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Roberto Martinez wants to build an Arsene Wenger-type dynasty at Everton - but admits it is out of his hands.

The Blues boss has a contract at Goodison until the summer of 2019 but he has grand plans the long-term future of the club.

Martinez, however, admits that whether he - or any other Premier League manager - could ever replicate Wenger’s near 20 years in charge of the Gunners depends on the nerve of a team’s owner.

Everton, who entertain Arsenal on Saturday, are entering a new era with the arrival of billionaire investor Farhad Moshiri and Martinez says with more money in the game than ever before, chairmen and owners will be under greater pressure to deliver results - and maybe make regular changes in the dug-out.

“The focus now goes onto the owners, what is the plan and what is the strategy behind their football clubs,” Martinez said.

“Every manager goes through good and bad periods and it’s how the manager fits into that role of building a football club. I don’t think every manager knows how to build a football club, that’s the truth.

“There are managers who prefer to be head coaches, which is looking after the first-team and concentrating on winning or losing at the weekend.

“When you are a manager where you are looking at the well-being of the football club, managing assets, managing finances and investing in and developing young players, that is a very, very different situation.

“It is the owner who ultimately decides where the manager should be judged.

“If that is just the result at the weekend or it is more about where the football club is going under his leadership.

“The modern times will make that very, very difficult and put a lot of pressure on owners about supporting managers for a long, long time like Arsene Wenger or Sir Alex Ferguson.

“More and more, that position as manager will become more like a head coach because people want instant success. And that investment that will be around will be the best investment ever, it is an historic moment, and every football club is going to have their own expectations because they will have the biggest spending they’ve ever had, attract the best players they ever had that demands wins.

“But it is still a competition of 20 teams and you cannot have 20 teams winning. That is the reality of the competition and the owners will make the difference, the owners with the stronger vision and the stability will get those rewards.”

Martinez has come under fierce criticism from sections of the supporters this season but guided the Blues into the FA Cup semi-finals with a win over Chelsea last weekend.

And the Catalan insists he is only just getting started at Goodison.

“I enjoy building football clubs, I am not the type of manager that is trying to spend as much money as I can to try and have a good season and if something happens then it will be someone else’s problem,” he said.

“I never, ever enjoyed football in that manner. When I started at Swansea, I would make decisions that I saw flourish under different managers and you get the pride and you see football clubs growing all the time.

“At Wigan it was very, very similar and it was unfortunate that the work couldn’t be followed up but at Everton I am now looking after being in charge for 1,000 days and you can see where we have taken the team since we have arrived.

“You can judge many aspects of our football club growing, rather than just winning or losing on the football pitch, and that is what I enjoy.”

Martinez signed a four-year contract when he replaced David Moyes as manager in the summer of 2013, before agreeing a new five-year deal 12 months later.

So does the Everton manager, who will be entering his fourth term next season, think Champions League qualification can be achieved in that initial time frame?

“We achieved 72 points in the first season which, in the season after, would have been enough for the Champions League and in many of the last 10 years, it would’ve been enough,” he said.

“But the margins in the Premier League are becoming smaller and we are in a position where that has to be the ultimate aim and has to be our vision and we need to work towards that.

“It is not going to be easy because it has become a really, really demanding competition but, in the same way, at Everton we are now starting a new era and can approach it in a different way.

“Until now, we have been able to compete eye-to-eye with the top teams in the division with the way we play, although we haven’t been able to break into the top four, that shouldn’t stop us from having that aim in mind.”