Arsene Wenger claims Arsenal are in 'great shape' despite 10-2 thrashing by Bayern Munich by Jack de Menezes
Arsene Wenger claimed Arsenal are in “great shape”, despite suffering the second-worst defeat in Champions League history.
For the third time in a row, Arsenal suffered a humiliating 5-1 loss to Bayern Munich,
consigning them to a 10-2 aggregate defeat that is only beaten by
Sporting Lisbon’s record 12-1 demolition – also at the hands of the
Bavarian giants.
But
despite watching his side implode as Laurent Koscielny was sent-off
after conceding a penalty in the second half to end any hopes the
Gunners had of reaching the quarter-finals following Theo Walcott’s
momentum-building opener, Wenger was keen to praise his players for
showing “spirit and pride”. It was a strange claim that not even the
most devout Arsenal fan could agree with.
With
Wenger facing possible action over his astonishing outburst against
referee Tasos Sidiropoulos for his performance at the Emirates Stadium,
it suddenly dawned that he may not serve any sanction at Arsenal. Wenger
is out of contract at the end of the season and yet to decide if he
will sign a new two-year extension that has already been offered, and
the felling is he is inching towards the last act of his
20-and-a-half-year reign at Arsenal.
After
being asked about his own future and whether he had just managed his
final match for Arsenal in the Champions League, he responded: “I don’t
know. You always worry for headlines, I’m here to speak about football
not about my future.”
Yet
he seemed reluctant to accept there is a problem at Arsenal. Before the
match, around 400 fans gathered outside the old Highbury East Stand to
protest against Wenger’s reign and called for him to leave at the end of
the season. Upon Arturo Vidal’s second goal that secured the 5-1
victory for Bayern, the “Wenger Out” signs once again appeared in the
Clock End, and Alexis Sanchez’s reaction to the final goal appeared to
be one of resigned humour.
But there is no problem, according to Wenger.
“What
needs to change at this club? What do you mean?” Wenger responded to a
question about the deep-rooted issues that the club clearly harbours.
“This club is in a great shape, at the moment it’s going through a very
difficult situation. So what needs to change is the result in the next
game.
“We can compete with Bayern, we showed that in the first half. I believe the second half was a very difficult situation for us.
“Overall
Bayern is a good team, they do what they want in Germany, what we
cannot do in England. Nobody can compete with them. They take the
players they want and they are a bit lonely on the market, which is not
the case in England.”
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