Arsene Wenger says team spirit makes him believe Arsenal can win the Premier League title
The Gunners won 2-0 at Aston Villa on Sunday
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Your support makes all the difference.Perhaps this is a time to view Barcelona in the Champions League as an opportunity not a trauma. There is a sense that fate is calling Arsenal forward, offering a moment to strike out, to make a statement.
On Monday Arsenal take on Manchester City in a match loaded with significance. If the idea of taking down Barcelona in Europe is a stretch, the visit of City invites Arsenal to take responsibility for – and ultimately control of – their best opportunity to win the Premier League since they last bossed the game in England 12 years ago.
Exquisite promise has been a persistent feature in recent years, but so too has the troubling collapse, a curious draining of belief when the demand was to stand tall. This was seen as a structural flaw linked to the continuing presence of Arsène Wenger, the guru gone bad, or so his critics maintained.
Well, he has steered his team of many talents into an enviable position at a critical point in the season, managing the standard injury issues along the way. Wenger never tires of telling us about the togetherness binding the group, and while there have been disappointments, we are beginning to see the truth of his claims.
The result against Olympiakos was delivered against a background of necessity. Winning to order is not easy, especially on the road. There was less to be learned in the summary dismissal of Aston Villa, but it was obvious Arsenal are a team at one with itself, and perhaps more significant still, enjoying itself.
This could be seen most clearly in the warm-up at Villa Park, where that precious jewel Mesut Özil delighted in sending Petr Cech the wrong way while team-mates looked on appreciatively. If this were a barometer of team spirit, then Wenger has a point when he draws attention to that quality. And should his team train on over the next two months, who knows what might happen in February when Messi and Co come calling?
“I’m very proud and happy of the spirit we show,” Wenger said. “That’s what people want to see. There’s a strength and togetherness coming out of the team that people feel and that’s the biggest satisfaction. It’s the best basis to make results.”
The upswing in form of Olivier Giroud, a striker who does not have the obvious appeal of some of his forerunners at Arsenal, could not have been more timely. The hat-trick in Athens was followed by a nicely drilled penalty at Villa Park. Bring it on, he says, of the match against City.
“I’m pleased with that and I don’t want to stop here,” he said. “It is a fantastic week. We did a great job in the Champions League and we really wanted to finish the week with a win and to be top of the league before Leicester’s game against Chelsea. Hopefully we can have a great game against Manchester City.”
At the other end of the pitch, Cech has effected a quiet transformation in his organisation of the back four, sending forth ripples of confidence with every clean sheet posted. Theo Walcott appreciates the qualities that bookend his team. “From when we signed him, we all knew how good he [Cech] was. He’s changed us completely in that back four. He’s a talker, he believes in us all. He’s very commanding and a leader in the dressing room as well.”
And of his strike partner, Walcott said: “It’s not just his goals, it’s his general play and everything about him. The way he holds the ball up, he blocks it and defends it, and he works hard for the team. He’s a dream to play with and he makes our job a lot easier. Confidence is streaming through him and you want that in the busy Christmas period.”
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