Liverpool 5 Arsenal 1: Mikel Arteta reveals at half-time Arsene Wenger was 'the angriest I have seen him'

The Gunners were 4-0 down after just 20 minutes at Anfield

Agency
Monday 10 February 2014 06:15 EST
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MIKEL ARTETA: Forced to play too deeply to have a major influence but took penalty coolly - 6.
MIKEL ARTETA: Forced to play too deeply to have a major influence but took penalty coolly - 6. (GETTY IMAGES)

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Arsenal captain Mikel Arteta says he has never seen manager Arsene Wenger as angry as he was during the half-time break in Saturday's 5-1 demolition at the hands of Liverpool.

At four-nil down after 20 minutes, Arsenal's players could almost be forgiven for wanting some respite from Liverpool's relentless onslaught, but instead they had to face the wrath of Wenger as he sought to spark a recovery after Martin Skrtel (two), Raheem Sterling and Daniel Sturridge fired the hosts in front.

"The manager was really upset at half-time, that's normal because it wasn't good enough for this football club," Spaniard Arteta said of Wenger.

"It was the angriest I have seen him."

The half-time rant failed to spark a recovery, with winger Sterling adding his second seven minutes after the restart before Arteta scored the consolation goal from the penalty spot after 69 minutes.

The loss saw Arsenal slip to second in the Premier League, one point behind Chelsea who beat Newcastle United 3-0, but Arteta was confident they were capable of picking themselves up and staying in the hunt for a first title since 2004.

He highlighted December's 6-3 thrashing by Manchester City, after which they won six of their next eight matches, a run that came to a sudden halt at Anfield.

"We have had two big crises already," the former Everton midfielder added.

"I think the Manchester United defeat was a different game to this, but City and this one are really hard to take. We have to react because there is nothing we can do about this now."

Wenger did not spare their blushes in public either, saying the performance was simply not good enough.

"We were feeble in every important aspect of playing at the highest level: concentration, strength in the challenge and naivety," he told French media.

"So from that moment on it's impossible to win a game when you're playing at that level."

He did, however, defend record signing Mesut Ozil, who came in for heavy criticism after match for a lethargic display in midfield.

"It is difficult to criticise an individual on this performance ... that would be unfair because nobody really played well."

Reuters

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