Friday, December 31, 2010

Wenger defends selection policy after draw against Wigan


WIGAN: Arsenal manager Arsene Wenger defended his selection policy after his side conceded a late goal in a 2-2 draw against 10-men Wigan that could prove costly in the race for the Premier League title.
An early Ben Watson penalty had given Wigan the lead before Andrey Arshavin and Nicklas Bendtner both scored just before half-time to give visitors Arsenal the advantage at the DW Stadium here on Wednesday.
However, just three minutes after Charles N’Zogbia’s sending off for a ridiculous headbutt on Arsenal’s Jack Wilshere, Sebastien Squillaci headed into his own goal following pressure at a corner.
Wenger is likely to come under fire from Gunners fans who saw him make eight changes from the side that beat champions Chelsea 3-1 on Monday.
Only Lukasz Fabianski, Bacary Sagna and Laurent Koscielny survived from that encounter, with Wenger clearly having one eye on the congested fixture list over the festive period and into 2011.
“There is no rule,” he said after a draw that left Arsenal in third spot, two points behind leaders Manchester United and second-placed Manchester City.
“We had the disadvantage that Wigan played three days ago and we played 48 hours ago. I had to change because we play again on Saturday and again next Wednesday and then next Saturday and we cannot always play with the same team.”
Despite all those changes, Arsenal should have had the strength in depth to beat a Wigan side currently haunted by relegation.
But although they came from behind to lead 2-1, Arsenal could never quite shake Wigan off and the home team thoroughly deserved the point that lifted them out of the bottom three.
“Yes (I’m disappointed) because we were 2-1 up and played against 10 men and dropped two points,” Wenger said.
“It was a difficult game with a high level of commitment from Wigan and they caught us a bit at the start. In the second half we didn’t do enough and conceded two goals at setpieces and credit to them because they didn’t give up,” the Frenchman added.

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