Wednesday, December 29, 2010

Wenger hopes pivotal victory can inspire title charge


LONDON: Arsene Wenger believes Arsenal’s 3-1 win over Chelsea can inspire his side to finally mount a sustained challenge for the title as they prepare to face Wigan today.
Wenger has kept faith with his young squad through several years of growing pains and the Gunners manager is confident their emphatic demolition of the champions at the Emirates Stadium on Monday will be the result that defines their campaign.
Arsenal have gone five years without a trophy and critics often pointed to their repeated failures against Chelsea and United as proof that, for all their eye-catching football, they didn’t have the attributes needed to compete with their main rivals.
That criticism was answered in resounding fashion as goals from Alex Song, Cesc Fabregas and Theo Walcott ripped the lacklustre Blues to shreds.
It was the kind of dominant display that Arsenal desperately needed after their recent tame defeat at Old Trafford.
Now they must keep the momentum going at Wigan – the kind of unglamourous venue where they have often come unstuck.
“It can be a pivotal result. Beating the big teams at home will have an impact on the league,” Wenger said.
“It was a win we wanted and needed. It has a double impact because it keeps us in touch with the leaders and it’s psychological as well because we were questioned about our ability to win big games.
“Of course we want to be consistent and we have to respond straight away at Wigan on Wednesday.”
Even Arsenal captain Cesc Fabregas had questioned his team-mates’ ability to raise their game on the biggest occasions and Wenger conceded he was starting to think along the same lines.
Wenger knew the key to banishing that concern was finding a way to match Chelsea’s physical approach and he was delighted with his players’ refusal to be intimidated by the Blues.
“Fabregas said we were playing scared. That is a strong word but there was maybe something in that but we didn’t see that in this game,” Wenger said.
“Two years ago with the same players we were maybe battered by Chelsea. Last year we felt we were getting closer. It was a slow learning process that we got out of our system with this result.
“I felt the strength and desire in the team. We kept good discipline and hunger over 90 minutes.
“We were putting in the challenges. We have improved on that front, that is for sure. We have a more ‘man-ish’ dimension in our team and we won our duels.
“We are not bullied anymore that is for sure. Over the last two years we have matured.” 

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