Arsene Wenger, already the longest-serving and most
successful manager in Arsenal’s history, could, in six months’ time,
celebrate 20 years at the club. However, if Arsenal do not win the
English Premier League this season, then the question has to be asked:
Will they ever do so with Wenger in charge? If they do fail, then it is
time for him finally to step down.
Wenger will be just a month short of his 67th birthday when the Sept 16 anniversary comes around, and will also be in the final year of a contract that he is expected to see out. Whether he signs a new deal is already in doubt.
Wenger will be just a month short of his 67th birthday when the Sept 16 anniversary comes around, and will also be in the final year of a contract that he is expected to see out. Whether he signs a new deal is already in doubt.
The natural step for him is to take on a different role at
Arsenal at the end of this campaign — and few managers appear as suited
to become a director of football as Wenger. The club should not simply
wave him goodbye and watch him leave the building this summer or next or
whenever he goes. The argument against Wenger going has always been
that people should be careful what they wish for and his status as one
of the greatest managers Europe has ever seen would be untainted even if
he did not win another league title. No one should question his
importance and the effect his brilliant football has had. But,
sometimes, it is right to change.
If you apply Wenger’s own
logic, then that would appear to be the case. Recently, he confirmed
what was suspected and written about at the time — if he had not won the
FA Cup in 2014 then it would have been “difficult” for him to carry on.
His reasoning was “because it would have been a massive disappointment for everybody” had Hull City not been defeated and a drought of nine years without a trophy not been ended.
Apply that logic to this year’s title race. In a season when Chelsea have imploded, Manchester United are in chaos, Liverpool are rebuilding (again), Tottenham Hotspur are a young and developing team and Manchester City have been distracted by the appointment of Pep Guardiola, then Arsenal have never had a better opportunity to win the league for the first time since 2003-04.
If they fail, then that will be an even bigger disappointment, surely?
Instead, it is Leicester City who are out in front. Looking at it hardheadedly, that is an indictment of the underperformance of the big clubs as much as it is a glorious effort by Leicester. And that indictment is at its greatest at Arsenal. While other big clubs have been in a maelstrom, Arsenal have gone from giving the impression they can capitalise on their continuity to appearing set to be paralysed by it.
It is in danger of developing into another Groundhog Day campaign, where the club appear to be trapped in a cycle. That sinking feeling is beginning to take hold — almost certain Champions League exit, Premier League chances blown.
Following a shocking defeat by second-string Swansea side, what matters now is the reaction. Arsenal are away at Spurs on Saturday and the nightmare scenario is this: Spurs could beat them and end their title hopes.
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