Cape Times

Sanchez: Arsene Wenger is the creator of the stadium and the style of Arsenal

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LONDON: With the title and relegation issues decided, three teams will scrap for the two remaining Champions League places on the final day of the Premier League season on Sunday.

Three points separate Manchester City, Liverpool and Arsenal, with each hoping to join champions Chelsea and Tottenham Hotspur in next season’s premier European club competitio­n. A Europa League place awaits whoever finishes fifth.

City travel to Watford knowing a win would guarantee them third spot and automatic qualificat­ion. Should fourthplac­ed Liverpool beat Middlesbro­ugh, they would at least secure entry into the Champions League qualifying round.

But if either team fail to win, and Arsenal beat Everton, a playoff on a neutral ground could yet decide positions because goal difference and goals scored – the deciding factors if teams finish level – are very tight.

City (75 points, 36 goal difference, 75 goals scored) have the edge over Liverpool (73, 33, 75) and Arsenal (72, 31, 74). Put simply, Liverpool must match Arsenal’s result and could even afford to lose to Middlesbro­ugh by a single goal and still finish fourth if the Gunners draw.

Last season Arsenal pipped rivals Spurs to an unlikely second place on the final day, but even manager Arsene Wenger knows a finish outside the top four for the first time under his stewardshi­p is now likely.

Wenger, pictured, will hope Liverpool’s habit of slipping up against the league’s worst teams resurfaces, although relegated Boro have not won away since August and have lost six of their past seven games on the road.

“He (Wenger) is the manager who gave a stadium to the club, won Cups, and he has been 21 years in the job,” said striker Alexis Sanchez, Arsenal’s top scorer whose own future at the club remains unresolved. “He is the creator of the stadium, the players and style of the club.”

Failure to qualify for the Champions League could see Sanchez and Mesut Ozil leave. With player salaries at Arsenal lagging Chelsea, City and Manchester United, the club may find it hard to attract the biggest names.

“Wenger wouldn’t get (Antoine) Griezmann,” former Arsenal striker Ian Wright said this month. “Why would Griezmann come to Arsenal in the current climate?

For the Reds to clinch a top-four spot ahead of the Gunners and United, who heavily outspent them in the transfer market, would be a significan­t achievemen­t and last week’s vibrant 4-0 win over West Ham United, suggests Wenger should not hold his breath even if Anfield has witnessed several dismal home performanc­es this season.

City, too, have impressed lately with three successive victories and should see off Watford, who have been slip-sliding into the off-season break and are parting ways with manager Walter Mazzarri. For City manager Pep Guardiola, third is a minimum requiremen­t from a campaign when many people’s pre-season favourites have only impressed in patches.

City are one of several clubs likely to splash the cash ahead of the new season with Chelsea, who could lose Eden Hazard and Diego Costa, also expected to be busy.

The champions sign off their league campaign, before next week’s FA Cup final against Arsenal, at home to Sunderland when captain John Terry is expected to make his final appearance for the club.

Old Trafford may also witness a farewell with British media speculatin­g that Wayne Rooney could sign off after 13 years, 556 appearance­s and a record 253 goals for United, who play Crystal Palace.

Rooney’s stellar United career is in danger of fizzling out after a season of frustratio­n and he is unlikely to make the starting line-up in the Europa League final against Ajax next Wednesday.

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