Evening Telegraph (First Edition)

Wenger won’t entertain idea of management restructur­e job

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ARSENE Wenger is not prepared to share responsibi­lities at Arsenal as he insists he will never work alongside a director of football.

The 67-year-old is still to be drawn on whether he will sign a new contract to remain at the Emirates Stadium beyond the end of the current season.

After a year which has seen the Gunners drop out of the Premier League title race and exit the Champions League at the last-16 stage, reports continue to surface that Arsenal board members are keen for a reshuffle of the backroom set-up.

But Wenger will resist pressure to introduce any new figures into the hierarchy at the club as the Frenchman maintains he can remain the all-seeing eye over Arsenal if he signs his new deal.

“It is a question of teamwork inside the club,” he said. “Some coaches are only interested in managing the team and they are happy with it.

“I am not like that and I cannot change myself now. I can change by trying to get better, but the personalit­y. . .

“I have 40 years of experience at the top, top level, you know, I think I personally I have a good knowledge of the game.”

The likes of former Arsenal winger Marc Overmars and ex-Germany internatio­nal Michael Zorc have been linked with a director of football role at the north London club, with the pair holding the position at Ajax and Borussia Dortmund respective­ly.

Many Premier League clubs now have a director of football in some guise, while others rely on a transfer committee to decide on potential new recruits.

But Wenger, who has been in charge at Arsenal for over 20 years, says he does not want such a structure introduced while he is still in the job.

“I’m the manager of Arsenal Football Club and, as long as I’m manager of Arsenal Football Club, I will decide what happens on the technical front, that’s it,” he said.

“I don’t know what director of football means. Is it somebody who stands in the road and directs play right and left? I don’t understand and I never did understand what it means.”

“Who do you blame when it does not happen? When it does not work here, I am blamed. I am blamed for decisions I have not made. It is tough enough to be blamed for decisions you have made,” he said.

The Gunners are in action tonight, taking on Southampto­n at St. Mary’s where a win could see them leapfrog Manchester United into fifth.

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