The Daily Telegraph - Sport

Wilshere’s Arsenal career needs lifeline of Europa League

Cologne match will end his long Emirates exile Striker Giroud aiming to reach 100 goals for club

- Jeremy Wilson DEPUTY FOOTBALL CORRESPOND­ENT Arsenal v Cologne

It is often said that opportunit­y lurks behind every failure and, while Arsenal would be strawclutc­hing to see much positive in their Europa League participat­ion, it does genuinely present a lifeline to certain players.

Theo Walcott, Olivier Giroud, Alexi Iwobi, Per Mertesacke­r, Alexis Sanchez and Mohamed Elneny are among those short of first-team minutes but, for one player, it is conceivabl­e that his entire Arsenal career will hinge on this competitio­n.

Jack Wilshere’s last appearance for the club was a 21-minute cameo against Watford 13 months ago but you have to go back substantia­lly further – to September 2014 – for the last time he played 90 minutes at the Emirates Stadium. Leaving became a serious considerat­ion this summer but the leading clubs were no longer queuing at the door and, after being told by Arsene Wenger that opportunit­ies would most likely come in the Europa League, Wilshere resolved to stay and fight for his future.

Wenger claims to have been impressed by what he has subsequent­ly seen and, with Francis Coquelin nursing a hamstring injury and seven first-teamers rested for Sunday’s match at Chelsea, he is expected to bring Wilshere back against Cologne tonight.

“He is very hungry and sharp,” said Wenger. “He is not completely at his best, but he is getting there. He enjoys being back and competing for his place and what I see in training is positive. I know Jack well enough. He analyses every training session. He has a football brain so I don’t need to tell him too much but I speak to him about how I see his evolution.”

Wenger’s true feelings on that subject are the pivotal question. He can make as many positive observatio­ns as he wants but, with Wilshere out of contract next summer, the clearest indication will be in his league involvemen­t.

What was interestin­g yesterday, though, was Wenger’s certainty that Wilshere’s future still lay in a more advanced midfield position. Wilshere was identified by former England manager Roy Hodgson as better equipped to play a deeperlyin­g role and that might seem a logical progressio­n, given the concern now about his mobility.

The young Wilshere was so special because of that almost Gazza-like ability to ride tackles and burst past opponents but numerous injuries – and perhaps even issues relating to his lifestyle – have blunted this attribute.

Yet he is still only 25 and Wenger believes that the old Wilshere, who genuinely did hold his own as a teenager against the Barcelona midfield of Xavi, Busquets and Iniesta, can re-emerge. By that, he means not just his range of passing but also the speed and strength to sprint past an opponent.

“If he is injury-free, he will come back,” said Wenger. “You have certainly seen the video of him when we played against Barcelona. He needs a little burst to get away from people because he can turn the game forward. If you can turn the game forward, you need your legs to get you out of pressure. That will come back.”

As well as the physical doubts, there are questions relating to his mental state. At more than 900, Wilshere has missed more days though injury than anyone in the Premier League since 2011. His red card this season for his reaction to being tackled dangerousl­y late in an under-23s game was interprete­d by some as a sign of frustratio­n, although not by his manager. “I didn’t talk to him at all,” said Wenger. “I could understand his reaction; he had been out so many times after suffering bad tackles and had just come back from a fracture.

“We are all different. Some just come back like nothing happened to them; some are traumatise­d for their whole life. It is like if you have a car accident. Some don’t want to drive any more. It depends on the personalit­y. He knows his body well, he has become very profession­al and learnt how much time it takes to get back to his best, so he is more patient.”

It will also be a big night for Giroud who, as well as a rare start, is aiming to become only the 19th Arsenal player to score 100 club goals. He admitted yesterday how close he came to leaving this summer. West Ham, Everton, Lyon and Marseille were all interested but he decided to compete with Alexandre Lacazette, Danny Welbeck and Sanchez for the main striker role.

“It’s true I was close to leaving the club,” said Giroud. “After a big reflection with everybody around me, I wanted to stay. I thought the story was not finished at Arsenal.” Wilshere will be hoping the same.

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