The Daily Telegraph - Sport

Wenger vents anger after 10-man Atletico punish lapse

- By Jeremy Wilson at the Emirates

Arsene Wenger admitted that Arsenal missed enough chances last night to have already reached the Europa League final and claimed that his players did not benefit from playing for more than 80 minutes against only 10 Atletico Madrid players.

The 10th-minute dismissal of Sime Vrsaljko helped Arsenal dominate the match.

But even with 76 per cent of possession and 28 shots, this first leg ended with what Wenger called the “worst possible result” in the context of his team’s chances.

“The result is not in line with the performanc­e,” he said. “Once they went down to 10 men it destroyed a bit the flow of the game and it was not to our advantage.

“You come out with a bitter taste because we had the chances to be in the final tonight.

“We had the chances in the first half. That’s where the regret is and we were not clinical enough.

“Unfortunat­ely we gave a goal away, which puts us in a very difficult position. Of course it feels like an opportunit­y missed.”

Wenger was especially angry at how his team had contrived to concede a goal to Antoine Griezmann following a rare counter-attack from Atletico and a series of defensive errors.

Arsenal must now score away to have any chance of reaching the final – against a team who have not conceded in their past 11 home matches.

“Once we were 1-0 up, the task was clear for us: not to be caught on the long ball because they could not combine enough to create a chance,” said Wenger.

“We can only look at ourselves. It was down to us just not to make a mistake and it’s a story we have

seen before. The whole team is very disappoint­ed. Our fans were fantastic – we created the anti-climax by giving a goal away.”

Wenger neverthele­ss remained adamant that Arsenal can prevail in Madrid and ensure that his 22-year reign as Arsenal manager ends in Lyon next month in the Europa League final.

“Yes, we can go there and score,” he said. We know we can score from anywhere.

“For us to qualify we need to rebuild confidence and the desire. The only advantage of that result is we know exactly what we have to do.

“We have nothing to lose. We have to go there in a positive mood and win the game.”

Atletico manager Diego Simeone was sent to the stands for his protests soon after Vrsaljko’s dismissal for a second yellow card offence, and described his team as “heroes” for managing to withstand so much Arsenal pressure.

“They stood firm after such a long season,” he said. “When the players defend and defend and defend, you have no idea how difficult it is. It was defensive work that will go down in the history of Atletico. Playing is the fun part but defending you need balls.

“The stadium needs to be exploding with positive energy next week to reflect that passion. I have goosebumps just thinking about it.”

Simeone refused to escalate his attack on referee Clement Turpin and was adamant that the tie was still “50-50” despite Atletico’s away goal and home advantage.

Arsenal were boosted before the match by the sight of midfielder Santi Cazorla returning to light training after an ankle injury that has kept him out since October 2016, and there is hope that Henrikh Mkhitaryan will be available for the second leg next Thursday following a knee ligament injury.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom