The Sunday Telegraph - Sport

Bayern prepare £55m bid for Sanchez

German club confident of signing Arsenal forward Others also scrambling to secure Chilean forward

- By Sam Wallace and Jason Burt

Bayern Munich have become the latest European superpower to register their interest in Alexis Sánchez, one of those few players at the elite level who looks readily available this summer and capable of making an impact at any of the Champions League big-hitters.

The German club are believed to be prepared to offer €65million (£55million) for the 28-year-old (right) who has continued to stall on signing a new contract at Arsenal.

The scale of the fee is surprising for a player with just 12 months left on his contract. But, unlike his team-mate Mesut Özil, who also may leave, Sánchez is in high demand.

It means that after three years at Arsenal, today’s visit of Manchester United could well be one of the last occasions when the club’s marquee player is tested at home against one of the big guns of English football.

The Chilean is one of those rare talents for whom just about every major European club have weighed up an offer. Bayern have long admired him and, having been eliminated from the Champions League quarter-finals last month, are now focusing on next season.

Paris Saint-Germain, Manchester City, Chelsea and Juventus are all also interested in Sánchez yet Bayern are increasing­ly confident of making the signing they want in spite of major competitio­n. If they are to sign him then the German club are more likely to want the saga concluded early in the summer. It would be fair to say that every month that passes without resolution weakens the hand of his current club. Increasing­ly, it feels as though Sánchez’s breadth of choice will be the story of Arsenal’s summer, rather than any hopes that the club might have of holding on to their star asset. Against that backdrop they remain nine points off the top four places, albeit with two games in hand over Liv- erpool and City, who occupy the final two Champions League spots.

Arsenal have lived with the uncertaint­y around the future of Sánchez, as well as Özil, for so long now that it can feel incidental to whatever happens to be the issue of that particular week, such as finishing below Tottenham Hotspur. Neverthele­ss, when a manager is fielding questions regularly about the future of his two biggest names, the effect on the club’s morale, and their standing in the eyes of other acquisitiv­e rivals, is cumulative.

For all that, Wenger has adhered to his old rule of never rebuking his players publicly. The lack of clarity around his own future has put him in a weak position when trying to close Sánchez and Özil’s contract stand-offs. Neverthele­ss he would have been entitled to criticise some of the performanc­es in recent weeks, especially those of the German.

Asked whether he might be prepared to make his criticism more pub- lic, as Jose Mourinho has done this season, Wenger remains adamant that a lifetime habit in football will not change in spite of the pressure he finds himself under with open dissent among Arsenal supporters about his future and the direction of the club.

“Ideally you have to be careful with that [criticisin­g players] because you cannot do that in every single game,” he said.

“You can do that in extreme situations but it has to be handled carefully because as well, we have spoken before about players dealing with stress. It just makes that stress level worse for them because top players have a good and objective assessment. They know well where they stand.

“You cannot always say to the players, we are all in the same boat and in this together to achieve something and then you jump out of the boat and say, ‘It’s your fault now’, but when it goes

well you take the credit. You’re in a position where you have to be part of it and fight for them when it doesn’t go well.” Have there been times when Wenger has been obliged to bite his lip? “Of course I have to, like you have to do it in any job,” he said. “You have to control what you say. Most of the time you are responsibl­e for the results so you are disappoint­ed with yourself.”

There is still the FA Cup final awaiting Arsenal at the end of the month and Mourinho’s very presence on the touchline at the Emirates should be enough to stir the atmosphere in the stadium today. Even so Wenger, who has never beaten a Mourinho side in a competitiv­e game, will be scrutinise­d for how his team react to whatever game plan the United manager uses.

Tottenham’s defeat by West Ham United on Friday has all but ended a possibilit­y that Arsenal fans feared most: their rivals winning the title, but the Emirates is perpetuall­y a bad performanc­e away from some form of insurrecti­on.

“We have to use the frustratio­n and transform it into positive energy,” Wenger said. “The players have been very hurt by our last result and performanc­e. We have a Cup final to prepare for and we have games until the end of the season to have a chance to still be in the top four, so they are focused.”

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