Daily Dispatch

Crystal clear Gunners hit junk status

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NEWSPAPERS, pundits and former players poured fresh scorn on Arsenal and their besieged manager Arsene Wenger yesterday following Monday’s dismal 3-0 defeat at Crystal Palace.

“They bottle it, they’re cowards, they duck out of challenges,” was the scathing verdict of former Liverpool defender Jamie Carragher on Sky Sports.

“The best descriptio­n of the players was two years ago from Graeme Souness, who said they are a team of son-in-laws. But what father would want his daughter to bring one of them home?”

It was Arsenal’s fourth successive away defeat in the league and left them seven points off the Champions League places with a game in hand.

Furious away fans taunted Arsenal’s misfiring players with chants of “You’re not fit to wear the shirt!” and barracked Wenger and his squad as they boarded the team bus after the match.

The back-page headline in The Times, a riff on Palace’s nickname, read: “Eagles 3 Butterflie­s 0.”

The Daily Telegraph said the result at Selhurst Park represente­d “humiliatio­n”, while The Sun asked of Wenger: “How can he stay after Selhurst shambles?”

Wenger, 67, is reported to have been offered a two-year contract extension by Arsenal, but has yet to reveal what he intends to do.

He once again batted away questions about his future after the game, saying he was “not in the mood” to discuss it.

Arsenal great Ian Wright claimed on Twitter that the nature of Arsenal’s latest capitulati­on showed “that the dressing room is lost”.

Carragher delivered a withering assessment of Arsenal’s players, labelling the recent performanc­es of star duo Mesut Ozil and Alexis Sanchez “nothing short of embarrassi­ng”.

Former Arsenal striker John Hartson said the defeat showed Wenger had lost the magic touch that brought him three league titles and four FA Cups in his first nine years at the club.

“I just think now it’s time for him to go,” Hartson told BBC Radio 5 Live.

“It hurts me to say that because I like Arsene Wenger.

“Last night (Monday), you would call that performanc­e inept. There was a lack of leadership, lack of togetherne­ss.” — AFP

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