Daily Star

Arsene backs struggling ace

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ARSENE WENGER insists he has no concerns that Alexis Sanchez’s head will not be right against Manchester City next Sunday.

And the Arsenal boss believes the Chilean striker will soon rediscover his goalscorin­g touch.

City thought they had a £60m deal in place back in August, only for Arsenal to pull out.

The Premier League leaders are expected to come back with another bid in January, or to wait until his contract runs out in summer.

But Wenger insisted he will not be worried about Sanchez’s frame of mind at the Etihad.

“No, I am not concerned,” he said after his side came from behind to win.

“Because I am not suspicious of the performanc­es or the desire to win of a football player.

“When you are a football player, you have a social contract with the rest of the team and I never question that.

“Once you don’t respect that, it’s difficult to say that you play football.”

And the Frenchman, who celebrated 800 league games in charge on Saturday, is sure that Sanchez will soon add to his two Arsenal goals this season.

“He’s a bit frustrated when he doesn’t score, like all goalscorer­s,” added Wenger.

“I’m not worried about it. He works hard and it will come back quickly.

Worry

“You can never try too hard. At the moment he’s marked well but he still creates many dangerous situations.

“He just has not to worry too much.

“You always say that to strikers and they still worry, but over a long period he has always scored and that will come back.”

Sanchez went close with a rasping shot that ex-Gunner Lukasz Fabianski saved at full stretch. But the glory belonged to Bosnian wing-back Sead Kolasinac, who scored the equaliser and created the winner for Aaron Ramsey, his 50th Arsenal goal. Swansea went ahead when Tammy Abraham took advantage of a slip by Laurent Koscielny to set up Sam Clucas after 22 minutes.

But Abraham, on loan from Chelsea, is finding goals harder to come by than he did at Bristol City last season.

And he was visibly annoyed when Jordan Ayew had a shot saved by Petr Cech instead of giving him a tap-in to make it 2-0 just before half-time.

“Contain your frustratio­n and move on to the next thing as quickly as possible,” said Swansea boss Paul Clement.

“Not only will he learn things tactically about the physicalit­y of the Premier League.

“He’s going to learn a lot about himself mentally because he’s not at a top-six club where you have more of the ball.

“So it’s a big learning experience for him.”

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