Arshavin carving out chances - Wenger

22 October 2010 15:21
Arsene Wenger maintains Arsenal's Andrey Arshavin is the Premier League's most creative force and will field him at Manchester City on Sunday.[LNB] The 29-year-old Russia international midfielder admits he has had "some good games and some bad, nothing unusual" this season.[LNB]While it has certainly not been the same impact which followed his arrival from Zenit St Petersburg in a £15million deal during January 2009, Wenger feels the diminutive attacker has contributed plenty to the team, with five goals so far.[LNB]"If you look at the stats, he is the player who has created more chances than everybody else in the Premier League this season, so his numbers are quite surprising to people who think he has not done so well," Wenger said.[LNB]"I believe that since the start of the season in the Premier League, he has been better at creating chances than anyone else."[LNB]Wenger is likely to have to soon consider moves to perhaps tie Arshavin into a longer-term deal, as Arsenal have done with many of their key men.[LNB]"He has a long future at the club - as long as his contract lasts at least, or until we extend his contract, and that is for I think 18 months," Wenger said.[LNB]"We are always in negotiations now because when you sign a player for four years, after two years you have to renegotiate so we keep it as quiet as possible."[LNB]Arsenal look set to come up against their former striker Emmanuel Adebayor at Eastlands on Sunday, the Togolese having netted a hat-trick in City's Europa League win over Polish outfit Lech Poznan.[LNB]Adebayor made the headlines for the wrong reasons last season, both for his over-the-top goal celebration in the 4-2 victory and then stamping on Robin van Persie's face, which earned him a three-match ban.[LNB]Wenger, however, insists there is no sense of ill-feeling toward the former Arsenal favourite, sold for £25million during the summer of 2009.[LNB]"When you accept to sell a player you cannot accuse him of not being loyal," said the Arsenal boss, who signed Adebayor from Monaco in January 2006.[LNB]"A manager tries to influence the club's life, but as well the life of the player.[LNB]"When you can help a player to have a successful career and a happy life, you think you do your job."[LNB]Wenger insists Arsenal will not let themselves get concerned over just which starting XI big-spending City boss Roberto Mancini will select.[LNB]"What I can master is the team that I will play and the way we focus and the way we play," Wenger said.[LNB]"We feel we have of course won again and we are very close to doing something special.[LNB]"There is a good spirit in the side, we have seen already at Chelsea that we are close to winning these big games and that is what we want to do."[LNB]Arsenal are five points behind Chelsea, who lead City by just two points after eight matches.[LNB]"It is an open title chase. The more consistent team will be rewarded," Wenger said.[LNB]"If you invest what they [City] do and you consider them not serious, then you must have a good sense of humour.[LNB]"They have a good side with plenty of good players."[LNB]UEFA have approved plans which in the future will insist clubs in European competition spend only what they earn.[LNB]The financial fair play rules will require clubs to break even over a rolling three-year period if they want to play in the Champions League or Europa League - which is likely to impact heavily on clubs who are bankrolled by individual owners like City, who recently announced record losses of £121.3million.[LNB]"If UEFA brings the rules in, these rules then give a problem to the Premier league - will they accept them or continue with their own rules?" Wenger said.[LNB]"I think they will not accept and teams will have a double problem - one team for England and one for Europe.[LNB]"Nobody knows yet what the rules will exactly be and anyway you will have to have a period of adaptation because players who are under contract now cannot go from one situation to another.[LNB]"You have to have an adaptation period to allow the clubs to adapt to the new rules. That is not for tomorrow."

Source: Team_Talk