Arteta calls for perspective as Arsenal look to avoid slump
Arsenal's Spanish manager Mikel Arteta addresses a press conference on the eve of their UEFA Champions League last 16 first leg football match against FC Porto at the Dragao stadium in Porto on February 20, 2024. (Photo by MIGUEL RIOPA / AFP)
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When Arsenal face Sporting in their Champions
League quarter-final first leg on Tuesday, there will be much more riding on
the game than just a knockout match in Lisbon.
For
many, this is where the Gunners need to show back-to-back defeats, against
Manchester City in the Carabao Cup final and the damaging loss to Southampton
in the FA Cup quarter-final, will not leak into their European and Premier
League campaigns.
Arsenal
have been tagged as the 'nearly men' under Mikel Arteta with three successive
second-placed finishes in the Premier League in the last three seasons.
But the
Gunners have played a ruthless style of football this season, which has seen
them establish a nine-point lead in the Premier League, reach the final of one
cup competition and, depending what happens in two legs against Sporting, at
least the quarter-final stage of the two other cup campaigns they began.
Their
style of play has been questioned at times but now it is the team's mentality
that is coming under the spotlight.
The
Gunners have been so impressive this season that their defeats by City and
Saints are the first time they have lost successive matches this campaign,
while the loss on the south coast was just the fifth of the season.
But,
with the Champions League and Premier League the top prizes for the Gunners,
this is where Arteta needs to show the pain of coming so close in previous
campaigns is not going to overwhelm his side as they look to win their first
major trophy since 2020.
"Have
some perspective about how difficult it is what we have done until now,"
said Arteta, when asked how he and the team prevent a longer run of defeats.
"Feel
the pain, feel the emotion and use it to be better and improve."
The
Spaniard said his team are "very clear" why they lost to Southampton
and believes they did not deserve to beaten.
"This
is football and we got punished for things that are related to our
identity," he said. "These are things we need to defend in the strongest
possible way."
The
Gunners boss said Arsenal are "hungrier than ever" and that the
defeats do not change the importance of the last-eight match against Sporting.
"If
we had won the game, this is the quarter-finals of the Champions League, it
doesn't get much better," he added.
"We worked so hard throughout the season to be at this stage in the competition. We are going to play an opponent that we know about their records and what they have done."
Arsenal will be 'wounded beast' - Sporting boss Borges
The
reason there is so much worry the nine-point gap is not enough to stop City
chasing Arsenal down in the Premier League is that Pep Guardiola's side seem to
have found form and their rivals are having to juggle injuries to key players.
City
produced two of their best performances of the season when they defeated
Arsenal 2-0 at Wembley and thumped Liverpool 4-0 in the FA Cup at the weekend.
During
the international break, 11 Arsenal players withdrew from their national teams
with injury issues and Arsenal are going to be without Bukayo Saka and Jurrien
Timber for the match on Tuesday night.
Centre-back
Gabriel Magalhaes came off with a knee issue against Southampton on Saturday,
while captain Martin Odegaard is building up his fitness after his own injury
issues and was substituted after an hour.
Sporting
head coach Rui Borges does not think the fact Arsenal have lost their last two
matches will make much of a difference on Tuesday.
"They
will be like a wounded beast," he said. "They will be more focused,
more willing to show their collective and individual capacity.
"It
will make things more difficult for us that they have not had the best two last
matches. But Arsenal will be facing a very motivated team in us.
"We
believe we can do something extraordinary, something that has never been done
by Sporting."
The
Portuguese side have never reached the semi-finals of the Champions League and
are looking to heap pressure on the Gunners.
Arsenal
goalkeeper David Raya echoed the sentiment of the Sporting coach, saying his
side are going to use the disappointment of recent results to turn things
around.
The
Spaniard said: "We just have to use that fuel and pain we had after the
game to pick it up for the rest of the season. It starts against Sporting. That
is the most important game."

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