Mikel Arteta admits Arsenal ‘are in big trouble’ ahead of crucial run of games

A 4-1 defeat against Man City in the Carabao Cup knocked yet more confidence out of the Gunners

Karl Matchett
Tuesday 22 December 2020 22:47 GMT
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Arteta is under pressure to turn Arsenal’s season around
Arteta is under pressure to turn Arsenal’s season around (PA)
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Mikel Arteta says Arsenal in are “big trouble” as their winless run was extended on Tuesday night. A 4-1 thrashing by Manchester City in the League Cup quarter-final has likely ended their silverware hopes for the season even at this early stage, given their form so far in 2020/21.

A goalkeeping error by Alex Runarsson tilted the tie in City’s favour just after half-time, putting Pep Guardiola’s team 2-1 ahead, before the current cup holders strode away soon after following Alexandre Lacazette’s first-half equaliser.

It means that the Gunners are without a win domestically since November 1, with their only victories since then coming in the Europa League against Molde, Rapid Wien and Dundalk. It’s seven without a win in the Premier League and they face fifth-place Chelsea next, before games against teams down at the bottom in Brighton and West Brom - which Arteta now says are key clashes for 15th-placed Arsenal.

READ MORE: Man City cruise into Carabao Cup semi-finals

Despite that, he feels there are enough players at the club up for the challenge and is unsure whether Arsenal will dip into the January transfer market to help ease their woes.

Phil Foden scores as Man City cruise past Arsenal in the quarter-finals
Phil Foden scores as Man City cruise past Arsenal in the quarter-finals (Getty Images)

“A lot of strange things are happening every game and that makes things difficult,” he told Sky Sports at full-time.

"We have to turn it around. We are in big trouble, that’s the [upcoming] moment that will decide our season.

“I’m focused on the fighters we have. I see a lot of fighters. We are looking at options, players coming in and out and we’ll see what happens in a complicated window.”

On the match itself, Arteta acknowledged that the cup exit was another disappointment - but gave Runarsson his backing despite a horrible mistake, and stated regular first-choice goalkeeper Bernd Leno needed a time-out after a recent run of games.

"We started the game, conceded a soft goal. After that, in the moment we are, it’s difficult. The way we conceded [the second] against this level of opponent they make it really difficult and you’re chasing it.

"He [Runarsson] hasn’t played a lot of games, he’s arrived [new] to the league and that’s it. We all make mistakes and we have to support him. Yes [I thought about starting Leno] but he has played minutes, he needed a rest and we want to give chances to other players. These things happen in football.

“When you give away this type of goal against this level of opponent it makes the game impossible.”

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