Pep Guardiola's team lost 4-2 to Leicester at the weekend. |
Arsenal boss Arsene Wenger has defended Manchester City counterpart
Pep Guardiola after his defensive tactics were questioned following a
4-2 loss to Leicester, saying criticism of the Spaniard has been
"unfair."
Guardiola was criticised by pundits for dismissing the importance of
tackling after his side fell to a second straight league defeat
following a 3-1 loss to Chelsea the previous weekend.
"I'm not a coach for the tackles, so I don't train the tackles," Guardiola said after the Leicester game.
But Wenger said the former Barcelona and Bayern Munich coach should
be applauded for his attack-minded style of play, and that his record
proves his teams know how to defend.
"Pep Guardiola, like myself, we are for offensive football. And when
you don't win, people question that. And that's as simple as that,"
Wenger said ahead of Arsenal's trip to Everton on Tuesday. "Overall, I
think what he wanted to say is that he promotes a game that is positive
and I agree with him on that. You respect him for that. I believe that
he doesn't forbid his players to tackle.
It's true that in the trainings you focus on your players to play an
offensive game. You look at the number of games he has lost in his
career, you would think that he defends quite well. For me it's a bit
the wrong debate. His teams usually defend well."
Defending champions Leicester have struggled badly to repeat their
heroics of last season's stunning title charge, but looked back to their
best against City as they took a 2-0 lead after five minutes and were
4-0 up by the 78th when Jamie Vardy completed a hat trick.
And Wenger pointed out that the strong start by Leicester didn't
leave Man City much of a choice other than to expose themselves
defensively for the rest of the game.
"I come back to one simple fact in that game. When you're 2-0 down
away from home, against a team that is good on the counter-attack, you
know you have have to come out like mad to come back," Wenger said.
"And you expose yourself on counter-attacks. What was the strength of
Leicester last season? It was that. So they were in a position where
they are at their strength after five minutes. Then you can criticise
what you want. I believe it's unfair because they had to come out and
they had to take the risk to be exposed on counter-attacks."
Wenger's own team have often been criticised in recent years for
conceding too many goals on counter-attacks, but this season they've
been a lot more successful when they're chasing a deficit. The Gunners
have fallen behind in six games in the Premier League and Champions
League, but finished those games with three wins and three draws.
One of those was Saturday's 3-1 home win over Stoke, but Wenger
admitted that the Gunners have often had small margins on their side --
such as when Petr Cech made a good save to deny a Peter Crouch header
when the score was still 2-1 against Stoke.
"I look at the history of the games, there are always turning points
that have gone for us. It's never one-way traffic. Even on Saturday it
could have been 2-2," Wenger said. "We manage to get the turning points
on our side. I'm conscious that it's very tight. But I'm conscious as
well that there is a resilience in the squad, because it's not a
coincidence, six times."
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