The long league campaigns, the Champions League’s dreaded barrier of the round of 16 – these are the challenges that Arsène Wenger has found ever harder to negotiate over the years but there is only one king of the FA Cup, the 67-year-old Frenchman who has now won it a record seven times.
Below him the Victorian Scotsman George Ramsay on six victories, and then others such as Sir Alex Ferguson, Bill Nicholson and Herbert Chapman, but no-one in the 146-year history of the oldest cup competition in the world has more than Wenger’s seven.
It might take another century to surpass his achievements or he might just remain there forever, a giant figure in English football’s greatest heritage piece, a man who simply had a knack for winning the FA Cup.
He ascended the steps at Wembley jacketless, the look of the wise old prelate in white shirt sleeves, once more looking the shrewd repository of all football’s best secrets. He had picked the right team, set the right tempo and his side had defeated the runaway champions of the Premier League by virtue of Aaron Ramsey’s winner and a certainty that had eluded them for so much of the season.
It comes
at this great juncture in Wenger’s career, another dramatic development
in the debate over his suitability, a manager who even at the final
whistle went to take the acclaim of his own divided support with a
certain reserve. Whether he has done enough to have his reign at Arsenal
extended beyond 20 years seems academic now, more important is that he
has created more favourable conditions for Stan Kroenke, the club’s
majority shareholder, to award him the contract.
Afterwards, Wenger claimed he was at the mercy of the Arsenal board when they meet on Tuesday as to whether there would be a new deal, and what conditions will come attached. He is playing a much stronger hand now and his criticism of the sections of the support for the ‘hostile’ treatment of his team during the season suggested a manager emboldened by his club’s record 13th FA Cup to get some things off his chest.
Afterwards, Wenger claimed he was at the mercy of the Arsenal board when they meet on Tuesday as to whether there would be a new deal, and what conditions will come attached. He is playing a much stronger hand now and his criticism of the sections of the support for the ‘hostile’ treatment of his team during the season suggested a manager emboldened by his club’s record 13th FA Cup to get some things off his chest.
An FA Cup
winner three times in the last four years, his fluctuating fortunes
defy definition, a manager whose Arsenal teams have an array of
personalities, jaded and rudderless or as inspired and confident as they
were at Wembley. This was a magnificently open final, albeit featuring a
Chelsea team who conceded Alexis Sánchez’s goal in the fifth minute
before they had barely done a single thing in the game.
It had
been defeat to Arsenal in the league in September that had prompted
Antonio Conte to change to the title-winning 3-4-3 system and it took
eight months for Wenger to be convinced it was also the right system for
him. In time for Wembley, a manager who has often looked behind his
younger coaching peers finessed Conte’s innovation with a version of his
own.
They did all the things a great Cup-winning team must do, making the running early on and scoring through Sánchez within the first five minutes and then, when they thought they had won the game, doing it all over again after Diego Costa’s equaliser. Before Ramsey scored the winner, Chelsea had lost Victor Moses to a second yellow card for a dive that no-one in a Chelsea short protested in any earnest.
Conte later complained about a handball by Sánchez in the creation of his goal although he was wise enough not to labour the point to make it look like the result should have been any different. For the first time this season he suggested the champions had been the victims of some bad refereeing decisions although he also conceded that his players had taken around 20 minutes to get into the game.
They did all the things a great Cup-winning team must do, making the running early on and scoring through Sánchez within the first five minutes and then, when they thought they had won the game, doing it all over again after Diego Costa’s equaliser. Before Ramsey scored the winner, Chelsea had lost Victor Moses to a second yellow card for a dive that no-one in a Chelsea short protested in any earnest.
Conte later complained about a handball by Sánchez in the creation of his goal although he was wise enough not to labour the point to make it look like the result should have been any different. For the first time this season he suggested the champions had been the victims of some bad refereeing decisions although he also conceded that his players had taken around 20 minutes to get into the game.
As for
Arsenal, this was as Wenger would have them every week if possible, a
liberated Mesut Özil, feeding into the ruthless running of Sánchez.
Danny Welbeck let loose, fit and strong to run the legs off an
opposition defence. Even David Ospina, selected ahead of Petr Cech in
goal, threw himself in front of a Costa shot in the 86th minute that
would have taken the game to extra-time.
Just
minutes of the game had elapsed when a long Arsenal passing sequence
yielded a corner that Thibaut Courtois took cleanly before throwing the
ball out. From there Chelsea’s lack of composure was telling. They lost
possession through N’Golo Kanté who had a poor game by his standards and
they missed chances to get the ball back.
The goal
was a complicated affair during which referee Anthony Taylor first blew
as if to disallow but instead gave himself time to speak to his
assistant Gary Beswick. He decided Sánchez had not handled when he won
the ball on the edge of the area and pushed it through the Chelsea
defence to run onto and score with a left foot shot past Courtois.
Neither, the referee ruled, had Ramsey, in an offside position,
interfered with play.
When Özil slid into a tackle against the escaping Eden Hazard towards the end of the first half this looked like an Arsenal team that had been transformed by the occasion.
When Özil slid into a tackle against the escaping Eden Hazard towards the end of the first half this looked like an Arsenal team that had been transformed by the occasion.
With
Welbeck having one of his best games in an Arsenal shirt and stretching
Chelsea with his running, the English striker drew the foul from Moses
that led to the Chelsea winger’s first yellow card. There was no
argument about that one just as there was very little about the second
awarded by referee Taylor who, as he had done for the Sánchez goal, blew
his whistle, took a moment to think and then made the correct decision
under heavy pressure.
Moses had
come in down the right channel, taken the ball on his left to go past
Alex Oxlade-Chamberlain and went down as he passed the Arsenal man.
Before then Conte had changed his team, bringing on Cesc Fabregas for
Nemanja Matic, and later Willian replaced Pedro. It was the Brazilian
who crossed for Costa’s equaliser, a fine clipped finish past Ospina
with the help of a deflection.
Arsenal’s response came almost immediately with Welbeck’s replacement Olivier Giroud yielding immediate dividends. It was Giroud’s intelligent run into the left channel, and a fine cross pulled back from the byline that Ramsey headed in from close range
Ospina was required to make that one more save from Costa but this was Arsenal’s day.
Arsenal’s response came almost immediately with Welbeck’s replacement Olivier Giroud yielding immediate dividends. It was Giroud’s intelligent run into the left channel, and a fine cross pulled back from the byline that Ramsey headed in from close range
Ospina was required to make that one more save from Costa but this was Arsenal’s day.
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