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1 days ago
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width="1" height="1" //divpThe Arsenal captain, William Gallas, has launched an astonishing attack
on his young team-mates, claiming they are "not brave enough in battle" and revealing he had been
forced to step in to prevent players arguing during games. The France international also suggested
one of his more experienced colleagues, who he refused to name, had proved a disruptive influence
at the club on and off the pitch./ppThe outburst is particularly untimely with Arsenal, nine points
off the top of the Premier League having lost their fourth game of the season against Aston Villa
last Saturday, already rocked by confirmation that Theo Walcott will be absent for at least three
months after the winger underwent surgery on his right shoulder yesterday. Gallas suggested he had
grown tired of the drip-feed of criticism of his captaincy, initially sparked by his bizarre and
petulant sit-down protest at Birmingham City in February, though his words will have done little
for team harmony at the Emirates Stadium./pp"We have to understand that, to be champions, you have
to play big matches every weekend and fight," said Gallas. "We are coming up against teams who are
not scared to play football against us, who are not scared to take us on at our place and this is
becoming dangerous for Arsenal. We are not brave enough in battle. I think we need to be soldiers.
We have to be warriors. There are teams who can do it well against us and we have to be able to
face up to these attacks. That is how they [Arsenal's young players] will forge their character and
how they will get experience. Even though they've played a certain number of matches, they're still
young and still learning."/ppThe 31-year-old, whose own form has been patchy not least against
Villa, insisted he was speaking out because "there are things that can't be said and can't be
tolerated". He revealed the team had fractured at half-time in the recent Premier League game with
Tottenham Hotspur, with the score 1-1 at the time, though his most stinging criticism was levelled
at an unnamed team-mate whose attitude had shocked him. "There was a problem at half-time [against
Spurs]," he said. "The only thing that I could say at half-time was: 'Guys, we resolve these
problems after the match, not at half-time.'/pp"When, as captain, some players come up to you and
talk to you about a player ... complaining about him ... and then during the match you speak to
this player and the player in question insults us. There comes a time where we can no longer
comprehend how this can happen. I'm trying to defend myself a bit without giving names. Otherwise
I'm taking it all [the blame]. It's very frustrating, but I'm 31 and the player concerned is six
years younger than me." The players who fall into that bracket at the club include Robin van
Persie, the Dutch forward and something of a free spirit as an attacking force, as well as Emmanuel
Eboueacute; and Bacary Sagna. Yet Gallas' suggestion that the tete-a-tete had occurred during an
attacking phase of play may be revealing./ppArsegrave;ne Wenger was made aware of the comments
yesterday and, although Gallas is unlikely to be stripped of the captaincy, the Arsenal manager has
not been impressed with the outburst after a difficult few days. Wenger's decision to retain his
compatriot as skipper, rather than pass the armband to Cesc Fagrave;bregas, came as something of a
surprise over the summer./ppThe centre-half's outburst appears born of frustration that Arsenal,
well behind Chelsea and Liverpool in the league, may endure a fourth consecutive season without a
trophy. "I have to win something this year," he said. "Arsenal has to win something. Another season
without a trophy would be a kind of failure."/ppThe loss of Walcott represents a blow. Wenger said
he does not hold the Football Association responsible for the training injury sustained on Tuesday
at the Olympic stadium, with the club considering whether or not to seek compensation, via the FA's
insurers. Thankfully, the 19-year-old's career has not been threatened by this set-back./pp"There
is not concern about that," said the Arsenal manager. "Once the surgery is done and it is solid,
there is no concern at all for the future of Theo Walcott. Not at all."/pdiv style="float: left;
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