Less than three weeks into the season and the Gunners are already feeling the pinch amid a rocky, injury-ridden start.
Influential
midfielders Mathieu Flamini and Aliaksandr Hleb have left the club,
while Spanish superstar Cesc Fabregas tops an injury list as long as
Liverpool's title drought.
Last weekend's loss to Fulham sent
warning sparks flying around North London, and many have called for
Wenger to spend big on quality reinforcements.
But the Frenchman
dismissed the notion that parting with large amounts of cash would
instantly solve all the club's on-field problems.
He said in The Sun:
“I hate the idea that, whenever we have a bad game, the solution is to
go out and buy. I don’t know why we’re always under pressure to buy
£30million or £40m players.
“I am not impressed by big names. I am only impressed by attitude and quality. All the rest is just hype.
“So
if Chelsea buy Robinho, frankly, what can we do about it? The answer is
not to look at what Chelsea, Manchester United or Liverpool are doing.
“I’m
not interested in comparing names. I focus on my own players, not the
other teams. The squad we have has enough quality and strength to win
the Champions League.”
But despite the former Monaco manager's
assurances to the contrary, there is no doubt that his team looks
rather light through the middle of the park.
The departures of
Gilberto Silva and Flamini earlier in the summer, and of Lassana Diarra
in January, have left the likes of Denilson and Abou Diaby - youngsters
both - to pick up the slack in central midfield.
Hence, a host
of seasoned stars, such as Xabi Alonso and Gareth Barry, have been
linked with a move to the Emirates to take up the role as Fabregas'
anchor.
And while Wenger confessed he is on the lookout for another signing, he reiterated that expense does not guarantee quality.
“If
I can find one more player before the transfer deadline, I will take
him. But one more player will not make that much difference,” he
continued.
“A good player is not necessarily linked with the
price. It is getting harder to buy the right players but the market is
still there.
“At the moment, we are struggling to find the right player.
"If we don’t get him, we’re still strong enough to deal with all the competitions.”