Arsene Wenger’s running feud with a section of his team’s fans showed little sign of abating after Tuesday’s FA Cup win over Hull City, with the Arsenal manager saying he had nothing to fear after supporters unveiled a banner urging him to quit.
Arsenal breezed past Hull 4-0 to reach the last eight and keep their bid for a first FA Cup hat-trick since Blackburn Rovers in the 1880s alive, but some supporters remain unhappy with the manager amid a faltering league campaign.
Fans at the Hull game unfurled a banner that said, “Arsene, thanks for the memories but it’s time to say goodbye,” provoking a defiant response from the Frenchman. “I don’t care,” Wenger told reporters after the game. “Look at the history of the club… and you will see that I have nothing to be scared of. I do not want to speak about that because it is always the same story. It is enough now.” Arsenal are third in the table, eight points behind leaders Leicester City and three behind derby rivals Tottenham Hotspur, after a run of three Premier League games without a win.
They also face elimination from the Champions League at the last-16 stage for the sixth year in a row unless they can overturn a 2-0 first-leg deficit when they travel to Barcelona next week, but Wenger insisted the team would keep fighting. “We judge the season afterwards and I’m quite amazed so many people judge it so early,” he added. “We have not given up anywhere and you will see that in the coming weeks. This club has been in a much worse position than it is today.”