Djourou out for rest of season
Djourou was injured in the second half of the FA Cup quarter-final at Old Trafford as he almost turned Wayne Rooney's cross into his own net. The 24-year-old took a nasty blow in reaching for the ball when team-mate Bacary Sagna crashed into him and eventually left the field on a stretcher after extensive treatment. "Unfortunately we have lost Djourou now for the rest of the season," Arsene Wenger confirmed after the 2-0 defeat which leaves the Gunners with just the Premier League to play for this season. Djourou's injury was a gloomy postscript to a shattering fortnight for Arsenal. Two weeks ago Gunners supporters were talking optimistically of an unprecedented quadruple. Defeats to Birmingham and Barcelona in the Carling Cup final and Champions League respectively wrecked that dream, and goals from Fabio and Wayne Rooney either side of the break at Old Trafford now leave Arsenal with only the Premier League title to play for. "I cannot fault our effort but things do not go our way at present," Wenger said. "We have lost three big challenges in a strange way. "One in the last minute with a goal from nowhere, one under very strange circumstances in Barcelona and today in a match where we were not outplayed but were punished by a team that was more clinical than us." Wenger is trying to maintain an air of positivity but felt the hangover from the disappointment of Tuesday's defeat at the Nou Camp was still present in too many of his players' performances. "Subconsciously I feel the disappointment of Tuesday played a part in the game," he said. "You could see something has gone, not in our effort or attitude, but confidence-wise. "But I don't feel like the season is slipping away. I believe we can do it. It is a good test for us now to show we can regroup and show the mental strength and togetherness quickly. "We will have to answer this kind of question in the next two or three weeks. We have to show we have an answer. "We are used to being questioned. We have to show we are strong enough to deal with it."