Van Persie looks on bright side
Arsenal forward Robin van Persie believes the Gunners have an advantage over Manchester United in the Premier League title race.
Arsenal have crashed out of the Champions League and FA Cup since their Carling Cup final defeat to Birmingham, with their season now resting wholly on their success in the Premier League.
Although Saturday's 2-2 draw at West Brom meant they lost more ground on the leaders, mathematically Arsene Wenger's men are still in the driving seat.
However, while nine straight victories from here on in - including their game in hand at arch-rivals Tottenham and when United come to the Emirates Stadium on May 1 - would secure a first championship since 2004, there is now also no more margin for error to keep things firmly in their own hands.
Van Persie - who took his season's tally to 15 goals with a late equaliser at The Hawthorns, where Arsenal had trailed 2-0 - believes with no other fixtures to distract them, the Gunners can deliver that long-overdue trophy.
Speaking to the Dutch edition of Goal.com, the Holland striker said: "It is a real blow that we threw away three trophies within the space of only three weeks. However, we still have another big objective and that is winning the Premier League title.
"We are five points behind Manchester United but have a game in hand, so we can narrow the gap to two points.
"It is actually an advantage that we are no longer active in other competitions, so we won't get distracted.
"We still have everything in our own hands and will do our utmost to win the league title, even though we have been dealt a few big blows in recent weeks."
Van Persie was controversially sent off in the Nou Camp for being shown a yellow card after shooting on goal just one second after Swiss referee Massimo Busacca had blown for offside - a whistle the Arsenal striker claimed he could not hear.
Both Gunners boss Wenger and midfielder Samir Nasri received one-match bans from UEFA for confronting the official at the end of the game.
Arsenal confirmed on Tuesday morning that they will decide early next week whether to appeal, with the UEFA report detailing the reasoning behind the bans expected by the end of this week. The Gunners have three days from receiving that report in which to lodge their intent to appeal.
Van Persie, though, does not want to dwell on the past.
"This is football. I don't feel like our loss was an injustice. These kinds of things are all part of the game," he said.
"Birmingham beat us in the final, but then lost the following four league games. The Premier League has been absolutely crazy this year.
"I hope that we learned something from the lost final, but you never know whether you actually did.
"When something goes wrong the first time, it doesn't necessarily mean that it will go better the next time."
Van Persie is one of 14 from Wenger's squad set to be away during the international break, with midfielders Aaron Ramsey and Jack Wilshere likely to face off against each other when Wales host England on Saturday.
Captain Cesc Fabregas, England winger Theo Walcott and midfielder Alex Song are all expected back from injury when Arsenal resume their title challenge at home to Blackburn on April 2.