Wenger: Gunners had a hungover

Wenger: Gunners had a hungover

Published Nov. 26, 2011 7:15 p.m. ET

Thomas Vermaelen's own goal gifted the visitors, who had not won at Arsenal in 25 attempts, the lead on 65 minutes. The Belgian went on to redeem himself when nodding in from close range with seven minutes left, but the Gunners could not conjure up a winner. Wenger believed his squad had shown "a bit of mental and physical fatigue" after their exertions in the midweek victory over Borussia Dortmund which had secured safe passage into the knockout stages. "The positives are we have shown an exceptional spirit and desire, refusal to lose the game," the Arsenal manager said. "You could see many players were on the fringe, and that we had not completely digested the Champions League game on Wednesday night. "We needed to dig deep, the circumstances in the game went against us because the moment when Fulham scored they were not crossing halfway a lot. "We scored an own goal at a moment when it was all us, earlier in the season, we could have lost this game, but we came back. "It is disappointing because we dropped two points, but at least it keeps our unbeaten run going." Wenger added: "We had a bit of mental and physical fatigue because we had not completely recovered from the Champions League game, and that happens sometimes. "We lacked a bit of accuracy in our passing. "However, we still had the potential to win, early on in the game we could have scored." The Gunners boss, though, insisted their European game should not be used as an excuse. He said: "We gave a lot on Wednesday night, and it is a short amount of time to play again. "But it is not an excuse, it is an explanation. "We want to be in the Champions League, so we can not cry when we are tired. "Our challenge is to win these types of games even when we are tired." Despite the onslaught of Arsenal's pressure, Fulham continued to defend resolutely - before snatching the lead on 65 minutes. Gunners midfielder Mikel Arteta thought he had been fouled, but play continued, and Danny Murphy chipped the ball into the box. John Arne Riise collected the pass on his chest, which then saw the ball bounce on the penalty spot before being scuffed back past Wojciech Szczesny into the far corner by the retreating Belgian. Arsenal had to step things up, and were denied an equaliser when Fulham keeper Mark Schwarzer - once a target for the Gunners - clawed away a goal-bound header from Johan Djourou after a corner. The home side finally were level when Vermaelen redeemed himself with a close-range downwards header on 83 minutes after Theo Walcott's cross from the right. Both Gervinho and then Walcott should have produced better finishes when weaving into the box instead of shooting tamely at the keeper. Robin van Persie hit the sidenetting when through down the right, and despite all of their late pressure, the Gunners had to make do with just a point. Fulham may have failed to improve their terrible away form with a rare win, but Cottagers boss Martin Jol feels his team can still take a lot of credit from today's battling display. He said: "A draw for us is a satisfying result. "In the first half, we had 50/50 possession, with seven attempts on goal. "But we could not play our football in the last 15 minutes. "We tried to pass it and get it to the front players, but to get three points, you have to do a bit more." Jol added: "Arsenal had played a difficult game in the Champions League this week, but you still have to work hard against them, because they have a winning mentality and showed that in the second half when they were 1-0 down, they did everything to score. "But with their form over the past six weeks, a draw is pleasing for us."

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