Arsene Wenger praised Gervinho's
dazzling performance after the Ivorian forward inspired Arsenal's 4-1
demolition of struggling Reading. Starting for the first time since
December after falling out of favour, and then representing his country
at the CAF Africa Cup of Nations in South Africa, the 25-year-old scored
in the first half at the Emirates Stadium before turning provider after
the break for Santi Cazorla and Olivier Giroud.
A Mikel Arteta
penalty after Hal Robson-Kanu had pulled one back for the visitors
rounded off the win for fifth-placed Arsenal to leave them just two
points behind Chelsea and four behind Tottenham in the quest for a
top-four finish. Wenger admitted he was delighted with Gervinho's attacking contribution after a difficult 18 months since his arrival in north London from Lille.
"He was always dangerous and looked always like he could score," Wenger said. "I believe sometimes that Gervinho
has lost confidence because he played in a very negative atmosphere
during a period. Strikers need confidence and his game even more. When
you lose confidence that is a dangerous game.
"But when he has that back he is a very dangerous player. At the African Nations Cup he was the best striker there."
Arsene Wenger, Arsenal manager on his side's UEFA Champions League qualification hopes
From the moment Gervinho
tapped home Cazorla's cross in the 11th minute, there was only going to
be one winner in this match. Reading had lost their last six in all
competitions and should have been out of contention by half-time after
Arsenal missed a hatful of chances.
Cazorla's precise curled finish from a Gervinho
pass two minutes after the break finally gave them the second goal they
deserved and another assist enabled Giroud to put the game out of
sight.
Robson-Kanu did pull one back with a diving header from Jobi McAnuff's cross, but a Arteta
penalty, when substitute Alex Oxlade-Chamberlain was brought down,
rounded off a miserable afternoon for new Reading manager Nigel Adkins,
who saw his new side sink to the bottom of the table on goal difference.
Arsenal's
third successive victory ensured they still have a good chance of
securing UEFA Champions League football for a 16th successive season
under Wenger. However the French manager warned they still have plenty
of work to do if they are to finish ahead of one or both of Chelsea and
Tottenham.
"What we do is we look at the table and we are still
behind Chelsea and Tottenham," he said. "I'm not in a calculating mood
but we have to win our next game and keep doing what we have been doing.
We are on a run so let's take care of ourselves and after we will see
where we stand. It will be less predictable than it was predicted.
"Let's
take care of the way we play and take care of our spirit. But we have
the experience and we have done it before and that's what we want to do
again. I'm sure we will but it demands a lot of dedication and nerves
until the end."
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