Mikel Arteta: Arsenal appoint ex-captain as head coach
Last updated on .From the section Arsenal
Arsenal have appointed their former captain Mikel Arteta as head coach on a three-and-a-half-year deal.
The 37-year-old won the FA Cup twice in a five-year career with the Gunners and succeeds fellow Spaniard Unai Emery, who was sacked in November.
Arteta had been working as a coach under Pep Guardiola at Manchester City, joining the club in 2016 after retiring as a player.
"We need to be competing for the top trophies in the game," Arteta said.
"That's been made very clear to me in my discussions with [owners] Stan and Josh Kroenke and the senior people from the club."
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He will take over as Gunners boss on Sunday, leaving Freddie Ljungberg in interim charge for the trip to Everton - another of Arteta's former clubs - on Saturday (12:30 GMT kick-off).
Arsenal are 10th in the Premier League with 22 points, seven points adrift of fourth-placed Chelsea and a potential Champions League qualifying place.
"We all know there is a lot of work to be done to achieve that but I am confident we'll do it," added Arteta.
"I'm realistic enough to know it won't happen overnight, but the current squad has plenty of talent and there is a great pipeline of young players coming through from the academy."
Arsenal's head of football Raul Sanllehi said the Premier League club met "several top-class candidates" before choosing Arteta as Emery's replacement.
"Mikel stood out to every single one of us as the perfect person for us," he said.
Arteta's coaching team has not yet been announced.
Ljungberg has won once in five matches since being appointed on a caretaker basis on 29 November, and the Swede called for some clarity on the situation after Sunday's 3-0 home defeat by champions Manchester City.
The Gunners have now gone six games without a win at Emirates Stadium, their longest run without a home victory since 1995. Arsenal are seven points behind fourth-placed Chelsea, after five victories in 17 matches this season.
Former midfielder Arteta, who made 150 appearances for the Gunners between 2011 and 2016 and captained the side, was linked with replacing Arsene Wenger at the Emirates in 2018 before the club appointed Emery.
Before joining Arsenal, Arteta spent six years at Everton, making 209 appearances. The Toffees are without a permanent manager since Marco Silva was dismissed on 6 December and also showed interest in the Spaniard.
Earlier in his career, Arteta spent two years at Scottish Premiership side Rangers before joining Real Sociedad in 2004.
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It would be good if Arsenal fans / real football fans give him a proper chance and don’t start sniping from the get-go.
The worst owner.
This is not a family club at all.
These lads turn up to get paid and thats it.
Good luck with this one Arteta!!
As a player he was miles ahead of anyone on the pitch in terms of being able to read a match. He's had a good tutelage under Pep, hopefully he can deliver and stand on his own two feet.
TIME TO GO KROENKE YOU FRAUD
I think you may need it.
As we've seen before, anything else just undermines the confidence of the team and makes us into a laughing stock.
Come on Arteta!!
The fact that Emery, Freddie failed to halt the slide - and maybe Arteta will fail too, who knows - doesn't mean Arsenal fans "should have been careful what they wished for" when Wenger was removed...
...Arsenal were on the slide for 4/5 years prior to Wenger's departure so in all likelihood would probably have continued on that trajectory even if he had stayed.