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Arsène Wenger will not sell Theo Walcott before the transfer deadline even if the winger has not agreed to fresh terms at Arsenal.
Walcott's future has been under the spotlight as he has entered the
final 12 months of his contract and negotiations have stalled over a new
deal.
The club had suggested to Walcott that if he did not agree
to their proposal of a long-term contract worth £75,000 a week, as he
has not, they would move him on before Friday night's cut-off.
Manchester City are most prominent among his admirers while Liverpool
have also shown an interest. Chelsea wanted him at the start of the
summer but they have since signed a clutch of attacking midfielders.
Walcott's
relationship with Arsenal has been close to breaking point, and he was
so frustrated on Sunday when he was dropped from the starting line-up
away to Stoke City that he came to see the end of his
six-and-a-half-year career at the club. He feared that his non-selection
represented a political statement from them.
Wenger had a meeting
with Walcott on Wednesday, with the chief executive Ivan Gazidis
present, at which he attempted to repair the recent damage. The manager
told Walcott he wanted the contractual talks to resume and the closure
of the summer transfer window would not represent a definitive deadline for them.
Wenger
and Gazidis are taking a risk in allowing Walcott to enter September
without an agreement in place but they have come to reason that it is a
calculated one as they know that the player wants to stay.
Walcott's
case is different to those of Samir Nasri and Robin van Persie, who
left Arsenal with less than 12 months to run on their contracts. Nasri,
who moved to City last August, and Van Persie, who joined Manchester
United two weeks ago, wanted to leave the club and forced their
departures after making it clear they would not consider extensions to
their deals.
Walcott has said in public he wants to stay and
reiterated it to Wenger during the meeting on Wednesday . Wenger's
knowledge of Walcott's intentions has allowed him to sound bullish when
questioned about the 23-year-old's future while he might also have been
reassured by his professionalism and commitment. Walcott reported for
pre-season training on 19 July and he travelled, two days later, on the
club's tour of the Far East, when other Euro 2012 players were stood
down.
"We want to extend Theo's contract and to keep him at the
club but you need not only our desire; his desire is also right," Wenger
said, last Friday. "He wants to stay and we need to find an agreement.
We have so many players in midfield and on the flanks but Theo is a very
important player for me. I hope he will stay and that's it."
The
sticking point has been the money, even if Walcott is not a
money-motivated person. To him, it has become a question of self-worth
and being paid his market value which, he feels, is £100,000 a week. He
might look at the £55,000 a week that Arsenal have paid to the reserve
striker Nicklas Bendtner and reason that the offer of £75,000 a week
which is on the table is not sufficient.
Walcott can look around
and see his England colleague James Milner, for example, being paid
£90,000 a week at City. He knows City and Liverpool would give him
£100,000 a week; City would pay much more. Walcott is the poster-boy for
Arsenal's ventures in the Far East and while the club are happy to
profit from his image, it feels a little incongruous that they do not
appear to have factored his commercial worth into their wage offer.
One
of the surprising things about the situation and the way that it
threatened to turn ugly has been the speed at which Arsenal conducted
the negotiations. The club's transfer fixer Dick Law only opened the
talks at the beginning of the month and he has had discussions on two
further occasions, most recently last Friday.
The negotiations are
set to continue, after the alarm of the past days, and the longer the
new contract remains unsigned, the more the power would appear to rest
with Walcott. The on-going issue is likely to dominate Wenger's
briefingon Thursday, ahead of Sunday's Premier League match at
Liverpool.
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