Arsene Wenger’s future is once again the centre of widespread debate for Arsenal supporters, who remain torn on whether the Frenchman in the right man to continue as the club’s manager.

With Arsenal’s wait for another Premier League trophy almost certain to stretch to a 13th season, fans are growing increasingly frustrated at the Emirates Stadium, where banners have once again appeared among supporters calling for Wenger to leave.

The north London club remain in the hunt for a top four finish, but with a 12-point gap to Premier League leaders Chelsea, their hopes of top-flight success are all but over. Though the club remain in the FA Cup and Champions League, European success is highly unlikely, and there’s no guarantee that winning back the FA Cup will feel like a successful season for the Gunners.

Wenger has spoken openly about his contract situation, with the club offering him a two-year extension that he is yet to agree to. He said last week that he will go with his “gut” feeling, but there appears to be a growing clamour for Wenger to end his 20-year reign at the end of his current deal.

The problem Arsenal have is that Wenger’s potential successor is not clear yet, with many names being thrown into the hat each time his contract gets close to expiring. Here, we look at the candidates that could take Wenger’s side.

Arsenal candidates to replace Arsene Wenger Show all 11 1 /11 Arsenal candidates to replace Arsene Wenger Arsenal candidates to replace Arsene Wenger Joachim Löw Age: 58

Current club: German national team

Honours: Austrian Bundesliga, 2001/02

Fifa World Cup, 2014

Fifa Confederations Cup, 2017 Getty Arsenal candidates to replace Arsene Wenger Mikel Arteta Age: 35

Current club: Manchester City Getty Arsenal candidates to replace Arsene Wenger Brendan Rodgers Age: 44

Current club: Celtic

Honours: Championship playoffs

Scottish League Cup

Scottish Premiership Getty Arsenal candidates to replace Arsene Wenger Leonardo Jardim Age: 42

Current club: Monaco

Honours: Segunda Liga

Superleague Greece

Greek Cup

Ligue 1 Getty Arsenal candidates to replace Arsene Wenger Patrick Vieira Age: 40

Current club: New York City FC

Honours: None Arsenal candidates to replace Arsene Wenger Diego Simeone Age: 47

Current club: Atletico Madrid

Honours: Argentine Primera Division x2 (Estudiantes de La Plata and River Plate)

La Liga

Copa del Rey

Spanish Supercup

Europa League

Uefa Super Cup Getty Arsenal candidates to replace Arsene Wenger Domenico Tedesco Age: 32

Current club: Schalke Bongarts/Getty Images Arsenal candidates to replace Arsene Wenger Massimiliano Allegri Age: 49

Current club: Juventus

Honours: Serie C1 (Sassuolo)

Serie A x3 (AC Milan, 2x Juventus)

Italian Super Cup x 2 (AC Milan, Juventus)

Coppa Italia x 2 (Juventus) Getty Arsenal candidates to replace Arsene Wenger Thomas Tuchel Age: 44

Current club: Free agent

Honours: DFB-Pokal Getty Arsenal candidates to replace Arsene Wenger Luis Enrique Age: 47

Current club: Free agent

Honours: La Liga x2 Copa del Rey x3 Supercopa de Espana Champions League Super Cup Club World Cup Getty Arsenal candidates to replace Arsene Wenger Carlo Ancelotti Age: 58

Current club: Free agent Intertoto Cup (Juventus) Serie A (AC Milan) Coppa Italia (Ac Milan) Supercoppa Italiana (AC Milan) Champions League x3 (AC Milan x2, Real Madrid) Super Cup x2 (AC Milan) Club World Cup (AC Milan) Premier League (Chelsea) FA Cup (Chelsea) Ligue 1 (Paris Saint-Germain) Copa del Rey (Real Madrid) Bundesliga (Bayern Munich) DFL Supercup x2 (Bayern Munich) Bongarts/Getty Images

Diego Simeone

Certainly the best manager who might be available this summer. Simeone’s contract lasts until the summer of 2018 and there is no prospect of him extending it. He could even leave this summer, one year early, if he finally wins the Champions League after two devastating final defeats to Real Madrid in 2014 and 2016. In taking his team to those two finals, as well as winning La Liga in 2013-14, Simeone has worked miracles at Atletico. No manager this century has overachieved more obviously than him.

But he is likely to want to complete his final year in Madrid and his preferred destination if he were to leave is Internazionale, where he played at his peak in the late 1990s. He has no experience of English football and while that is not a barrier to him succeeding here, winning in the Premier League is not his top priority yet.

Eddie Howe

If Arsenal are committed to going British then Howe is the obvious candidate. He has taken Bournemouth all the way up from League Two to the Premier League, and has done so playing attractive, enterprising football. He would be a natural fit with the professed playing philosophy of the club and would need no time to adapt to English football.

What Howe would need though is time to adapt to coaching a big club. Managing top players is different and the fact that Howe has achieved so much with players he had in League One could even count against him. Could he persuade Mesut Ozil and Alexis Sanchez to stay? Or find world-class replacements for them if they left? He would surely need to prove himself in the top half before stepping up.

Eddie Howe has been linked with replacing Wenger (Getty)

Max Allegri

If Arsenal want a manager who has proved that he can win titles with big clubs, Max Allegri is an obvious pick. He won Serie A with Milan and is now on his way to a third straight scudetto with Juventus. He has taken on the team that Antonio Conte built and even did what he could not, taking them to the 2015 Champions League final, only to lose to Barcelona.

Allegri is a canny man-manager and tactician but ultimately he may be like his compatriot Carlo Ancelotti, a good manager of top players rather than a dynamic team-builder. He could improve Arsenal but may not provide the serious change of direction they need at the top.

Thomas Tuchel

The man who replaced Jurgen Klopp at Borussia Dortmund in 2015 has a similar commitment to aggressive pressing football. He joined after impressing at Mainz, guiding them to their best-ever Bundesliga finish and taking them into Europe. He is now trying to revive Dortmund with young players after so many of the top players have been sold in the last five years.

Tuchel is a very different person from Klopp, lacking his explosive charisma, but has a much more studious approach. He is close friends with Pep Guardiola and greatly admired by the Manchester City manager, who sees him as the next best manager in Europe after Antonio Conte. Tuchel speaks perfect English and his contract expires in 2018. He ticks more boxes to replace Wenger than most.

Thomas Tuchel could be the next Bundesliga manager to head to the Premier League (Getty)

Roger Schmidt

Like Tuchel and Klopp, Schmidt is another follower of legendary German coach Ralf Rangnick. His aggressive pressing football has been very successful first at Red Bull Salzburg and now at Bayer Leverkusen. His Leverkusen team beat Tottenham Hotspur at Wembley in November, out-doing even Mauricio Pochettino’s with their energy and speed.

Schmidt has plenty of admirers in England and has been offered Premier League jobs before, only to choose to stay in Germany. But he is well known at Arsenal too and would fit naturally into the role. There may be some concerns, though, that he is not won any bigger trophies than the Austrian league.

Ralph Hasenhuttl