Arsene Wenger responded to Tony Adams’ criticisms of his coaching by challenging his former captain to prove how good a manager he is instead.

Adams said that Wenger, under whom he won two Premier League titles and two FA Cups, “could not coach his way out of a paper bag”. The former Arsenal captain also said that Wenger did not want him to return to Arsenal in a coaching capacity.

Wenger said at his Friday morning press conference that former players did not have a “divine right” to return to the club in coaching roles, which should be awarded on merit.

Arsenal summer transfer targets Show all 6 1 /6 Arsenal summer transfer targets Arsenal summer transfer targets Thomas Lemar (Monaco) Age: 21

Position: Left-wing

Likelihood: 5/10



After their eye-catching run to the semi-finals of the Champions League, Monaco are being gutted by European football’s elite. One of their many bright young things is Lemar, who would slot right into Alexis Sanchez’s left-sided role at Arsenal should the Chilean leave the Emirates this summer. The problem? Monaco are not selling, or at least not for Arsenal’s reported initial offer of £30.75m. Getty Arsenal summer transfer targets Kylian Mbappé (Monaco) Age: 18

Position: Left/right-wing

Likelihood: 3/10



Another Monaco player, Mbappé is one of the hottest properties in Europe and is perhaps a surprise inclusion on the list, with many expecting the teenager to move to Real Madrid, if anywhere, this summer. Arsène Wenger is said to have struck up something of an accord with the lightning quick winger’s family and harbours hopes of convincing Thierry Henry’s rightful heir that north London is the best place for his development. Getty Arsenal summer transfer targets Riyad Mahrez (Leicester) Age: 26

Position: Right-wing

Likelihood: 4/10



It is no secret that Wenger is a long-time admirer of Mahrez, whose stock has fallen somewhat following that remarkable title-winning campaign with Leicester City in 2015/16. While some of Europe’s top clubs were hovering around the Algerian this time last year, the coast is now relatively clear. The only worry is whether Mahrez can recreate the scintillating form he began to show two years ago. Getty Arsenal summer transfer targets Jean Michaël Seri (Nice) Age: 25

Position: Centre-midfield

Likelihood: 5/10



Seri was one of Nice’s stand-out players during their surprise challenge for the Ligue 1 title last term. If Santi Cazorla’s injury woes continue into the new season, the Cote d’Ivoire international could prove to be an ideal replacement, but his performances in the south of France have not gone unnoticed. Roma, Southampton, Tottenham and Leicester have all been keeping tabs on the midfielder. Getty Arsenal summer transfer targets Mario Lemina (Juventus) Age: 23

Position: Centre-midfield

Likelihood: 3/10



Gabon international Lemina is in search of regular playing time away from Turin, where he has struggled to establish himself in Max Allegri’s first-choice XI. “I want to play more,” he said in June. “I think it's right for me to play more, find a club capable of giving me more space. At 23 I want to show what I can do.” Could he find the minutes he needs in north London? At the moment, there seems to be little concrete about Arsenal’s reported ‘interest’. Getty Arsenal summer transfer targets Aleksandr Golovin (CSKA Moscow) Age: 21

Position: Centre-midfield

Likelihood: 2/10



Another midfielder whose name has been bandied around in the gossip columns this summer, but with few solid leads for transfer-hungry supporters to pursue. Any deal for the talented CSKA Moscow academy graduate would likely involve him being loaned back to his current club, if indeed any such deal is likely at all. Getty

But Wenger pointed out that now Adams is manager of Granada, he has the opportunity to show what a good coach he is himself. Adams has lost all six of his matches in charge of Granada so far.

“He can show what he can do now,” said Wenger, before trying to brush the issue off. “Who gives importance to that? I know him for a long time. It’s sad.”

Adams worked with the Arsenal Under-18s last summer, following Thierry Henry’s departure, before moving on to be sporting director of Chongqing Lifan FC in the Chinese Super League. Adams then moved on to Granada and Wenger was surprised by his claim that he had not been wanted at Arsenal.

“We had him here to work for a while with the youth team,” Wenger explained. “He decided to go to China and now he is in Granada.”

Wenger then argued at length that he was not duty-bound to employ all legendary former Arsenal players in club roles, and that those players had no special right to walk into big jobs. Being manager means employing the best people, not the most famous ones.

“I just think at a football club you want people to help you do the job,” Wenger said. “You have to employ people who can help you to be successful. And sometimes [the job] is to make harsh decisions.”

Wenger has been especially criticised for not employing Patrick Vieira and Thierry Henry, criticisms which he effectively responded to. “If I leave tomorrow Arsenal Football Club I have no right to come back, because I have worked here,” Wenger said. “You have to be needed. If you have made a career as a player somewhere, it doesn’t give you any divine right to come back. Because all the players, at some stage, they decide to leave, when their interest was to leave. It is not like some players have never left the club. When it was their interest to go somewhere else, they went somewhere else.”

Wenger has been criticised for not keeping Henry at Arsenal (Getty)

Ultimately Wenger did not want to get drawn into too many criticisms of his famous former captain. “I am respectful to everybody,” Wenger said. “I don’t have anything to say about that. For me it’s a subject of no interest. And so I would like to dedicate my time to something that is more interesting.”

Wenger did not especially want to talk about the other big topic either, the fact that Sunday’s game against Everton will be the last league match of his current Arsenal contract. Wenger still has not signed an extension and while he is widely expected to, he continued to insist that his only focus was on the next game.

There will be a board meeting after the FA Cup final one week on Saturday, which will finalise Wenger’s future. An announcement will follow at the end of this month or the start of June.

“I am really on the short-term,” Wenger said. “I am focused to win the next game. And after that, what happens, happens. All the rest at the moment is not in my mind. I’m just focussed on doing my job until the end of my contract.”

This means compartmentalising, and not thinking about anything beyond his immediate priorities, but Wenger says that he can do that.