LONDON: Arsenal manager Arsene Wenger was left furious and frustrated after the Gunners faded away to the embarrassment of a 3-1 hime defeat by his old club Monaco in the second round of the Champions League.

Olivier Giroud, who missed several good chances, was not the only the Arsenal player far below par.

A 25-yard deflected effort from Geoffrey Kondogbia put Monaco ahead on 38 minutes, and after Giroud had spurned another two great chances to pull his side level, former Tottenham striker Dimitar Berbatov crashed in a second on the break.

Substitute Alex Oxlade-Chamberlain, returning from a groin injury, grabbed Arsenal a lifeline in stoppage-time, but as the Gunners went in search of an equaliser, they were dealt a hammer blow in the break again as Yannick Carrasco slotted past David Ospina, and the boos rang out at full-time.

Wenger said: “We were not at the level defensively and we were a bit unlucky as well because the first goal is deflected. On the second and the third goal we were suicidal. It looks like we have lost our nerve and our rationality on the pitch. The heart took over the head and at that level it doesn’t work.

“Our weakness was more down to mentality. We rushed our game, we knew coming back at half-time it was important not to concede a second goal and we were too impatient.”

Physical strength

Wenger added: “Mentally we were not ready or sharp enough to get into this game. We paid for it.

“Monaco are a team who are strong physically with a good physical intensity and we missed the chances. If you look at the number of chances we missed, at that level you cannot afford that.

“We used our hearts more than our brains. The players wanted to do well and come back when it was 2-1. They wanted to come back to 2-2 and forgot their elementary cautiousness.”

Wenger had warned Arsenal against complacency ahead of a tie he insisted was still very much “50/50”, despite his side’s good form in the Barclays Premier League.

“I hope not (that there was complacency),” he said.

“(But) it looks like that when you don’t have that kind of sharpness.

“Football is not down to paper, football is down to performance and on the night Monaco produced a performance and we didn’t.”

Arsenal must now score three goals at the Stade Louis II in Monte Carlo next month, against a team which before this tie had conceded just twice in some 17 matches.

Wenger said: “We have a smaller chance, but no matter how big the chance is we will go for it.

“We need to recover from this disappointment and prepare for the next game (against Everton on Sunday).”

Monaco coach Leonardo Jardim felt his side were rewarded for sticking to their gameplan.

“No one really thought that this result would have been possible, but we achieved it,” he said.

“However, Arsenal are a great side and we are only halfway through this knockout tie.”

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