Arsenal will need to show consistency in their final seven Premier League matches if they are to qualify for next season’s Champions League, manager Arsene Wenger has said.
The North London club have seven games to go, are seventh in the league and seven points behind fourth-placed Manchester City, who have played one more game than them.
“We have to fight like mad to win our games,” the Frenchman told a news conference before they host 15th-placed Leicester City in the league on Wednesday (9.45pm).
Wenger has led his side to a top-four finish every season since joining the club in 1996.
“The door is open but it demands a consistency from us,” Wenger said.
“It is still possible, but we need a near perfect run-in. We need to keep the level of desire and hunger for every game of the season.”
The British media reported on Monday that French club Marseille are looking to sign Arsenal striker Olivier Giroud at the end of the season.
Wenger, however, said he had heard no such thing and the 30-year-old France international signed a contract in January which keeps him at the Emirates until 2020.
“I have had no approach from Marseille, and we want to keep Olivier Giroud at the club.”
The 67-year-old Wenger, whose own contract expires at the end of the season, gave no updates on his future but said he was evaluating transfer targets for Arsenal’s next campaign.
“Yes, of course. I work until the last day of the season for the present and the future.
“What happens with me is a bit secondary, what is important is the future of the club.”
As for champions Leicester, the Foxes should be able to hold on to their key players as they prepare for the upcoming season without European football, rather than just selling them off, manager Craig Shakespeare has said.
With striker Jamie Vardy and winger Riyadh Mahrez, midfielder Danny Drinkwater and goalkeeper Kasper Schmeichel tied down with long-term contracts, Shakespeare believes he has no reason to worry about key players leaving at the end of the campaign.
“We have said before we don’t want to be a selling club,” Shakespeare told reporters.
“All the players are happy here. They are a very unique group. We have created something here which is quite special, so they have said they are quite happy.
“I have no problems with players being ambitious, but they are at a good club here and get looked after well.”
Shakespeare, who took charge from Claudio Ranieri in February for the rest of the season, said a decision is yet to be made on his future but the board has involved him in its pre-season and recruitment plans for the next campaign.
“I am in charge of pre-season. I have had one meeting about recruitment, which I really enjoyed,” he added.
“We need to make sure we get enough points to stay in the league first, and the time will come to sit down.”
Shakespeare has led Leicester to five league victories in their last seven games, moving the club six points clear of the relegation zone.