Manager Arsene Wenger has admitted using "too many experienced
players" after Alex Oxlade-Chamberlain and Theo Walcott were injured in
Arsenal's 3-0 League Cup loss at Sheffield Wednesday.
Walcott replaced Oxlade-Chamberlain but left the field on 18 minutes and both will have scans on muscular injuries.
The Gunners boss said the injuries to both forwards were a "big blow".
"We are short now with the injuries," added the 66-year-old Frenchman, who has six other first-team players out.
"I have to manage the workload of the players and at the end of the day I still think I maybe brought too many experienced players here."
The FA Cup holders barely threatened as goals from Ross Wallace, Lucas Joao and Sam Hutchinson sent the Championship side into the quarter-finals.
Wenger said he would have "loved" to have won the tie but, referring to his growing injury list, he added: "With the squad we have got now, we cannot keep in all the competitions."
Arsenal's injury concerns |
|
---|---|
Aaron Ramsey (hamstring - end of November return) |
Tomas Rosicky (knee - unknown return) |
Jack Wilshere (leg - unknown return) |
David Ospina (thigh - January return) |
Danny Welbeck (knee - Christmas) |
Theo Walcott |
Mikel Arteta (ankle - unknown) |
Alex Oxlade-Chamberlain |
But Wenger said the level was "too high" for the younger players he selected.
Midfielder Glen Kamara and forward Alex Iwobi - both 19 - made full debuts in the last-16 tie, while 17-year-olds Ismael Bennacer and Kristian Bielik came off the bench.
"They are not ready to play at this level," said Wenger. "We lost two players and after that I had Gabriel and Nacho Monreal on the bench but I couldn't bring them on because I couldn't afford to lose any more players."
Wenger also called the latest injuries "damaging" as his side - second in the Premier League - travel to Swansea City on Saturday before a key Champions League game at Bayern Munich four days later.
Defeat at Hillsborough ended a four-game winning run for the Gunners, who have not won the League Cup since 1993, when they beat Wednesday 2-1 in the final.
"They were faster, sharper and more decisive than us," added Wenger. "We could not create anything. We were very naive when defending."
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