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The German worked as a coach under Wenger at Arsenal and believes he will have the bug to get back into the game. Arsenal started life under Unai Emery on Sunday with a 2-0 defeat at home to
Manchester City. Wenger is yet to confirm his next move, keeping his options open for a new job or new path. But Lehmann thinks he has the drive to return to club management. “He’s very
much driven by winning games, and winning trophies,” the German told Sky Sports. “So I very much expect him to show up somewhere at some point." When asked if Wenger is enjoying a
little break, he added: “Only a little one.” Wenger left Arsenal after 22 years in the summer having guided them to three Premier League titles, seven FA Cups and seven Community Shields.
His emotional farewell came after huge fan pressure to step aside having gone since 2004 since the last league title. And Arsenal eventually went for Emery as his successor. The former PSG
and Sevilla boss beat Mikel Arteta and Thierry Henry to the post despite their relationships with the club. He oversaw an overhaul of coaching and playing staff this summer and is hoping for
an upturn in results. Last year Arsenal finished sixth in the Premier League, but he’s been handed a tough start with City followed by Chelsea this coming weekend. Former England manager
Sam Allardyce has already stuck the boot in claiming his tactics for the Premier League opener were stupid. Petr Cech struggled in the passing system and came close to scoring an own goal in
the first half, when he passed it off for a corner. "It is the manager's fault," the former England boss told talkSPORT, when asked about Cech's performance.
"Don't ask somebody to do against Man City what you shouldn't do. You shouldn't play out like that against Manchester City. "What do Manchester City do? They press,
press, press so why do you try and play out when they press, press, press? "Even the Arsenal crowd cheered when he [Cech] dropped one in the opposition's half. "We are getting
obsessed with this stupid 'let's play out from the back, split the centre halves either side of the 18-yard box and go and play from there'… it's utter rubbish to play
like that all of the time. "When you're the best at it [like City] then you can do it."