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BURNLEY: This has been a season of unrelenting surprises in the English Premier League and has the shock therapy been more acutely felt than Arsenal.
Arsene Wenger's side has lurched from the sublime to the ridiculous with bewildering frequency this term, its inconsistency indicative of a division which has shed much of its reputation for predictability.
From title race deadbeats two weeks ago, after a home defeat by Chelsea, Arsenal now find themselves grasping eagerly at a lifeline thrown by their rivals.
An 11-point deficit has been slashed to six, courtesy of Chelsea and Manchester United leaking unexpected points, and Arsenal still have a home game against Bolton in hand.
The north Londoners have done their bit too, of course.
Another victory at Burnley on Wednesday and the talk of a genuine title challenge would swell from quiet murmurs to an excited chatter.
Wenger is already struggling to contain himself.
"We feel that we have sent out a message to all the people who wrote us off after we were beaten at home by Chelsea," the Frenchman said.
"We have got ourselves back very close to the leaders - just six points away from Chelsea with a game in hand.
"We have come back at them in a very short space of time since they beat us in late November. Even I did not expect that to happen. We have shown we have mental strength. For us, we are back into contention following the other results from Saturday."
On the face of it, there can be no arguing with that assessment. Yet the sceptics who discounted Arsenal from the championship race will not be penning their apology letters just yet.
For all Arsenal's upturn in form, the doubts remain: can a defense which has kept just three clean sheets in its last 15 games really serve as a solid foundation for a title tilt? Can a team expecting to win the league seriously invest all of its faith in a goalkeeper, Manuel Almunia, whose confidence appears to have imploded?
And, most pressingly of all, how can Wenger hope to cope without Robin van Persie?
The Dutchman is out for the next five months with ankle ligament damage that required surgery and Arsenal's options in his absence are thin. Andrey Arshavin has been deployed as a lone central striker in the past two Premier League games and, while he has scored in both, it still smacks of a short-term measure.
The Russian does not enjoy a role which can often leave him isolated and pining for possession.
The imminent return of Nicklas Bendtner from injury will provide some more beef to a forward line overburdened with small, scampering forwards but the Dane, while much improved since his hapless early days at Arsenal, is simply not in van Persie's class.
The trip to Turf Moor will serve as a litmus test of Wenger's ability to find solutions. The aversion of his team to north-western outposts such as this is well known but it cannot afford a slip-up against Owen Coyle's side, which has lost some of its early-season swagger in recent weeks.
The Clarets have failed to win any of their past five matches and, remarkably, were subjected to the odd jeer by disgruntled home fans after the 1-1 draw with Fulham last weekend.
That provides proof of how expectations have sky-rocketed in east Lancashire.
AFP