Disappointment haunts Arteta at Arsenal and the management supports him

Arsenal coach Mikel Arteta is disappointed with his side's shaky performance this season but has the club's board of directors supporting it as it tries to change the team's fortunes.

Arsenal beat London rivals Chelsea 3-1 on Saturday to claim their first Premier League victory in nearly two months and end a series of seven games without a win.

Arteta breathed a sigh of relief with this victory, and the 15th-placed team will strive to build on this performance when they meet stumbling teams in the coming days, starting with Brighton & Hove Albion, 16th-place, tomorrow, Tuesday.

"We suffered a lot in the past few weeks from the decline in results. I personally suffered. I feel a great responsibility about this. I suffer because I want to get out of this cycle as quickly as possible," Arteta said.

"To achieve this, you have to win matches ... When I fail to win I feel that I have let the club down. It is a difficult, frustrating and painful feeling."

Arteta, who led Arsenal to winning the Federation Cup last season, said he had begun reviewing his coaching methods during the team's bad period, which was its worst start in a season since 1974-1975.

"I review my methods daily. Since my arrival here, I have analyzed what is going on, what we can do and what we cannot do," he said.

"It is a continuous work around the clock, seven days a week, and it requires dealing with a lot of matters. When you go through a period of bad results like that period, you sometimes do not find the right reasons to understand the reason for losing matches. But the nice thing about this game is that there are many other means to do Matters in different ways. "

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