Former Manchester United defender Gary Neville has taken another swipe at Arsenal, stating that the North London club lack dominant characters in their team.

The Sky Sports pundit was critical of the Gunners following their 0-0 draw with Liverpool on Monday night, which sparked frustration in Arsene Wenger.

However, despite this Neville has continued to take aim at the Emirates Stadium outfit and has stated that they are unlikely to win the Premier League title this season.

The former England international stated that the Gunners lack dominant personalities and do not have the same will-to-win as former Arsenal teams.

“The Liverpool teams of the 1970s and 80s; all the Manchester United sides of the 1990s and 2000s, the Arsenal XI of Petit and Vieira and Jose Mourinho’s first Chelsea team of Frank Lampard, Michael Essien and Claude Makelele. The Manchester City of Kompany, De Jong, Yaya Toure. You see power, character and a winning urge,” Neville wrote in The Telegraph.

“The league has never been won by a team without these characteristics in abundance. Kevin Keegan’s Newcastle side played recklessly good stuff but still fell short.

“The Arsene Wenger teams of the last 10 years meanwhile have lacked the dominant personalities, strength and purpose of his earlier creations.

“You see the importance of these qualities at points in the season when you’re not playing well and need to win by a set-piece; the winter months when the Champions League bites and you find yourself with two or three injuries.

“In every one of the last 10 seasons Arsenal have finished either fourth or third. Those facts are pretty clear and suggest a lack of improvement.”

Arsenal have started slowly this season and have only picked up four points from their first three games.

A slow start was a key reason to the Gunners not putting forward a title challenge this season and Wenger will hope that his side can keep pace with the frontrunners in the early days of 2015-16.

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