Wenger may look to Adams for advice on Pennant
The 20-year-old midfielder may also face a two-week club fine, which would amount to about ÂŁ30,000, once a Highbury investigation is completed.
Pennant, who was English footballs most expensive teenager when he arrived from Notts County in a deal worth ÂŁ2m in 1999, broke a curfew last weekend when he was on international duty with David Plattâs side.
He is said to have returned to the team hotel at 7am last Sunday having been banned from going out at all in the wake of his sideâs European Championship defeat in Portugal two days earlier.
Wenger said: âI hope heâll learn from this as you can understand that young boys make mistakes. But if they donât learn, thereâs no future for them.
âSome players who appeared for England against Turkey have made mistakes in the past but they have learned from them. His future is down to him now.
âThe biggest part of success until 20 is how much talent you have and, after 20, itâs how much you want it.
âWe want our players to represent the club well and make us proud of them. On this occasion, he didnât do it but that doesnât mean we have to throw him away.
âEveryone in our squad would say this boy is a special talent. But of course what happened to him cannot be repeated or people who have faith in you will lose that.
âHe is the biggest talent of his age-group. Wayne Rooney is a bit younger than his age-group, from 18 to 22, but he still played in the U21s when he was about 17.â
Despite his huge talent, Pennant has still not managed to make a Premiership start for the club and was sent on loan to Watford earlier this season.
However Wenger, who will consider the club report before speaking to Pennant, believes recovering alcoholic Adams could help to focus his former team-mateâs mind on his career.
âWe will help him to control his life better and someone like Tony Adams could be a big help in that,â he revealed.
Wenger has left Pennant out of the squad for todayâs trip to Aston Villa, where the Arsenal boss believes his side would show their mental strength by relaunching their title chase.
After the last double-header international break in October, the Gunners failed to recover momentum and lost their next four games.
Despite missing five first-team players through injury, including David Seaman, Ashley Cole, Martin Keown and Robert Pires, Wenger insisted:
âLetâs see if it happens to someone else this time. Itâs like a storm, it doesnât always catch the same place twice. I feel the last two games against Everton and Chelsea showed a lot of character. My aim is to get that kind of focus and bonding back into the side.
âLast season, we responded to going out of Europe by going on a domestic run. The target now is to repeat that.
âWeâre not foolish. Manchester United are in there and so are Newcastle. Itâs only a mental thing now. Itâs a question of how much you want to do it.â





