Arsene Wenger won’t know what to do with himself once his 22-year reign at Arsenal wraps up at the end of May.

The 68-year-old has become an iconic figure in world football and his last few matches as the Gunners boss are sure to be full of emotion.

Wenger will bid farewell to the Emirates when Burnley travel down from Lancashire next Sunday, followed by a trip to Huddersfield on 13 May to mark his final Premier League appearance.

As it stands, he has five matches left in all competitions, but he could salvage one last outing in a Europa League final should his men negotiate a way past Atletico Madrid come Thursday.

With the first-leg ending in a 1-1 draw, Arsenal must beat the La Liga side at the Wanda Metropolitano to preserve their hopes of giving Wenger a fitting send-off in Lyon.

Irrespective of how this season pans out, the fact is it’s only a matter of weeks before the Frenchman must part ways with his beloved club.

But despite coming off the back of more than two decades at the highest level of management, he has no intention of retiring.

"I honestly don't know what I will do. Will I take a little rest? I will continue to work, that is for sure. At the moment I'm not ready to commit to anything else,” Wenger said in his pre-match media conference on Wednesday.

Given his reluctance to walk away from the touchline, the three-time Premier League winner has been linked with advisory roles at Paris Saint-Germain and the French national team.

While Wenger is thought to want an opportunity to continue his managerial career in France or Spain, reports of a concrete offer from elsewhere could turn his head.

The Mirror claims a Chinese Super League club are willing to make Wenger the highest-paid manager in the world, overtaking the £24 million salary pocketed by national team boss Marcello Lippi.

The outgoing Arsenal boss currently takes home £8 million-per-year – exactly half of what Manchester City pay the leading Premier League earner Pep Guardiola.

It would be difficult to blame Wenger for accepting a massive wage to see out his days in the dugout, but then again, money has never had a huge influence on his approach to the game.