Arsenal 1 – 3 Man City
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Manchester City seized control of the Premier League title race with a ruthless 3-1 win over Arsenal to send the defending champions above the Gunners at the top of the table.
In a pulsating encounter at the Emirates Stadium which lived up to its billing, City’s title-winning pedigree eventually told as goals from Jack Grealish (72) and Erling Haaland (82) clinched a potentially pivotal victory for Pep Guardiola’s side.
Earlier, Bukayo Saka’s penalty (42), after Ederson was deemed to have fouled Eddie Nketiah, had cancelled out an opening goal from Kevin De Bruyne (24), who lifted a brilliant first-time finish over Aaron Ramsdale following a poor Takehiro Tomiyasu backpass.
Arsenal, without Thomas Partey due to a muscular injury, deserved their leveller having started positively, but their recent slip-ups against Everton and Brentford had opened the door to City and Mikel Arteta’s side were unable to resist the visitors’ second-half pressure.
The defeat extends Arsenal’s winless run to three games and hands the title race initiative to a City side seemingly galvanised by the charges levelled against them by the Premier League.
How City claimed crucial win
Arsenal came into the game feeling a burning sense of injustice following the VAR error that allowed Ivan Toney’s equaliser to stand in Saturday’s 1-1 draw with Brentford and it could be felt in the ground, the home fans generating a crackling atmosphere.
Arsenal started strongly, despite the absence of Partey, replaced by full debutant Jorginho, and after surviving a nervy moment when Haaland elected to cross rather than shoot from a Riyad Mahrez cross, the hosts created the first clear chance of the game, Nketiah heading wastefully wide from Oleksandr Zinchenko’s diagonal cross.
It was a let-off for City and within two minutes they ruthlessly capitalised. Tomiyasu, selected ahead of Ben White at right-back, left his backpass short for Ramsdale and De Bruyne nipped in, lifting his finish over the stranded goalkeeper brilliantly.
Tomiyasu had a chance to make amends a few minutes later at the other end, when a deflected cross fell to him in space inside the City box, but his first-time shot flew over the bar.
City attempted to disrupt Arsenal’s rhythm by delaying over goal kicks and throw-ins but the hosts’ response to falling behind was excellent, Saka spurning an excellent chance from Martin Odegaard’s slide-rule pass when he delayed his shot, allowing Nathan Ake to block.
But Arsenal, and Saka, who was giving makeshift left-back Bernardo Silva a torrid time on the hosts’ right flank, would not have to wait long for their moment.
It seemed they had been denied when Ake hooked Nketiah’s diagonal effort off the line, but referee Anthony Taylor pointed to the spot, deeming Ederson to have fouled Nketiah as he struck the ball.
After a long delay, Saka showed impressive composure to step up and beat Ederson, who, mercifully for City, avoided a second yellow card having been booked for timewasting earlier.
An explosion of celebration followed the goal but the contest continued toing and froing at a frenetic pace with City inches away from scoring a second shortly before half-time.
The chance came from a free kick, not long after Ramsdale had denied Ilkay Gundogan, who was then flagged for offside, as Rodri’s header bounced off Ake and hit the top of the crossbar.
It was perhaps a sign of things to come as City began to dominate proceedings after the break. There was a let-off for Arsenal when a penalty, won by Haaland as he tangled with Gabriel Magalhaes, was overturned for offside by VAR.
But City continued to pin the hosts back and, after a couple of narrow escapes, including a fine save from Ramsdale after Haaland had got in behind, Guardiola’s team struck their second.
It came from another Arsenal error as Gabriel ceded possession in his own half, but what followed was brilliantly clinical from City as they rapidly worked the ball out to Grealish, whose low finish took a slight deflection off Tomiyasu on its way into the net.
The game was then sealed by Haaland, who was passed fit to start having suffered an injury scare in City’s 3-1 win over Villa. The Norway striker controlled De Bruyne’s cut-back brilliantly before firing a low finish across Ramsdale and into the far corner.
Arsenal kept fighting, with Nketiah heading another effort wide, but by that point their fate was sealed, City’s experience and clinical edge proving the difference in a thrilling contest which may change the course of the Premier League title race.
What’s next?
Arsenal are back in Premier League action in the early kick-off on Saturday as they travel to Villa Park to face Aston Villa.
Manchester City have another away trip on Saturday as they head to the City Ground to face Nottingham Forest, with kick-off at 3pm.
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