Giroud & Walcott punish 10-man Spurs to seal vital comeback win
The visitors took the lead through Emmanuel Adebayor but a red
card for the striker after just 20 minutes allowed the Gunners to claim a
convincing win against their local rivals
Adebayor put Tottenham in front in the 10th
minute but the former Arsenal turned from hero to zero eight minutes
later as he was sent-off for a dangerous challenge on Santi Cazorla.
From
that point on, Arsenal took complete control and were 3-1 up by
half-time thanks to goals from Per Mertesacker, Lukas Podolski and
Olivier Giroud.
Santi Cazorla, the Gunners’ Spanish magician,
scored the fourth on the hour mark and Theo Walcott added the fifth in
the closing stages either side of a Gareth Bale strike that will offer
little consolation to Tottenham supporters.
The final score
mirrors the same fixture last season, the turning point in Arsenal’s
campaign, and takes the Gunners up to sixth in the Premier League, two
points ahead of Spurs. The boos that have greeted recent Arsenal
performances here were replaced by a sound of ‘Ole’ as Arsene Wenger’s
side toyed with their great rivals, a renewed optimism sweeping around
the red half of north London.
It all started so well for
Tottenham as they controlled the early exchanges and took the lead in
the 10th minute. Jermain Defoe raced on to a long ball as the Arsenal
defence stood statuesque and after his shot was saved by Wojciech
Szczesny, Adebayor scrambled in the rebound.
But
Spurs’ afternoon fell apart eight minutes later. Adebayor, clearly
pumped up for the occasion as he was taunted by the home fans, could
have no complaints after being sent-off by referee Howard Webb for a
dangerous studs-up challenge on Cazorla.
From then on, Arsenal
were dominant, teasing their neighbours and creating chances at will
with their use of the ball in midfield.
In the 24th minute, Mertesacker levelled with a towering free header from 12 yards that nestled in the top corner after good work down the right from Walcott.
Hugo
Lloris, making just his second league start in the Tottenham goal, had
to be alert to make two excellent saves to deny Giroud but the Gunners
eventually took the lead they deserved in the 42nd minute. Podolski
tricked his way into the the penalty area and his shot flicked off the
foot of William Gallas and spun fortuitously into the far corner. It was
one of the more ugly goals seen in this stadium but few have been
greeted with such a guttural roar.
On the stroke of half-time, Giroud
made sure there was no way back for Spurs. The French striker, a
constant menace throughout the game, was simply too sharp for the
visitors’ centre-backs as he fired home Cazorla’s cross at the near
post.
Villas-Boas responded by switching to three at the back
during the break but his players were simply unable to stem the tide as
Arsenal exploited the space created by their man advantage.
On the hour mark, Arsenal worked the ball to Podolski on the left and the German produced a perfect low cross from the left for Cazorla to score from eight yards to make it 4-1.
Bale
fired in Spurs’ second of the game after a fine run but by that point
Arsenal were going through the motions, conserving their energy ahead of
Wednesday’s Champions League clash with Montpellier.
There was still time for Walcott
to add a fifth with his right foot following a scorching run by
substitute Alex Oxlade-Chamberlain. A potentially season-changing result
for both sides of north London.
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