Wednesday, April 13, 2011

Gunners back on form at Blackpool

Arsenal's victory cut Manchester United's lead at the top to seven points with a 3-1 win at Blackpool on an afternoon that started dramatically with Arsene Wenger forced to hand a last-minute place to veteran Jens Lehmann after Manuel Almunia injured his knee in the warm-up.

Abou Diaby and Emmanuel Eboue put Arsenal into a commanding position at Bloomfield Road but Gary Taylor-Fletcher replied as relegation-threatened Blackpool played for their top-flight lives. Taylor-Fletcher felt he was denied a penalty but Van Persie made victory safe for Arsenal after 76 minutes.

The afternoon started in dramatic fashion as Almunia injured his knee in the warm-up and manager Arsene Wenger was forced to turn to 41-year-old Lehmann.

It was an unexpected 200th appearance in a Gunners jersey for the German, who was recently coaxed out of retirement to provide emergency cover in the title run-in.

Lehmann had little to do in the first half as Arsenal, with captain Cesc Fabregas also back in their starting line-up, overpowered the struggling Tangerines.

Blackpool had an early chance when Ian Evatt headed over from a Charlie Adam corner but after that it appeared Arsenal had no intention of suffering a repeat of their last week's Blackburn stalemate.

Andrey Arshavin and Van Persie both put early shots over before Richard Kingson rushed out to deny Samir Nasri.

It quickly became one-way traffic and the Gunners carved open the Blackpool defence with ease to claim a 17th-minute lead. Fabregas picked out Van Persie with a superb cross-field ball and the Dutchman crossed for Diaby to sidefoot home from close range.

They grabbed a second just three minutes later as Eboue played a neat one-two into the box with Jack Wilshere and then blasted past Kingson.

Blackpool enjoyed a little spell of possession but were unable to test Lehmann and Van Persie had the next chance when controlled another long Fabregas pass and shot at Kingson.

Kingson needed to be alert again to block an effort by the fleet-footed Nasri after more slick football by the Gunners.

Nasri had another opportunity seconds later when the ball was lobbed back into the box by Fabregas but his volley hit the bottom of the post.

Van Persie took the ball past the outrushing Kingson to set up Diaby but Stephen Crainey got back to tackle.

Some Blackpool fans thought Adam had pulled one back immediately after the restart but his long-range free-kick had struck the side-netting.

The hosts, however, had realised they had little to lose by taking the game to Arsenal and did reply after 52 minutes.

Luke Varney was fouled but play proceeded and Jason Puncheon played in Campbell.

The striker appeared to be fouled by Lehmann as he closed in on goal but the ball ran on for Taylor-Fletcher to fire home.

Blackpool were inspired and poured forward again. Manager Ian Holloway was furious his side were denied a penalty when Taylor-Fletcher went down under a Laurent Koscielny challenge.

Taylor-Fletcher then headed wide as Blackpool maintained the pressure but Van Persie shot across the face of goal at the other end.

Arsenal made the game safe 14 minutes from time as they quickly turned defence into attack. Campbell shaped to shoot for Blackpool but Sebastien Squillaci won possession and Fabregas released substitute Theo Walcott down the right.

Blackpool struggled to get back and Walcott crossed low into the box and Van Persie made no mistake in front of goal.

Blackpool tried to set up a tight finish but Evatt headed at Lehmann and the Gunners eased to the final whistle.

Arsenal boss Arsene Wenger has promised his team will give everything in an attempt to pinch the title from Manchester United.

He said: "Today was only three points and it could help us to keep a chance. We have promised ourselves to give everything until the end of the season. There are still seven games. It is a long time - there are many games.''

Victory at Blackpool came as a welcome relief for the Gunners after a disappointing spell which had threatened to derail their season. In February the Londoners had hopes of a Quadruple but amid a run which saw their Carling Cup, FA Cup and Champions League bids ended, their Premier League tilt was also derailed by three successive draws.

"It was a massive disappointment,'' Wenger said of that spell. "You go through a period of grief and of denial first and then you have to stand up and show you have the mental strengths to respond. The team has done that remarkably well.''

Arsenal's afternoon in Blackpool began dramatically as goalkeeper Manuel Almunia injured himself in the warm-up and Wenger handed a start to 41-year-old Jens Lehmann for the first time in three years.

Lehmann was perhaps fortunate to escape punishment when bringing down DJ Campbell just seconds before Blackpool's goal.

Wenger, who had no goalkeeper on the bench, said: "That was the important split-second of the game. I felt Jens played the ball. Even if he gives a penalty he can give a yellow card, not more. He didn't try to deliberately foul - he tried to intercept the ball.''

Blackpool thought they should have had a penalty moments later when Taylor-Fletcher went down under a challenge from Laurent Koscielny.

When asked directly about that incident, Wenger said: "I think we were unfortunate to have a few offsides who were not offside in the first half, personally.''

Robin van Persie eventually eased Arsenal's nerves with the third goal 14 minutes from time.

Wenger said: "That is what you get with Blackpool and a team fighting relegation. I knew at 2-0 they would not give up. We missed some chances in the first half and at 2-1 we had a little nervy period but at 3-1 we killed the game. They had given a lot but from then it was quite comfortable.''

Blackpool manager Ian Holloway delayed his post-match press conference while he waited to speak to Mason in his dressing room. Holloway, who also felt his side could have had another penalty for handball, eventually emerged to speak to the media around 90 minutes after the game finished.

He said: "It was very amicable. I was very calm, I can't afford not to be. I can't describe how I feel. How that is not a penalty I just do not know, to be perfectly blunt.

"But Mr Mason has given us a couple of penalties before and he didn't see it as one, nor the handball. Those things at this level make huge, huge, huge differences. I think the man genuinely gave what he thought he could see. If he wasn't sure he couldn't give it.

"It is a bit easier not to be sure against Arsenal but I am sure they have had a few this year when they thought they should have had one. What annoys me is it is so easy to get it totally and utterly right - a five-second delay on a monitor.''

On the Lehmann incident, Holloway added: "I'd like to think he was going to blow for a penalty if Taylor-Fletcher wasn't there. But I didn't ask him about that one - just the catalogue of others.''

Source: ESPN Soccernet on 10 Apr 11

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