Wenger |
The French defender latched on to Lukas Podolski's header
following Theo Walcott's free-kick to score his most important Arsenal
goal as they pipped Tottenham to fourth spot in the Premier League and
the final place in Europe's elite competition.
The Gunners finished a point ahead of Andre Villas-Boas's Spurs, who
scored late on to beat Sunderland
but needed to better their rivals' result.
It could have been more comfortable for Arsenal as Walcott hit
the post in stoppage time against a Newcastle side desperate to improve
after recent home defeats to
Sunderland
and
Liverpool.
Arsenal boss Arsene Wenger and his team saluted their
joyous supporters, who sung "are you watching, Tottenham?" with added
fervour.
Reaching the Champions League ahead of Spurs completed a
superb turnaround after they trailed by seven points at the beginning
of March. Arsenal have now finished above Spurs 18 seasons in a row.
And the late-season form of Wenger's side, who have won
eight of their last 10 Premier League games, will also go a long way to
appeasing fans who had doubts about the Frenchman earlier in the
season.
Arsenal have not won a trophy since the 2005 FA Cup but
reaching the top four again at least means the Gunners can attract new
talent in the summer with funds due to be released for players.
The win was as hard-fought as the scoreline suggested,
with Newcastle probing in the first half and the visitors enduring a
nervous final few minutes as news filtered through of Gareth Bale's late
goal at White Hart Lane.
Despite another home defeat, the Magpies finished 16th
having secured their Premier League safety against QPR last weekend, and
their season finished on a relative high note as the supporters saluted
38-year-old goalkeeper Steve Harper, who played his last game for the
club after a 20-year career on Tyneside.
After finishing fifth last time round, this has been a
frustrating season for Alan Pardew's side but he will aim to address his
squad this summer.
He would been heartened by his side's
first-half display, in which Papiss Cisse was a whisker away from giving
the hosts an early lead but fired over following Mapou Yanga-Mbiwa's
cutback.
Santi Cazorla and Walcott were both off target as the
visitors struggled to impose themselves and they were not helped when
Mikel Arteta, who passed a fitness test on an injured calf before the
game, was substituted before the half-hour.
His replacement, Alex Oxlade-Chamberlain, slotted into
the deep midfield role despite usually appearing on the wing, but
struggled to contain Hatem Ben Arfa.
Pardew's side were in the ascendancy as the home
supporters saluted Harper in the 37th minute to correspond with his
squad number, the keeper unable to control his emotions amid the
deafening cheers.
Harper's day almost took a turn for the worse shortly
after the break, however, when his poor kick fell to Walcott, but he
made amends with a fine stop.
He could do little about Koscielny's goal, however,
when Podolski got on the end of Walcott's free-kick from the right and
the defender swivelled to fire home from close range.
Good report on a new good blog. Keep it on.
ReplyDelete- Heroe