Arsenal fight back from two down against Tottenham to earn a point
Arsenal fought back from two goals down to force a draw in the North London derby against Tottenham.
Arsenal fought back from two goals down against Tottenham to draw 2-2 in the Premier League, with the Gunners’ much-anticipated attacking trio unable to see off their fierce London rivals.
Spurs shocked the home fans at Emirates Stadium to take an early lead in the 10th minute, when forward Christian Eriksen capitalised on an error from Arsenal goalkeeper Bernd Leno to slot the ball home. Harry Kane later doubled the lead with a penalty after Arsenal captain Granit Xhaka’s reckless tackle on Son Heung-min left referee Martin Atkinson no choice but to point to the spot.
Arsenal striker Alexandre Lacazette pulled one back just before halftime to make it 2-1, taking a touch to bring the ball between the two central defenders and lashing it home.
Arsenal then regained a foothold in the game, putting pressure on Tottenham’s back line in the second half.
Midfielder Matteo Guendouzi floated a long pass behind the Spurs defence to find Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang, who drifted between the two central defenders.
The striker only needed to stick out his leg and poke the ball past goalkeeper Hugo Lloris for the equaliser in the 71st minute.
The result leaves Arsenal in fifth place in the league, with Spurs in ninth.
“We can be very proud of the response, and how our supporters pushed us,” Arsenal manager Unai Emery said, adding “we deserved more”.
Emery said that Xhaka’s tackle on Son was due to frustration and that he was happy overall with the midfielder’s performance, but said “we need to be clearer in our box”.
Arsenal thought they had a winner minutes after drawing level when defender Sokratis Papastathopoulos bundled the ball over the line, sparking wild celebrations among the home crowd. But an offside decision against Sead Kolasanic was upheld by VAR and the score stood at 2-2.
It rounded off a difficult week for Spurs, losing to Newcastle and then constant speculation about the possible departures of Eriksen, defender Jan Vertonghen and even manager Mauricio Pochettino.
Pochettino said that his team can only improve.
“I’m optimistic and positive,” he said. “In the first three games, the team didn’t show all the quality that we had.”
He repeated that Spurs had been unsettled at the start of the season over the future of Eriksen and others.
“I don’t want to say it’s impossible (that he will depart), but it’s going to be difficult,” he said, before adding: “Nothing is impossible in football. (But) I’m optimistic.”
For Arsenal, the match was meant to showcase a vibrant attacking force in Lacazette, Aubameyang and summer signing Nicolas Pepe — the first time all three have started a match together. But the visitors were able to stifle them in the first half, before Arsenal became a threat after the break.
“We are not happy, but we did a great job. It was a tough game, but we played well,” Aubameyang said. “We maybe deserved more tonight.”
AP