Lacazette, Mkhitaryan On Target As Arsenal Halt Southampton's Away Run
24th February 2019
Saints arrived at Emirates Stadium unbeaten on the road in 2019, but knowing that record was going to be put to a significant test against an Unai Emery side challenging for a top-four finish

- Southampton’s unbeaten away run in the Premier League was halted at four games, as Ralph Hasenhüttl’s side fell to a 2-0 defeat at Arsenal on Sunday afternoon
- Hasenhüttl made three changes for the game, notably bringing Angus Gunn back in goal, with Alex McCarthy dropping to the bench.
- Matt Targett was also introduced for Ryan Bertrand at left wing-back, with the Saints boss again deploying three centre-backs, while Stuart Armstrong returned from injury in place of Shane Long, who missed out altogether
SOUTHAMPTON, United Kingdom- Southampton’s unbeaten away run in the Premier League was halted at
four games, as Ralph Hasenhüttl’s side fell to a 2-0 defeat at Arsenal on
Sunday afternoon.
Saints arrived at Emirates Stadium unbeaten on the road in
2019, but knowing that record was going to be put to a significant test against
an Unai Emery side challenging for a top-four finish.
So it proved, as the Gunners roared into an early 2-0 lead and claimed a
position from which they would not relinquish control.
Hasenhüttl made three changes for the game, notably bringing Angus Gunn back in
goal, with Alex McCarthy dropping to the bench.
Matt Targett was also introduced for Ryan Bertrand at left wing-back, with the
Saints boss again deploying three centre-backs, while Stuart Armstrong returned
from injury in place of Shane Long, who missed out altogether.
It meant Redmond leading the line, and he nearly made full use of the position
in just the sixth minute, as he raced onto a quick ball over the top from deep,
putting him clear down the inside-right.
The angle meant that, as he sprinted into the area, he needed to cut back
inside onto his left foot, with Shkodran Mustafi getting back to cover, but the
movement opened up a glorious chance, only for Bernd Leno in the Arsenal goal
to save his shot from close range.
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It was a pivotal moment, as the hosts immediately broke
upfield and scored themselves.
The ball was worked to Alex Iwobi on the left, with his chipped cross falling
to Henrikh Mkhitaryan at the back post. Mkhitaryan struck a left-footed volley
back across goal, which was heading wide, but Alexandre Lacazette found himself
positioned perfectly in its path and he diverted it with a flick into the back
of the net.
There were protests from Saints for offside, but they fell on deaf ears.
Granit Xhaka’s dipping shot from 25 yards a few minutes later for a moment
looked as though it had a chance of doubling the advantage, but it was just
wide of the top corner, and, having survived that effort, Hasenhüttl’s men went
back on the front foot.
In the space of a few seconds in the 14th minute they came close to equalising.
First, a Targett cross from the left picked out Redmond at the far post, and he
nodded the ball cleverly back into the path of Armstrong, who sent his own
header goalwards from a few yards out, only for Sead Kolašinac to make an
excellent block.
As Arsenal then attempted to move the ball clear, Armstrong tracked back to win
it again before playing a smart pass to Targett on the left edge of the area.
He took a touch to set himself and did the right thing, sending a fizzing low
shot towards the far corner, but Leno dived down to tip it away.
Again, as it had been in the opening minutes, Leno’s intervention was followed
moments later by an Arsenal goal.
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Under pressure, Jack Stephens was a little errant with a back-pass and, in
trying to stop it going out for a corner, Gunn hit a low kick straight to Iwobi
30 yards out.
The Arsenal forward drove into the box and sent a low, square ball across,
which found Mkhitaryan in space on the far side, and he side-footed home first
time from about 16 yards.
With each side having carved out two big chances, the score
could well have been very different at the midway point of the half, but, after
winning the battle of fine margins, it was the home side who were well in
command at that stage.
They threatened to make it 3-0 on 26 minutes, as Lacazette was again found in
the area, but, as he cut inside to shoot, Jan Bednarek slid back in to make a
superb block.
After a frantic first half-an-hour, the game calmed a little, although Gunn had
to save well down to his right to keep out Lacazette’s glancing header from a
Xhaka corner on 39 minutes.
If that was a smart effort from the Arsenal forward, the one he produced
seconds later was not so impressive.
After Saints only cleared Stephan Lichtsteiner’s cross to the edge of the area,
Aaron Ramsey pounced on it, took a step forward and slid a brilliant ball to
Lacazette, who controlled, but then somehow side-footed over from six yards.
And, when he was on target again, this time in the 42nd minute, his fierce low
shot was repelled by the feet of Gunn.
The pressure was very much mounting again by this point, but Saints did at
least manage to reach the interval without conceding a third that would surely
have removed any doubt about the final result.
Hasenhüttl then made two changes at the break, as Stephens and Armstrong were
removed, with Charlie Austin and Michael Obafemi being sent on.
Saints were gifted a chance to halve the deficit in the 52nd minute, as Xhaka
made a dreadful error, attempting to play a lofted pass along the edge of his
own area, only to send it straight to James Ward-Prowse. He chested it down and
hit the ball on the half-volley, but it sliced agonisingly wide of the post
from 18 yards.
At the other end, Arsenal were still threatening to add to
their total on occasions, but Hasenhüttl’s men were able to prevent them from
creating any clear-cut chances.
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Saints’ hopes of getting back into it suffered a blow on 65 minutes, though, as
Obafemi, who was only introduced at half-time following two months on the
sidelines, picked up an injury and had to depart the field, with Mohamed
Elyounoussi being sent on in his place.
As the clock ticked past 70 minutes, Saints’ hopes were slim, but nonetheless
alive, and Austin tested Leno with a looping header that the Arsenal keeper had
to be alive to.
With 14 minutes left, Ward-Prowse had another chance to pull the visitors back
into it, but his right-footed strike from 15 yards was blocked superbly by
Kolašinac.
As the game entered the final few minutes, Arsenal went in search of a third,
and only an excellent Gunn save prevented substitute Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang
from sending a right-footed effort into the back of the net after dancing into
space just inside the area.
With two minutes left, Saints nearly breathed some hope back into the game, as
Targett put a brilliant strike on a rising ball 20 yards out, only for Leno to
fling himself to his right and get enough on it to tip it wide.
The result leaves Southampton third from bottom, but with a chance to
potentially change that as soon as Wednesday, when 19th-placed Fulham are the
visitors on a big night at St Mary’s.