LONDON, England
Arsenal are within touching distance of qualifying for the Champions League knockout stages after Leandro Trossard and Bukayo Saka clinched a 2-0 win against Sevilla on Wednesday.
Mikel Arteta's side got back
on track after successive domestic defeats thanks to Trossard's first half
opener and Saka's strike after the break at the Emirates Stadium.
With three wins from four
Group B games, Arsenal sit in first place, four points ahead of second-placed
PSV Eindhoven.
The north Londoners will be
certain to reach the last 16 if they take one point from their remaining
matches at home to Lens and at PSV.
The only concern for Arteta
was the sight of Saka limping off with an injury after appearing to twist his
ankle in the closing stages.
Brushing aside Sevilla was the
perfect way to erase the bitter taste of a difficult spell that included a
League Cup defeat against West Ham and the end of their unbeaten start to the
Premier League at Newcastle.
That loss against Newcastle,
whose winning goal by Anthony Gordon was controversially awarded by VAR, sent
Arteta into a sustained fury that had hardly subsided in the days since.
Arteta labelled the decision
"embarrassing" and a "disgrace", while Arsenal backed him
in a statement that said the defeat involved "yet more unacceptable
refereeing and VAR errors".
There were no more VAR dramas
to provoke Arteta into another red mist as Arsenal made light work of
lacklustre Sevilla, who languish at the bottom of Group B without a win.
Arteta said his side have to
be "absolutely ruthless" and make opponents "suffer" if
they want a long run in the Champions League this season.
The Gunners followed his
message to the letter as they out-classed Sevilla from start to finish.
Arsenal beat Sevilla 2-1 in
Spain a fortnight ago and the serial Europa League winners once again had no
answer for the Gunners' relentless tempo.
Kai Havertz should have put
Arsenal ahead in the first minute but, in keeping with his lacklustre form
since arriving from Chelsea, the unmarked German headed tamely wide from
close-range.
Despite that miss, Arsenal
were well on top and Gabriel headed over from Saka's free-kick, while Ben White
and Jorginho both went close from the edge of the area.
Driven on by Saka and Gabriel
Martinelli's incisive raids, Arsenal kept probing away and finally made the
breakthrough with a sublime move in the 29th minute.
Jorginho unlocked the Sevilla
defence with a superb pass that picked out Saka's run down the right flank and
the winger's low cross was perfectly placed for Trossard to slot home from
close-range.
The 28-year-old Belgian's
fourth goal this season rewarded Arteta's faith after he selected him as his
central striker in the absence of injured duo Eddie Nketiah and Gabriel Jesus.
Sevilla were impotent for long
spells and even when Adria Pedrosa threatened to burst into the Arsenal area,
William Saliba's brilliant sliding tackle snuffed out the danger.
Havertz, who has just one goal
this term, went close with a long-range curler early in the second half but yet
again he was largely anonymous for long periods.
Luckily for Arsenal, they
don't need to rely on Havertz as a regular source of goals at present.
It was Saka and Martinelli who
combined to secure the killer second goal in the 64th minute.
Martinelli's pin-point pass
sent Saka racing into the area and he cleverly cut back inside Pedrosa before
guiding a composed finish past Marko Dmitrovic from 10 yards.
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