Evening Standard
·18 Januari 2025
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·18 Januari 2025
Arsenal thought they had a late winner but VAR intervened
Arsenal were denied a late winner as Aston Villa came from two goals down to earn a 2-2 draw at the Emirates Stadium.
Mikel Merino’s strike hit Kai Havertz and beat Emiliano Martinez in the final minutes, but that goal was ruled out by VAR after replays showed the ball had hit the arm of Havertz.
The Gunners had appeared in control within ten minutes of the second-half, when Kai Havertz volleyed in to double the lead after Gabriel Martinelli had given the hosts a half-time advantage.
However, it turned into a damaging evening for Arsenal’s title hopes, just a couple of hours after Liverpool had scored twice in stoppage-time to edge past Brentford.
Youri Tielemans headed in just five minutes after Havertz’s goal to get Villa right back in the match, and Ollie Watkins then took advantage of some incredibly poor marking from Thomas Partey to volley in and leave the Emirates stunned.
Arsenal had just over 20 minutes to find a late winner and Merino thought he had provided just that, only for VAR to halt the celebrations in the stands.
Seven minutes were added on and Merino was inches away from a goal that would have stood, when his strike smacked off the post, before Martinez denied Leandro Trossard from the rebound.
Villa held on for a point, one that leaves Arsenal six points behind Liverpool having played a game more.
Arsenal have also been rocked by another high-profile injury - this time to defender William Saliba - with the defender ruled out of Saturday's fixture.
Villa were unable to get a foothold early on in the match, but the visitors rode the initial storm and it was Emery's men with the first shot on target as Ian Maatsen's effort was punched clear by David Raya.
Five minutes later and the hosts tested Emiliano Martinez for the first time, with Leandro Trossard stinging the hands of the Argentina international.
Mikel Arteta, and the man he replaced in the Arsenal hotseat, then clashed on the touchline, with Emery urging his compatriot to return to his technical area after the former remonstrated a throw-in.
Arteta was booked for his protest, but the breakthrough for his side arrived with 10 minutes of the first half left.
Trossard found space on the left-hand side before fizzing a cross across the six-yard box. Martinelli caught Maatsen napping to take his team-mate's pass on the volley.
Martinez saved at point-blank range, but the ball drifted over the line before the Villa stopper could claw it away again with his left glove.
Referee Chris Kavanagh looked at his watch, which indicated it was a goal, with a jubilant Martinelli celebrating his seventh strike of the season.
Replays showed it was the correct decision, and moments later, Arsenal might have doubled their advantage only for Trossard to blaze over.
Arsenal remained largely in control of the fixture at the start of the second half, while knowing that they needed another goal to afford them some daylight.
And Havertz thought he had delivered it with 55 minutes gone. Havertz's missed spot-kick sent Arsenal crashing out of the FA Cup here last Sunday, and this was a much-needed goal for the German.
Trossard was the provider again with Havertz volleying home the Belgian's cross. Arsenal supporters were still singing Havertz's name when Villa nicked a goal.
Tielemans stole a yard on Merino and his diving header from Lucas Digne's cross nestled into the bottom corner.
A minute later, Tielemans came within inches of hauling Villa level only to see his fine strike sail through Merino's legs and cannon of the foot of Raya's post. It was a let-off for Arsenal but in the 68th minute, Villa had their equaliser.
Matty Cash was allowed to whip in a cross from Villa's right-hand side and Watkins, unmarked from six yards, volleyed past Raya to land his 10th of the season and leave the Emirates stunned.
Arsenal looked for a response and, after rarely threatening, looked to have landed the winner when Havertz helped Merino's shot on its way past Martinez.
The Emirates erupted but a VAR check followed and then disallowed his strike to leave Arteta on his knees. Merino then hit the Villa woodwork, with Martinez diverting Trossard's follow-up from danger.
Seven minutes of stoppage time followed and Trossard had a golden chance to win it but he dragged his effort agonisingly wide as Arsenal were left to reflect on a sobering draw in their hunt for a first title in two decades.