Huddersfield Town 1 Arsenal 2: Iwobi and Lacazette earn first away win since November

Jan Siewert celebrated Huddersfield Town's first goal under his leadership but it suffered a 2-1 Premier League home loss to Arsenal.

Published : Feb 09, 2019 22:59 IST

Arsenal striker Alexandre Lacazette celebrates scoring at Huddersfield Town
Arsenal striker Alexandre Lacazette celebrates scoring at Huddersfield Town
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Arsenal striker Alexandre Lacazette celebrates scoring at Huddersfield Town

Alex Iwobi and Alexandre Lacazette scored first-half goals to set up Arsenal's 2-1 win at Huddersfield Town and earn its first away Premier League victory since November.

The Gunners had taken a single point from their past five away league games and were without Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang, Mesut Ozil and Aaron Ramsey for Saturday's trip to Yorkshire.

Huddersfield, rock bottom of the Premier League, offered little resistance but did at least score for the first time since Jan Siewert replaced David Wagner as head coach thanks to Sead Kolasinac's late own goal.

Victory moves Arsenal a point behind fourth-placed Manchester United in the congested race for Champions League qualification, with Chelsea going to Manchester City on Sunday.

 

Arsenal took the lead in the 16th minute. Kolasinac's deep left-wing cross found Iwobi and his volleyed finish took a decisive deflection off Terence Kongolo.

Henrikh Mkhitaryan almost marked his return from seven weeks out with a foot injury with a goal but he could not beat goalkeeper Ben Hamer at the end of a flowing Arsenal move.

But he was involved in Arsenal's second before the break, Mkhitaryan teeing up Ainsley Maitland-Niles for a driven low cross that Lacazette tapped in at the back post.

Huddersfield almost replied in the 50th minute but Adama Diakhaby's driven effort from a low Kongolo cross was saved comfortably by Bernd Leno.

Iwobi should have added his second after Mkhitaryan fed him but he fired his shot into Hamer's chest, while Leno denied Diakhaby again and Huddersfield's home debutant Karlan Grant had an effort cleared off the line at the other end.

 

And the Huddersfield fans finally had reason to celebrate after four games without a goal as Kolasinac turned into his own net in the 93rd minute, while Leno then saved from Juninho Bacuna to protect the Gunners' victory.

What does it mean? Arsenal still in top-four race

The battle for Champions League qualification looks set to go to the wire, with a single point splitting United in fourth and Arsenal in sixth, although Chelsea has a game in hand.

Huddersfield's survival chances are ever more desperate as a 13-point gap to make up in just 12 matches, considering its almost total lack of goal threat, appears an increasingly impossible equation.


Mkhi shines on return

The absence of Ozil and Ramsey created a spot for Mkhitaryan and the Armenia international was lively, if understandably a little rusty, on his return to action. If the Gunners are to finish in the top four and also push for the Europa League crown, Mkhitaryan will have a big role to play.


What's next?

Arsenal's next two games are both in the Europa League as it takes on BATE in the last 32, with the Gunners returning to Premier League action at home to Southampton on February 24. Town, which is also out of the FA Cup, is away to Newcastle United a day earlier.

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