Report and free match highlights as Rice and Jesus pounce in final moments; Marcus Rashford had given United the lead but Martin Odegaard struck back 35 seconds after the restart; Arsenal two points behind Man City in fifth; Man Utd down in 11th, six points behind their neighbours
Monday 4 September 2023 08:09, UK
Declan Rice and Gabriel Jesus scored stoppage-time goals to take Arsenal to a famous 3-1 win over Manchester United on Sunday.
In a game packed with drama, United thought they had won it themselves on 88 minutes when Alejandro Garnacho broke free to score but a close VAR offside call denied him his moment. Erik ten Hag was adamant it should have stood.
Instead it was Arsenal's £105m man who delivered the decisive goal, brilliantly controlling a corner at the back post before blasting a shot off 35-year-old Jonny Evans and past Andre Onana six minutes into added time.
Evans appealed for a foul from the cross but Rice's celebrations into the crowd were an iconic moment, adding another remarkable chapter to this Premier League rivalry.
As the visitors desperately pushed for a response, Jesus sealed it, breaking away and leaving Diogo Dalot and United on the floor. Last season it was Eddie Nketiah dealing the injury-time knockout blow to United. This time it was a Rice-Jesus one-two.
In the first half, Arsenal captain Martin Odegaard had come up with an instant response to Marcus Rashford's counter-attack goal, hitting the net 35 seconds after the restart.
Arsenal thought they had been handed a chance to go in front on the hour mark when Kai Havertz went down in the box and a penalty was awarded. But replays showed it was the German looking for contact with Aaron Wan-Bissaka and it was overturned by a VAR check.
That capped a personal day to forget for Havertz, who made a hash of an early chance when the goal was at his mercy and then gave away the ball for United to break away for Rashford to score.
But his team-mates would create the comeback in the end - and what a comeback it was.
A thrilling finish to a match which leaves Arsenal with three wins from four and moves Mikel Arteta's side up to fifth, just two points behind title rivals Manchester City.
As for Manchester United, they are down in 11th, six points behind their neighbours.
It was a cruel finale for them but Ten Hag - yet to pick up a point away in the Premier League this season - will spend the international break mulling over a six-point return from their opening batch of games which leaves them already playing catch up on the teams they want to challenge.
Every meeting between these fierce Premier League rivals is met with anticipation and the atmosphere reached fever pitch at kick-off. The opening exchanges were similarly electric. But composure was glaringly absent from Havertz when the goal opened up for him on 14 minutes. The German snatched at his shot when Gabriel Martinelli's cross broke to him and barely made contact. It was a shocking miss.
Lisandro Martinez was sharp to stop Eddie Nketiah from following up and he got in the way of an Odegaard shot soon after. On 19 minutes Rice headed over and it was Arsenal who were unquestionably on the front foot. But on this hot September day temperatures were rising too and a series of free-kicks and firm challenges stalled the home side's advances.
Havertz then had his second moment to forget of the game. During a passage of Arsenal build-up he carelessly sent the ball straight to Christian Eriksen who launched a United counter which inevitably ended with Rashford stepping in from the left and arrowing a right-foot shot in off the far post. It was United's first shot of the game but a trademark move from Rashford and his third in a row against these opponents.
Moments later the game was level again, though. Martinelli had been a standout for Arsenal and his interplay with Nketiah and then Odegaard led to the captain sweeping in a swift equaliser.
The game ramped up to the half-time whistle. Havertz made something of an amends by blocking an Eriksen shot. Rashford drove high and wide. Saka saw Martinez get in the way of another Arsenal attempt just before the break.
United came out with purpose in the second half and Rashford had his hands on his head when his rebound from Anthony Martial's saved shot was blocked by William Saliba.
But Havertz was back in the spotlight just before the hour mark.
On first watch it was a stonewall penalty. But replays soon confirmed it was a spot-kick which had been bought by the forward with Wan-Bissaka not making contact. Boos rang out when it was overturned but it was the right decision in the end.
On 67 minutes Ten Hag turned to Rasmus Hojlund - and also Harry Maguire to replace the injured Martinez. The new striker was jeered by the Arsenal fans; Maguire was cheered and had his name sung by the Arsenal supporters. A damning reflection of his reputation right now.
Martinelli whipped a shot just wide of the post soon and as the clock ticked down, Hojlund had a penalty shout waved away when he went down under a challenge from Gabriel after the pair tussled in the box.
A big chance of the final stages fell to Saka, who could only prod an effort at Andre Onana from inside the box. It felt like that might have been Arsenal's opportunity come and gone.
And it felt like it was a moment they'd regret when Garnacho broke free to finish brilliantly past Ramsdale - but an eventual offside call left the home fans celebrating instead. They had every reason to moments later when Rice delivered the match-clinching moment at the back post.
The noise was off the scale. When Jesus sealed it with his goal-scoring return from injury there was delight among three-quarters of the Emirates crowd.
Arsenal vs Man Utd? This was a classic of the genre.
Arsenal boss Mikel Arteta: "We all worked so hard and planned everything for moments like this. These moments will stick with us, with the crowd so connected to the team with the big history of these matches, it's great. The will, the determination of the team, that will to win and go and go and go, I'm so proud of them.
"A team needs different tools to win football matches, and the capacity to react. We did that in the first half and that set the tone and brought some calmness to the team."
On Rice: "A tremendous performance. As a holding midfielder, how he needs to dominate his area, to break up play. He was really dominant. And then he produced a magic moment to win us the game. You need to have that quality, that composure and he had it.
On Arsenal's start: "There's still 34 games to go. After 38 we will be where we deserve. We played four games, deserved to win four games. We can do better and the team will try to progress, to close games earlier."
Manchester United boss Erik ten Hag: "The performance was alright from us. I thought we played a very good game but everything went against us - then you don't win the game. We needed a little bit more luck to win the game. It was not offside [for Alejandro Garnacho goal]. It was the wrong angle.
"It was then a penalty on (Rasmus) Hojlund and then we concede a goal that's a foul on Jonny Evans. It's so clear and obvious. You can say you need to finish your chances and that you shouldn't concede a goal after going 1-0 up. This is all true, but I was happy with the performance."
Arsenal captain Martin Odegaard: "This is what we play for, this feeling. To celebrate with our fans and give them something back; everything they do for us, how they support us in each moment. When we went 1-0 down, they kept cheering and they gave us so much energy, so it's amazing to give them three points back.
"The games are like this now, with the added time and you have to be prepared to played 105, 100 minutes. We have to dig deep every game, but I thought we did brilliant [on Sunday]."
Arsenal visit Everton in their first fixture following the international break on Sunday September 17, live on Sky Sports. Kick-off 4.30pm.
Manchester United return to Old Trafford the day before for the visit of Brighton. Kick-off 3pm.