THE comparisons between Alexander Isak and Thierry Henry are frequent and obvious.
And here, against the club where the great Frenchman became Invincible, Newcastle’s lethal Swede sent his side to the brink of a second Carabao Cup Final in three years.
Alexander Isak fired Newcastle to victory in the first leg of their Carabao semi against Arsenal[/caption] Anthony Gordon was also in target as Toon won 2-0 at the Emirates[/caption] Arsenal failed to get going on a miserable night for their fans[/caption] The Gunners will need a miracle to turn things around at St James’ Park[/caption]Just a month ago, the Geordie Arabia revolution seemed to have stalled.
After a miserable beating at Brentford, Eddie Howe’s men were marooned in the bottom half of the Premier League table with the club’s spending plans frustrated by Profit and Sustainability Rules.
The turnaround since has been staggering – seven straight victories, powered by Isak’s goals.
Like Henry, he is tall, languid, dangerous coming off the left flank and dead-eyed in front of goal.
Here, he netted a tenth goal in nine appearances, then produced the shot which led to Anthony Gordon’s second.
Arsenal’s hopes in the second leg – which is, ridiculously, being staged four weeks from now on February 5 – are slim, approaching zero.
This was a hideous night for Mikel Arteta who saw his own set-piece specialists concede from the most basic of up-and-under free-kicks.
The Gunners dominated possession and the shot count but were hopeless in both boxes.
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Without Bukayo Saka, Martin Odegaard seems to lack spark and Arsenal are often prone to looking bang average in attack.
Arsenal have seven fixtures in three different competitions before the return leg. Perhaps this will give them time to forget what a disaster this first leg had been.
Arsenal haven’t won the League Cup for 32 years, while Newcastle have never got their hands on the trophy.
And while Arteta has propelled the Gunners into title contention over the previous couple of seasons, his side haven’t won any silverware since his old mate Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang fired them to the FA Cup in 2020.
Howe’s men, who had racked up countless celebratory dressing-room teamshots on their recent winning run – were without the suspended Bruno Guimaraes but it scarcely seemed to matter.
After dropping points at Brighton on Saturday, the Gunners welcomed back Kai Havertz, who’d missed the previous two matches through illness.
The clashes between these two sides became extremely heated over the past couple – Arteta spewing that his side had been robbed at St James’ Park last season.
ARSENAL have a mountain to climb to reach the Carabao Cup final after a shock 2-0 first-leg defeat to Newcastle.
Here SunSport’s Jordan Davies rates every Arsenal player on a disappointing night at the Emirates…
DAVID RAYA – 6/10
Looked nervy with ball at feet at times but could do nothing to stop Alexander Isak’s brilliant close-range finish.
Unlucky to see his palmed save tapped in by Anthony Gordon.
MYLES LEWIS-SKELLY – 8
The academy product was very impressive again. Turned out of danger well at both ends of the pitch. So calm under pressure.
GABRIEL – 6
Gave Isak far too much space to manoeuvre a shot in the box before the Toon’s second. Wasteful and ineffective from corners.
WILLIAM SALIBA – 6
Had an early effort blocked near the line by Dan Burn. Was dealing with Isak well until losing a header to Sven Botman that saw the Toon striker score.
JURRIEN TIMBER – 5
Missed an absolute sitter from a yard out from a corner.
Was then caught sleeping just after the break to allow Gordon to double Newcastle’s lead.
THOMAS PARTEY – 6
Linked defence and attack fairly well without ever really doing anything spectacular.
DECLAN RICE – 6
Plays Jacob Murphy onside from a flicked on free-kick that leads to Newcastle taking the lead.
Took more responsibility in the second half on the ball.
MARTIN ODEGAARD – 7
Heavily man-marked by Joelinton but looked back to his very best after a spate of illness.
GABRIEL MARTINELLI – 8
Much more direct in his running. Unlucky not to open the scoring with his driven shot hitting the post after a half-way line sprint.
Continued to be positive in his play – just lacked the finishing touch.
LEANDRO TROSSARD – 6
Sneakily got away with dragging Isak down to stop the Swede joining a Newcastle counter in the first half and a good first-time pass to set Martinelli away. Those were his only highlights.
KAI HAVERTZ – 5
May just be back from a sickness bug, but the big German did very little, apart from somehow fluffing a header wide unmarked from six yards.
SUBS:
JORGINHO (PARTEY, 59) – 7
Some nice passes into dangerous areas and sprayed the ball about with conviction.
GABRIEL JESUS (TROSSARD, 59) – 6
Lively and sharp without every really testing Newcastle’s back four or goal.
OLEKSANDR ZINCHENKO (LEWIS-SKELLY, 77) – 5
Booked within a minute of coming on for a rash challenge on Joelinton.
Early on, Joelinton spooned a shot over early on, then William Saliba had a shot blocked by Dan Burn.
The Geordie alarm bells started ringing when Arsenal won one of their dreaded corners – Declan Rice whipped an in-swinger and Jurrien Timber rose to head over from close range.
It was end to end and compelling. Soon, Isak was wriggling free and teeing up Lewis Hall for a shot which Saliba hacked clear.
Arsenal had been struggling to break down Newcastle’s defence but when they were able to sit deep and launch a counter, Arteta’s men were inches away from the lead.
Leandro Trossard released Gabriel Martinelli, who galloped clear from the halfway line and drilled a shot against the post.
Gordon doubled Toon’s lead early in the second half[/caption] His strike sent the visiting fans into raptures[/caption]When another Rice corner arrived, Toon keeper Martin Dubravka dropped it, causing an almighty scramble with Timber attempting a back-heel Sven Botman making a saving block from Havertz.
So it was against the run of play when Newcastle grabbed the lead, Martin Dubravka punted a free-kick forward, Botman won a header and Jacob Murphy was able to tee up Isak to ram home off the underside of the bar.
Arsenal’s defending resembled a game of musical statues – freeze when the ball comes close – and Arteta was raging on the touchline.
His side have earned many comparisons with Tony Pulis’ Stoke, due to their attacking set-piece prowess but that bruising Potters side would never have conceded this goal.
For Isak, it was a 50th Newcastle strike in just 89 appearances.
Kai Havertz was guilty of missing several clear chances[/caption] The German looked off the pace on his return from injury[/caption]Joelinton was booked for chopping down Thomas Partey on the edge of the Newcastle box but Odegaard planted the resulting free-kick into the wall.
It summed up a frustrating first half for the hosts.
But far worse was to come at the start of the second half, when Murphy picked out Isak with a sweet pass and the Swede’s shot, bound for the far corner, was pushed out by David Raya, only as far as Gordon who beat Timber to poke home the rebound.
Once more Arsenal’s defending left much to be desired.
Havertz was soon heading wide, seemingly in slow motion, when Trossard located him four yards out.
Arteta sent for Gabriel Jesus and Jorginho but his side continued to pass up opportunities and began to run out of ideas.
Mikel Arteta has plenty to think about for the return leg[/caption] Newcastle have one foot in the final at Wembley[/caption]Newcastle froze when they faced Manchester United in the final of this competition two years ago.
But unless there is a miracle in that distant second leg, the Toon Army will be marching on Wembley again with genuine hope of a first major trophy in 56 years.