Watford snatch last-gasp winner - Against desperately disappointing Arsenal - Martinstopgist

Sunday 15 October 2017

Watford snatch last-gasp winner - Against desperately disappointing Arsenal


Watford 2 Arsenal 1: The home side have scored some celebrated late goals recently but none as important as this, with the upset victory moving Watford into the top four.
Richarlison’s late winner at Swansea City was good, and his equaliser at the death at West Bromwich Albion too was important too. But this Watford fight-back, sealed by Tom Cleverley’s 90th minute winner, sparking carnage at Vicarage Road, was the best of the lot.
1-0 down to Arsenal with less than 20 minutes left, Watford never stopped believing, never stopped throwing everything they had at Arsenal, even after Mesut Ozilmissed an inviting chance to make it 2-0 and kill the game.
And Watford were rewarded as the ripped the game away from Arsenal in the final minutes. Troy Deeney’s came on as a substitute and converted a penalty won by the brilliant Richarlison. Then, in the final minute, Cleverley smacked the ball into the roof of the net, taking the roof off Vicarage Road in doing so.
    Marco Silva had said before this game that he did not need to convince his players that they could beat Arsenal, because they had been proving to him all week that they had conviction and belief. This was an emphatic vindication of that and also of the growing reputation of Silva’s side. To keep changing games like this in the final minutes says so much about the ambition and drive of this team and also of their manager.
This win moves Watford up to fourth after eight matches, two points ahead of Chelsea, Arsenal and Liverpool. They are unlikely to finish ahead of those three – although stranger things have happened --  but they are certainly the best of the teams outside the big six. It helps that of those 14 – with all due respect to Rafa Benitez – they have the best manager.
Silva changed his formation for this game, matching Arsenal’s 3-4-3. But while the details can change, the ambition does not. Watford did not do much in the first half – Abdoulaye Doucoure hit one sharp cross to Roberto Pereyra – but in the second half they were electric.
      Watford’s hero again was Richarlison, the Brazilian winger who has taken to English football far quicker than anyone could have imagined. When he runs with the ball he is difficult to stop and he soon realised he had the beating ofHector Bellerin. He did him on the inside and fired a 20-yard shot just wide of the far post. Then he beat Bellerin on the outside, and as Bellerin stretched to tackle, Richarlison went down.
Deeney had just come on as a substitute as part of a switch of formation and he stepped up to take the penalty. He sent Petr Cech the wrong way and celebrated his first goal of the season by pointing to his name on the back of his shirt.
Watford found yet another level of energy and drive once they were level, thanks to substitutes Deeney and Etienne Capoue. His shot deflected off Mertesacker and went on to hit the post before Richarlison volleyed over from close range.

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