Arsenal's new Nigerian star Nwankwo Kanu walked straight into a cheating storm
as he laid on the FA Cup holders' 76th-minute winner for Marc Overmars and
sparked furious protests from Sheffield United in the fifth round FA Cup tie at
Highbury.
United boss Steve Bruce appeared to want to take his team off the field
following the goal and the game was held up for eight minutes while players from
both sides jostled each other in an explosive confrontation.
The mayhem started when teenage United striker Lee Morris went down under
challenge from Gilles Grimandi in the Gunners' penalty area.
United's appeal for a penalty were rejected and as Morris limped off injured,
the ball ran out for an Arsenal throw-in.
Ray Parlour tried to throw the ball to United keeper Alan Kelly to give the
visitors' unchallenged possession.
But Kanu, who had come on as a 65th-minute substitute and may have been
unaware of the unwritten code of sportsmanship which is followed in this country
in such circumstances, hunted the ball down and slid a low cross into the path
of Overmars who tapped into an empty net.
United players could hardly believe their eyes but once they had recovered
their senses they surrounded referee Peter Jones and a linesman with their
protests.
Then an angry Bruce jumped out of the dug-out, signalling for his players to
come off the field.
United fans, guarded by an army of security men, chanted "shame on Arsenal"
for the rest of the game but the referee, once all the mayhem had died down, was
left with no option but to let the goal stand.
Arsenal had appeared to be heading for a comfortable victory when Patrick
Vieira headed them into a 28th minute lead from Denis Bergkamp's exquisitely
curled free-kick. Diawara, who made a surprise starting debut in place of his
French compatriot Nicolas Anelka, last Wednesday's two-goal Wembley hero for the
world champions against England, twice hit a post within the space of three
minutes towards the end of the first-half.
And Overmars was only inches off target with two other block-busting efforts
as United's defenders fell apart against a patient and finally penetrating wave
of Arsenal attacks.
But three minutes after the interval United's Brazilian striker Marcelo, who
had terrorised Arsenal's defence - lacking the injured Tony Adams, Martin Keown
and Lee Dixon, easily rose above Grimandi to nod home Paul Devlin's cross.
United, who knocked Arsenal out of the cup three years ago in a fourth-round
replay having drawn at Highbury, clearly fancied their chances of repeating the
trick at that stage and their heavily reinforced back line reduced the Gunners
to frustration in the second half.
But when Kanu, the £3million signing from Inter Milan whose career was
threatened three years ago when he needed heart surgery, made his entry it led
to a frenzied finale.
He was unlucky not to score with a fierce shot that brought goalkeeper Kelly
to his knees but then became the villain as far as Sheffield were concerned when
he pounced on Parlour's throw in and re-routed it beyond the helpless Kelly for
Overmars to tuck away.
In the scrimmage that followed, Overmars appeared to take a blow in the face
from Ian Hamilton, one of five United players who were booked in the match and
when the game finally got going again it was almost a sheepish Arsenal that held
on desperately for their dubious victory.
Teams:
Arsenal: Seaman, Vivas, Bould, Grimandi, Winterburn, Parlour,
Garde (Hughes 43), Vieira, Overmars, Bergkamp, Diawara (Kanu 64).
Subs Not Used: Anelka, Manninger, Upson.
Goals: Vieira 28, Overmars 76.
Sheff Utd: Kelly, Derry, Sandford, Holdsworth, Quinn, Morris,
Woodhouse, Hamilton, Stuart, Devlin (Twiss 83), Marcelo.
Subs Not Used: Ford, Tracey, O'Connor, Jacobsen.
Booked: Stuart, Hamilton, Holdsworth, Derry, Marcelo.
Goals: Marcelo 48.
Att: 38,020
Ref: P Jones (Loughborough).