Patrick Vieira turned in yet another commanding performance as Arsenal gave
warning that they are prepared to settle for nothing less than the Double this
season.
But if in May English soccer's two most prestigious prizes glitter in the
Highbury cabinet Arsenal manager Arsene Wenger will surely reflect that three
points never came more easily than on this Easter weekend against Sunderland.
This was nothing short of a stroll in the holiday sun against a Sunderland
side which is beginning to take on a death pallour as it careers towards the
relegation trap door.
After the news had filtered through that Manchester United had beaten Leeds at
Elland Road in a High Noon shoot-out, Arsenal required a commanding performance
to sustain their title ambitions.
As a statement of intent their three goals from Vieira, Dennis Bergkamp and
Sylvain Wiltord, all in the first half-hour, could hardly have been more
conclusive.
Vieira's contribution, in defence and peerlessly in midfield, can only have
persuaded Wenger that when the Vieira contract talks reach their denouement his
employers had better be pretty damn generous, regardless of chairman Peter
Hill-Wood's comments that his players were paid too much.
This was a champion display no doubt, but if Arsenal showed the class of
Double-winners then rarely have opposition contributed so greatly to their ease
of victory.
Sunderland were out-fought, out-passed and out-classed. And pretty soon, on
this performance, they will be out of the Premiership.
Indeed, the Highbury wags were chanting 'cheerio' before the half-hour chimed
on the famous Highbury clock and all Sunderland manager Peter Reid could do was
shake his head in anguish.
His side were awful. They defended like schoolboys, Jason McAteer squabbled
his way through the first half with Arsenal's Ashley Cole, McAteer at one stage
receiving a schoolmasterly ticking off from his own team-mate in the shape of
Niall Quinn and Reid was forced to replace the former Liverpool and Blackburn
man at half-time with Thomas Butler.
On top of that the Wearsiders had few ideas in midfield and up front Kevin
Phillips had one of those games which would only convince England manager
Sven-Goran Eriksson that his future no longer lies in an international shirt.
It was the perfect way for Arsenal captain Tony Adams to celebrate his 500th
league appearance for the Gunners - a clean sheet and not too much to trouble
his ageing limbs.
Sunderland had not won at Highbury since 1983, so they were perhaps fearing
the worst.
But Arsenal could not have got off to a better start, scoring twice within the
first three minutes after taking advantage of some desperate Sunderland
defending.
The first came after just 90 seconds. There seemed no danger in the Sunderland
penalty area when Paul Thirwell attempted to pass the ball back to goalkeeper
Thomas Sorensen but he had clearly not seen Vieira.
The French midfielder swept onto the unfortunate 'pass' and slid the ball home
with the minimum of fuss.
If that was a gift then the second was almost as generous. This time the
entire Sunderland defence stood off as a long, speculative cross from Fredrik
Ljunberg found Thierry Henry out wide.
With almost casual glee the Frenchman, back from his three-match suspension
for protests against referee Graham Poll last December, volleyed the ball
hopefully across the goal where it found Bergkamp loitering by the far post.
Bergkamp rarely needs any space to make his talent felt. On this occasion
Sunderland gave him what seemed like the length of the Holloway Road to tap the
ball home from less than a yard with not a Sunderland player in sight.
It was men against boys.
True, Phillips should have done better after 27 minutes when good work from
Darren Williams saw the ball cut back into the striker's path but from 15 yards
he skewed the ball past Seaman's post.
It was a miss which was to prove costly because in virtually the next attack
Bergkamp picked up the ball on the edge of the area, shimmied in that imperious
style which is the Dutchman's trademark and passed the ball delightfully into
the six-yard box where Sylvain Wiltord was on hand to stroke the ball elegantly
home with his left foot.
Three-nil up and Arsenal were cruising. As it happens if Phillips had taken a
series of chances in either half the match might have turned into more of a
contest.
But such was the mundanity of Sunderland's approach-work that they neither
deserved not looked like taking anything from the match.
Indeed, Arsenal might have extended their superiority in the second-half,
especially with Henry tormenting the Wearside defence at will. The Frenchman did
manage to get the ball into the net but while he was celebrating, ripping off
his shirt to reveal a 'Go Robert, We're Thinking Of You' message for injured
French team-mate Robert Pires, the assistant referee raised his flag for
offside.
It was a pity, the Gunners' brilliant display deserved a prosaic statement. On
this form, however, that will come soon enough hallmarked in glittering silver.
Teams
Arsenal: Seaman, Cole, Luzhny, Campbell, Adams,
Ljungberg (Kanu 77), Vieira, Edu, Wiltord (Grimandi 68), Henry,
Bergkamp (Jeffers 78).
Subs Not Used: Dixon, Wright.
Goals: Vieira 2, Bergkamp 4, Wiltord 30.
Sunderland: Sorensen, Gray, Reyna, McCann, Bjorklund,
McAteer (Butler 45), Craddock, Williams, Thirlwell,
Phillips (Kilbane 76), Mboma (Quinn 21).
Subs Not Used: McCartney, Macho.
Booked: McCann, Reyna, McAteer.
Att: 38,047
Ref: P Durkin (Dorset).