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ARSENAL REPORTS 1997-1998
Picture Arsenal's Anelka tries to escape Chelsea's Duberry.

Arsenal 2 Chelsea 0

By Martin Lipton, PA Sport

Stephen Hughes' first half double continued Chelsea's Highbury hoodoo after Manchester United proved they can win even when they only draw - and the rest showed they don't really want to be champions.

Ruud Gullit had brought his Blues across London desperate to end that appalling record of just one win in their previous 14 visits.

But like Blackburn and Liverpool already this weekend, Chelsea tripped up when given the perfect opportunity to make the champions pay for their Old Trafford failing as they subsided woefully to their eighth league defeat of the campaign.

Their inability to keep their heads after referee Dermot Gallagher had failed to send off Steve Bould for a clear "professional foul" on Luca Vialli surely showed why the Premiership crown will not finish in West London.

Arsenal, now a point behind the second-placed Blues with a game in hand after an 11 games all-competition unbeaten run, can justly claim to be right back in the title mix, perhaps the only real contenders to the Old Trafford side.

Yet Alex Ferguson will be the happiest man of all after his side somehow managed to extend their advantage over the weekend despite being held at home by lowly Bolton.

The prize was there for Chelsea to grasp, although with that dreadful Highbury record behind them the last thing they needed was to give away a goal from Arsenal's first real attack.

But that was precisely what happened. When Dennis Bergkamp flicked on in the fourth minute, Leboeuf had all the time he needed to clear, before not one, but two miskicks let in Nicolas Anelka.

Ed De Goey did well to block the Frenchman's first shot, as the ball bounced on, although when Laurent Charvet hacked clear to Hughes the danger looked over.

Yet the young midfielder, whose only other goal this season had come in the Coca-Cola meeting with the Blues, did not hesitate as he unleashed a thumping first-time left-footer from 22 yards that threaded the eye of the needle to flash into the net.

Chelsea, with Gianfranco Zola again only a substitute, were rocked, once again the authors of their own misfortune, yet they had reason to feel the fates were conspiring against them in the 12th minute.

Emmanuel Petit's poor header -his only mistake of an otherwise immaculate game - sent Vialli charging away, and when Bould grabbed hold of the Italian's shirt collar to haul him to the ground Mr Gallagher appeared to have no option.

But the card was yellow, not red, Chelsea were furious, and when Leboeuf's free-kick was deflected wide and Charvet's header from the resulting corner was held by Alex Manninger, all the bad blood that had built up in September's Stamford Bridge meeting spilled over again.

Wenger had memorably described parts of that match as "really vicious" and what we got next was another 20 minutes of midfield mayhem, the ball often utterly peripheral to events, as Vialli, Mark Hughes and Dennis Wise took out their frustrations on anybody they could find.

Arsenal were no shrinking violets either, Nigel Winterburn standing his corner more fiercely than most and Mr Gallagher's cards were in regular use.

The surprise was that only the excellent Ray Parlour - who must have impressed the watching Glenn Hoddle - Vialli and Leboeuf were cautioned. It could, should, have been more.

Despite their evident unhappiness, Chelsea were holding their own, especially after Wise moved inside from the left to confront Petit, although failing to trouble Manninger.

Arsenal, with Ian Wright left on the bench, had offered even less, but from their only other attack of the half, three minutes from the break, they doubled their advantage.

Eddie Newton brought down Anelka on the Chelsea left, and when Bergkamp floated over the Blues compounded the felony by failing to pick up either Bould or Tony Adams.

Adams it was who nodded down and with Leboeuf, Roberto Di Matteo and DeGoey all slow to react, Hughes stooped to conquer with a headed finish.

Now it was a real mountain, one Chelsea never really looked like climbing, although Gullit tried to change the course of events by pulling off thevastly unimpressive Dan Petrescu, sending on Danny Granville and reverting to a back three.

It did not make them appear any more solid, and twice, first from Parlour and then from Gilles Grimandi, Anelka ran away free, De Goey saving histeam on both occasions.

Granville's header wide and a speculative - and far from close - volley byHughes was the sum total of Chelsea's efforts at the other end before Vialli was replaced by Zola in the 63rd minute.

All Chelsea could do was continue to exact physical retribution for theearlier slights, Hughes and Di Matteo rightly, if belatedly, falling foul of the man in black.

Wright and Lee Dixon entered the fray at the expense of Grimandi and Anelka for the final 20 minutes, and Marc Overmars also departed before the end, David Platt getting a run-out.

But this was a game long since settled, Chelsea never showing any conviction that they felt they could find a way back into proceedings, although the nastiness remained to the very bitter end, with Bergkamp booked for dumping Wise.

Three out of three for the Gunners, the fourth to come soon.

Chelsea may start having an inferiority complex. In title terms, they should have.

Teams

Arsenal: Manninger, Winterburn, Bould, Adams, Anelka (Wright 69), Bergkamp, Overmars (Platt 76), Parlour, Petit, Grimandi (Dixon 69), Hughes.

Subs Not Used: Luis Boa Morte, Lukic.

Booked: Bould, Parlour, Bergkamp.

Goals: Hughes 4, 42.

Chelsea: De Goey, Petrescu (Granville 46), Leboeuf, Vialli (Zola 62), M. Hughes, Wise, Duberry, Le Saux, Di Matteo, Newton (Flo 80), Chalvet.

Subs Not Used: Hitchcock, P. Hughes.

Booked: Vialli, Leboeuf, Wise, Di Matteo.

Att: 38,083

Ref: D J Gallagher (Banbury).

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