As statements of intent go, it was a truly inspired performance by champions
desperate not to surrender their crown.
For while Chelsea may have meekly surrendered any realistic title ambitions
against Leicester, Arsenal made it clear that they would push Manchester United
to the limits in defence of the Premiership.
Instead of stuttering to a halt like Chelsea yesterday, after seizing a 2-0
lead through Ray Parlour and Patrick Vieira, the Gunners destroyed Wimbledon in
a devastating three-minute period near the start of the second half.
An own-goal by Ben Thatcher, a strike by Dennis Bergkamp to help erase the
painful memory of his FA Cup penalty miss last week, and a tap-in by Nwankwo
Kanu all sent a clear warning to United ahead of their trip to Juventus.
For Arsenal not only closed the gap on the Premiership leaders to a point -
even if they have played a game more - but they also narrowed United's
previously huge advantage on goal difference to manageable proportions.
And just in case anyone had doubted their renowned resilience, they proved
that even that FA Cup semi-final defeat by United would not derail their
season.
Last April, the Gunners inflicted a 5-0 defeat on Wimbledon to move above
United to the top of the table - a position which they never let slip.
This time around, they may have been facing a depleted Dons side, with Chris
Perry and Michael Hughes especially missed.
But just as they had done in holding United recently, the Dons were seemingly
intent on securing a draw, with midfielders Stewart Castledine, Ceri Hughes and
Robbie Earle rarely moving from their shielding role in front of the back four.
Although the opening 30 minutes were one-way traffic, Arsenal nevertheless
struggled to breach the blue wall ahead of them.
All too often the Gunners, who even left joint leading scorer Nicolas Anelka
on the bench, were restricted to hopeful, long-range efforts - indeed they had
13 efforts on goal before they finally broke the deadlock.
Bergkamp, who had been given a rousing welcome in a bid to boost his deflated
morale, did force 'keeper Neil Sullivan to tip over a drive which was powering
toward the top corner after an effortless turn.
Vieira wasted a glorious opening when he blazed a wild shot over the bar from
close range after Tony Adams had headed a corner back across goal, while Parlour
almost made the most of a Kanu back-flick.
But it was only when the Gunners found the width to get behind the massed
defensive ranks that they seriously threatened to beat the impressive Sullivan.
Parlour headed over the bar after one flowing move involving almost half of
the side, but when Marc Overmars then showed persistence to reach the byline and
cut the ball back, the midfielder was on hand to finally make the overwhelming
pressure tell.
In contrast, the Dons were largely non-existent as an attacking force, relying
only on the pace of Marcus Gayle to capitalise on long-balls into the corners.
It was on a rare breakaway by the visitors four minutes after the break that
Nigel Winterburn intercepted the ball well inside his own half, scurried forward
40 yards and slipped the ball sideways.
The pass may even have been meant for Overmars, but Vieira had spotted the
inviting space ahead of him and controlled it, took two giant strides and let
fly with a left-footed drive straight into the bottom corner.
Carl Cort placed a header just wide from a free-kick, but by now, Arsenal were
rampant and took the hapless Dons defence apart.
They could afford to see Nelson Vivas head an effort over the bar and Kanu
place a follow-up just wide after Sullivan had parried an effort from Overmars.
But on 56 minutes, it was 3-0, as Bergkamp crossed for Kanu to head against
the post, and the ball to rebounded into the net off Thatcher.
A minute later, Bergkamp was played through after fine approach work by
Winterburn and Emmanuel Petit, and although Sullivan managed to get his hand to
the shot, he could not prevent it sneaking just inside the far post.
Two minutes after that, it was 5-0, as Bergkamp played the ball to Kanu, he
turned and although the ball was taken off the toe of the advancing Vieira, it
merely wrong-footed Sullivan and left Kanu to tap his shot into an empty net.
After that breathless spell, it was hard to maintain the same frenetic
momentum, and Arsenal allowed Wimbledon a consolation effort 20 minutes from
time when Cort rose unchallenged to meet a free-kick from Hughes.
But there was still a renewed vein of confidence running through the team
which led to Winterburn venturing forward again to strike a drive just over the
top.
In the closing stages, Sullivan saved from Overmars and substitute Kaba
Diawara, while the Frenchman also blazed a volley over the top.
Arsenal registered an incredible total of 34 attempts on goal - 18 of them on
target - and escaped any bookings.
It may now be a two-horse title race, barring a Chelsea recovery of miracle
proportions, but it promises to be one of true quality. end
Teams
Arsenal: Seaman, Vivas, Keown (Bould 89), Adams, Winterburn,
Parlour, Vieira, Petit, Overmars, Bergkamp (Diawara 69), Kanu.
Subs Not Used: Anelka, Grimandi, Lukic.
Goals: Parlour 34, Vieira 49, Thatcher 56 og, Bergkamp 57,Kanu 59.
Wimbledon: Sullivan, Cunningham, Blackwell, Thatcher, Kimble,
Hughes, Castledine (Hartson 74), Gayle, Euell (Ainsworth 89),Earle, Cort.
Subs Not Used: Heald, Leaburn, Jupp.
Booked: Thatcher, Hughes.
Goals: Cort 70.
Att: 37,982
Ref: S Lodge (Barnsley).