Aaroon Ramsey scored an injury-time winner to snatch a 2-1 Premier League
victory for Arsenal over managerless Crystal Palace.
The south London club was shocked by Tony Pulis' departure by mutual consent on the eve of the season on Friday, but they performed admirably before taking a shock lead at the Emirates Stadium on Saturday.
The south London club was shocked by Tony Pulis' departure by mutual consent on the eve of the season on Friday, but they performed admirably before taking a shock lead at the Emirates Stadium on Saturday.
Having comfortably absorbed
waves of Arsenal pressure, debutant Brede Hangeland headed Palace and
their caretaker boss Keith Millen into a 35th-minute lead.
Laurent
Koscielny levelled on the stroke of half-time, but the FA Cup holders
looked like they would fail to
capitalise, even as Palace winger Jason Puncheon
departed for a second booking in the closing stages.
But
Ramsey was on hand to prod home from point-blank range when Mathieu Debuchy's
shot was saved, following a display of set-piece defending that would have left
Pulis horrified.
Hangeland
joined fellow defender Martin Kelly and striker Fraizer Campbell in making his
Palace debut, while Arsenal were unchanged from last weekend's Community Shield
win over Premier League champions Manchester City.
Arsene
Wenger's team tore forward during the early stages in the hope of capitalising
on any vulnerability after a turbulent 24 hours for their London rivals.
But the
massed ranks of Palace defenders retained the hallmarks of their former boss
and Ramsey's tumble under a challenge from Scott Dann for an optimistic
eighth-minute penalty shout underscored a frustrating opening for the hosts.
Palace
goalkeeper Julian Speroni had to wait until the 29th minute to make his first
save - parrying smartly behind after Jack Wilshere's drive bounced awkwardly.
Marouane
Chamakh came close with an audacious attempt from distance that Koscielny
cleared to safety after goalkeeper Wojciech Szczesny tore out of his area to
challenge Campbell.
The
incident appeared to unsettle Arsenal and they were still reeling when Hangeland shrugged off Alexis
Sanchez and leapt
above Koscielny at the near post to glance home Palace's first corner of the
match.
But the
roles were reversed in first-half stoppage time when Koscielny peeled away from Hangeland to nod
Sanchez's floated free-kick beyond Speroni.
Arsenal
left-back Kieran Gibbs limped off with a suspected hamstring problem to be
replaced by Nacho
Monreal seven minutes into the second half, by which time the
match had settled back into the pattern established the last time it was level.
Sanchez
drove at the Palace defence in the 68th minute and cleverly exchanged passes
with Santi Cazorla, but Speroni's save was routine.
Olivier
Giroud and Alex Oxlade-Chamberlain emerged from the bench as Arsenal pushed for
a second goal, the former agonisingly close to turning home a close-range
winner in the 75th minute.
Arsenal's efforts
appeared in vain until Ramsey's late
intervention. Palace showed plenty of the spirit that Pulis fostered in
escaping relegation last term and will hope this result is not an indication of
how much they will miss his Midas touch.
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