EMILE SMITH ROWE came off the bench to fire holders Arsenal into the FA Cup fourth round with an extra-time goal against Newcastle – but only after he had a red card overturned by VAR.
The substitute was given his marching orders by referee Chris Kavanagh for a tackle on Sean Longstaff at the end of the 90 minutes, but the card was downgraded to a yellow after the pitchside monitor was used.
It proved decisive with Smith Rowe grabbing the opener in the 109th minute before captain Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang confirmed the victory eight minutes later with a tap-in to wrap up a 2-0 success.
Gunners boss Mikel Arteta had to turn to the bench to ensure their FA Cup defence did not end at the first attempt, while Newcastle manager Steve Bruce was left to rue Andy Carroll’s wastefulness in front of goal.
Holders Arsenal made a number of changes for the third-round tie but predictably there was no place for Mesut Ozil in the squad, while an injury to Gabriel Martinelli in the warm-up saw his night end prematurely.
It was the visitors who enjoyed the better of the play in the opening exchanges and although Aubameyang forced the returning Martin Dubravka into an excellent save midway through the half, he would have been deemed offside by VAR.
A better chance was created soon after by Kieran Tierney, but Reiss Nelson decided to control his cut-back and the opportunity went begging.
While Arsenal began to dominate, they still struggled to penetrate an organised Newcastle back five though Carroll was required to make two timely clearances from dangerous balls into the area before half-time.
Following a lacklustre first 45, when captain Aubameyang touched the ball only 18 times while playing in his favoured central position, it was a surprise to see the away side make the first change.
Skipper Jamaal Lascelles, who made his first appearance since November 21 after recovering from coronavirus, was replaced by Matt Ritchie and the substitute slotted in at left wing-back.
Gunners manager Arteta had already seen enough by the time Carroll fired a glorious opportunity wide 11 minutes into the second period.
David Luiz’s clearance was poor and Jeff Hendrick’s scuffed shot came to the Magpies forward, but he side-footed past the post from six yards and Smith Rowe was finally able to enter the fray.
Arsenal should have broken the deadlock on the hour mark, but Aubameyang again did not have the Midas touch in front of goal and poked wide with only Dubravka to beat.
Newcastle’s goalkeeper was making his first appearance of the season following a heel injury and was required minutes later to keep out Joe Willock’s close-range header.
It was the midfielder’s last involvement following a double substitution with Bukayo Saka and Granit Xhaka introduced and the changes worked, with Aubameyang more prominent, but Bruce’s side almost clinched victory at the end of the 90.
With results decided on the day at this stage of the competition, both teams pushed for a winner and a quick break by the visitors saw Elliot Anderson’s shot fall for Carroll and yet Bernd Leno saved well and bravely pushed away the loose ball before the forward could score the rebound.
The stoppage-time drama was not over, with substitute Smith Rowe shown a red card for a high tackle on Sean Longstaff – but referee Chris Kavanagh downgraded his decision to a yellow after he used the pitchside monitor.
Xhaka forced Dubravka into a wonderful save from his fierce volley early in the first half of extra time before the opener arrived.
Arteta saw three of his substitutes combine, with Saka involved before Alexandre Lacazette headed into Smith Rowe’s path and the playmaker fired into the bottom corner.
There was still time for Aubameyang to grab only his sixth of the season eight minutes later when he tapped in Tierney’s centre to send the holders into the fourth round.
How Leinster could do with a guy like him. This lad is side stepping guys like they are not even there. Lowe’s big focus is hoping to get tackled by a guy that will give him an opportunity to place the ball into him to try win a penalty regardless of how not in the way the guy is. This guy is so good and a joy to watch!
@T Dawg: what are you smoking? ANY team would love to have Kolbe. Best attacking wing in the world. Lowe is still class though. Hes scored 9 tries this season. Compared to his competition in the irish squad hes doing pretty well: conway=8, earls=3, stockdale=2, larmour=1.
@Rudiger McMonihan: I am staying when the game isn’t going well for Lowe, he is more interested in trying to cheat. Easy to lead the try count with Leinster playing so well
@T Dawg: if that’s the case why doesnt every leinster winger score so many tries?
@Rudiger McMonihan: Dave Kearney has 12 tries in 13 games. Lowe 9 in 17.
Great discussion Rudiger.
@T Dawg: I said every winger. You picked out one player who had a great season but even if you take his average over his career Lowe is still better. Keenan, Larmour, McFadden dont score as many. AByrne has had good seasons and bad seasons in terms of try scoring too. Lowe consistently scores loads of tries year after year.
@Rudiger McMonihan: McFadden played 4 games. Keenan played 3 games on wing, Larmour played 1 back in 19′. This is like talking to a child. Read the stats
That step was filthy.