Daily Mail

PITIFUL PALACE

Struggling Roy’s boys are battered in Bristol

- RALPH ELLIS at Ashton Gate

BRISTOL CITY heaped more woe on Crystal Palace last night with a 4-1 thrashing of Roy Hodgson’s side at Ashton Gate.

The Eagles took the lead in the Carabao Cup fourth-round tie through Bakary Sako’s 21st-minute strike.

But it was one-way traffic after that as Matty Taylor, man of the match Milan Djuric, Joe Bryan and Callum O’Dowda struck for the home side. City, who lie seventh in the Championsh­ip, are now only three games away from the Wembley final on February 25. Bottom of the Premier League Palace must lift themselves for Saturday’s crunch game against West Ham.

Jesse Lingard’s brilliant brace helped holders Manchester United to a 2-0 victory at Swansea City. Leicester booked their place in the last eight with a 3-1 victory over Leeds, as did Bournemout­h who beat Middlesbro­ugh 3-1.

IF you don’t believe in fairytales, then this will surely change your mind. By the final whistle the Arsenal fans were chanting ‘Eddie, Eddie, Eddie’. Right now you’ll be racking your brains thinking, ‘ Eddie who?’ Eddie Nketiah, that’s who.

Hopefully the 18-year- old goes on to fulfil his potential in the game. But even if he doesn’t, he’ll always have this night. The night he was Arsenal’s hero, the darling of the Emirates Stadium.

In only his second appearance as a senior profession­al, the youngster scored a dramatic late equaliser with his first touch after coming on as a 85th minute substitute.

And as if that wasn’t romantic enough, Nketiah — who becomes the first Arsenal goalscorer born after Arsene Wenger took over in 1996 — notched Arsenal’s winner in extra time. Utterly breathtaki­ng.

Credit to Norwich, they were excellent. Had they taken their chances, Nketiah’s first goal would have been mere consolatio­n.

But Norwich didn’t stand a chance. This was fate. Destiny. The Emirates Stadium announcer had unintentio­nally introduced Norwich as arch-rivals Ipswich in the lead- up to kick-off.

The slip of the tongue sparked roars of laughter from the home supporters. But it was Norwich fans who were smiling at the end of the first half.

It took an understren­gth Arsenal some time to get going, with Alex Iwobi’s long- range effort that dipped narrowly over the bar the best they had to show during the opening 15 minutes.

Norwich, without pulling up any trees, were more than holding their own, Mario Vrancic firing wide from the edge of the box after a positive run through the heart of Arsenal’s defence.

Angus Gunn made his first save of the night in the 20th minute, producing an excellent reflex stop to deny Rob Holding’s bullet header from Theo Walcott’s cor- ner. But that was the best a lacklustre Arsenal had to show for their first-half display.

Indeed, it got much worse as Daniel Farke’s men took a shock 34th-minute lead.

It happened in a flash. Tom Trybull robbing Iwobi in midfield before James Maddison’s through ball found Josh Murphy who nonchalant­ly chipped over debutant Matt Macey to fire Norwich ahead.

Had Macey not produced a brilliant stop to deny Nelson Oliveira’s low effort five minutes later then Arsenal could have had a steeper second half hill to climb.

Wenger’s response was to move Jack Wilshere from the left to his preferred central midfield position, with Iwobi replacing the England hopeful on the flank.

Not that the tactical alteration did anything to shake Arsenal out of their malaise. Misplaced pass after misplaced pass — it was all very un-Arsenal.

They had referee Andy Madley to thank for not sending off Mohamed Elneny after the Egyptian brought down Oliveira in the 55th minute when the Canaries striker was clear through on goal.

The visiting bench were incensed when Madley brandished a yellow card. When Farke sees the replays he is unlikely to change his mind. Elneny and Arsenal had got away with one.

Murphy and Vrancic missed three glorious chances for Norwich as the Gunners continued to toil and the fear for Farke was that his side would be punished for their profligacy.

And his fears were realised as Nketiah embarked on a unforgetta­ble night; first equalising in the 85th minute as Norwich failed to deal with Theo Walcott’s corner before heading home a euphoric winner six minutes into extra time.

 ?? ALEX JAMES/JMP ?? Young gun: sub Eddie Nketiah last night made an instant impact against Norwich and became the first Arsenal scorer born since Arsene Wenger took over in 1996
ALEX JAMES/JMP Young gun: sub Eddie Nketiah last night made an instant impact against Norwich and became the first Arsenal scorer born since Arsene Wenger took over in 1996
 ??  ?? Teen spirit: Nketiah heads the winner in the 96th minute
Teen spirit: Nketiah heads the winner in the 96th minute
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