Daily Mail

Rafa the conductor of mayhem leads Arsenal on a merry dance . . .

- CRAIG HOPE at St James’ Park

As A frantic finale was played out amid the noise, one manager orchestrat­ed his team from the touchline; the other was nowhere to be seen.

Rafa Benitez and Arsene Wenger, the former leading his side to a fourth straight victory, the latter beating a retreat to the shadows after five consecutiv­e away defeats, Arsenal’s worst run on the road since 1984.

Arsenal have come to embody flattery to deceive. Possession? No problem, 72 per cent. Chances? They aren’t afraid to shoot: 15 shots here. But when it comes to being clinical in attack and ruthless in defence they are flaky. They try to trick the observer into believing they might actually be in control. They are not, especially when meeting the antidote to their pretty patterns, as was the case at st James’ Park.

Once the home side figured that Arsenal’s plan did not extend far beyond keeping the ball and doing little with it, they made sure to punish them when their own chances came along.

They did that by turning half of their four shots on target into goals. Only four teams have bettered their conversion rate in the calendar year, and to think they slumped into the bottom three when beaten by Arsenal in the reverse fixture in December.

since then Benitez has managed his team, bringing improvemen­t from every player. Compare that to Wenger and Arsenal, where players and seasons drift aimlessly. The Europa League and a semifinal with Atletico Madrid is their salvation now, but their extended stay in that competitio­n will prove another mirage to judge from this evidence.

Wenger called Arsenal’s away form a ‘negative spiral’, but then delayed the inquest because of mitigating factors.

And there is the football club in a nutshell — yes, there are problems, but we don’t want to address them now.

Wenger claimed Thursday’s trip to Moscow was the reason they underperfo­rmed yesterday, even though he made six changes.

‘It is a concern because traditiona­lly we have a very strong record away from home,’ he said.

This was a snapshot for the Gunners of what a club should be like, where players, management and supporters are as one. That much was evident on full time as Benitez joined his team for an impromptu lap of honour.

They sing Benitez’s name in these parts, they snarl Wenger’s in north London. Not that the away fans could be bothered to turn on their manager, there was almost a sad acceptance of their fate.

And how can that be at a ground where Arsenal had not lost since 2005? They even had a lead to protect, handed to them when Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang and Alexandre Lacazette — the £105million strikeforc­e paired for the first time — clicked on 14 minutes, the former crossing for the latter to hook home.

But come the half-hour Newcastle

were level as a raking pass from man of the match Jonjo Shelvey was worked to DeAndre Yedlin and he crossed for Ayoze Perez to flick between Petr Cech and his near post.

Shelvey was again dictating the contest from the middle of the park and Paul Gascoigne — among the sell-out crowd — would have appreciate­d his fellow No 8 in black and white.

Newcastle’s winner came on 68 minutes when substitute Islam Slimani made a nuisance of himself on the edge of the area and Perez dummied for Matt Ritchie to gather and dink over Cech.

Brazilian winger Kenedy then hit the bar as the hosts pressed for a third. Not that they needed it.

Later, Wenger walked in on Benitez’s post- match press conference before spinning and waiting in the shade of the corridor. And that was where he had been all afternoon, in the shadow of his opposite number. NEWCASTLE UNITED (4-4-1-1): Dubravka 6.5; Yedlin 6.5, Lejeune 7, Lascelles 6.5, Dummett 6.5; Ritchie 7.5 (Murphy 85min), Diame 7, SHELVEY 8, Kenedy 6.5; Perez 7.5 (Joselu 79, 6); Gayle 6 (Slimani 63, 6). Subs not used: Darlow, Clark, Hayden, Manquillo. Scorers: Perez 29, Ritchie 68. Booked: Slimani. Manager: Rafa Benitez 7. ARSENAL (4-2-3-1): Cech 5; Chambers 5.5 (Maitland-Niles 78, 5), Holding 6, Mustafi 6, Monreal 6; Xhaka 6, Elneny 7; Iwobi 5.5 (Nketiah 86), Willock 5 (Welbeck 68, 5.5), Aubameyang 6.5; Lacazette 6.5. Subs not used: Ospina, Mertesacke­r, Kolasinac, Nelson. Scorer: Lacazette 14. Booked: None. Manager: Arsene Wenger 5. Referee: Anthony Taylor 7. Attendance: 52,210.

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 ?? OFFSIDE ?? Deft finish: Matt Ritchie has the beating of Arsenal keeper Petr Cech for the winning goal
OFFSIDE Deft finish: Matt Ritchie has the beating of Arsenal keeper Petr Cech for the winning goal
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 ?? GETTY IMAGES/AFP ?? Open and shut: Rafa Benitez (main and inset) cuts an animated figure on the touchline
GETTY IMAGES/AFP Open and shut: Rafa Benitez (main and inset) cuts an animated figure on the touchline

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