The Citizen (Gauteng)

Gunners look to keep their season afloat

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London – Arsenal’s season appeared to be ending with a whimper when they were reduced to 10 men after falling 2-0 behind against Villarreal in last week’s first leg of their Europa League semifinal.

Instead, a precious away goal gave them hope they can finish an inconsiste­nt campaign on a high by setting up a showdown in the Polish city of Gdansk against Manchester United.

Arsenal are ninth in the Premier League table and are unlikely to qualify for Europe next year via that route but winning the Europa League would give them a ticket back to the Champions League.

Manager Mikel Arteta (right) said that the Premier League match against Newcastle last weekend was the perfect preparatio­n for the Villarreal game.

“Yes, because we had a strong and a very convincing performanc­e,” he said. “We scored two goals, we kept a clean sheet, won the points, and had some really strong individual performanc­es too.

“The only downside is the one with David (Luiz, who was injured during the game) because we know how important he is to us. I think we lost him today.”

Standing in Arsenal’s way is their former boss and Europa League specialist Unai Emery, who won the trophy three years in a row from 2014 when he was in charge of Sevilla and also took Arsenal to the 2019 final.

Villarreal, who have never reached the final of the Champions League or Europa League, have put together a promotiona­l video ahead of the clash against Arsenal starring Pau Torres, with the message: “Let’s flip the script... It’s our time.”

While Arsenal and Villarreal fans face a nervy night, Manchester United are virtually assured of a place in the final of a competitio­n they won in 2017 after hammering Roma 6-2 in the first leg.

United were in trouble when they were trailing 2-1 at Old Trafford last week but blitzed the Italians in the second half, with standout performanc­es from

Paul Pogba and Edinson Cavani.

Ole Gunnar Solskjaer said after the game that the job was not yet done but he is on the brink of ending his semifinal hoodoo and reaching a final for the first time as United boss.

The Norwegian will hope there will be no distractio­ns after Sunday’s match against Liverpool was postponed following a pitch invasion at Old Trafford as part of a protest against United’s owners, the Glazer family.

A first trophy in four years would not magically ease the festering tensions at the club but it would add gloss to a season in which they are likely to finish second in the English Premier League.

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