Arsenal Leapfrog Toon

05 February 2012 11:54
Newcastle slipped to sixth in the table following Arsenals 7-1 thumping of Blackburn. Man City 3 Fulham 0Arsenal 7 Blackburn 1Stoke 0 Sunderland 1Wigan 1 Everton 1Norwich 2 Bolton 0QPR 1 Wolves 2West Brom 1 Swansea 2

Manchester City opened up a three-point gap at the top of the Barclays Premier League following a 3-0 defeat of Fulham.

Sergio Aguero opened the scoring from the penalty spot after Adam Johnson had been fouled, then Fulham defender Chris Baird doubled the lead when he turned Johnson's low cross into his own goal, before Edin Dzeko wrapped up the win 18 minutes from time.

Second-placed Manchester United can move level again with their city rivals with victory at Chelsea on Sunday.

Earlier, Thierry Henry completed a 7-1 rout of Blackburn with his first Premier League goal since his return to Arsenal - but Robin van Persie took centre stage with a hat-trick at the Emirates.

It was a miserable afternoon for Rovers boss Steve Kean, who also saw defender Gael Givet shown a first half red card for a two-footed challenge on van Persie.

The Holland striker began Arsenal's goal frenzy in the lunchtime kick-off after just two minutes, hitting his second seven minutes before half-time and completing the hat-trick in the 62nd minute.

Morten Gamst Pedersen had equalised for the visitors but Alex Oxlade-Chamberlain (two) and Mikel Arteta added to the Blackburn gloom.

And the on-loan Henry, on as a substitute, popped up in injury time to put the pressure back on Kean.

Sunderland's impressive form continued as a strike from James McClean secured them a 1-0 win against 10-man Stoke at a wintry Britannia Stadium.

In a contest during which snow fell throughout, a first half of few goalscoring opportunities finished with Potters defender Robert Huth receiving his marching orders in the 45th minute. The German was shown a straight red card following a tackle on David Meyler.

McClean then netted in the 60th, bursting through the hosts' defence and tucking the ball away to seal a victory which means the Black Cats have now taken 22 points from the 30 on offer since manager Martin O'Neill took charge.

Swansea's on-loan midfielder Gylfi Sigurdsson played a major role in Brendan Rogers' side coming from behind to register only their second away win of the season at West Brom.

The Iceland international, who joined from Hoffenheim last month until the end of the season, cancelled out Marc-Antoine Fortune's opener and laid on the winner for Danny Graham.

Second-half goals from Andrew Surman and Anthony Pilkington ensured Norwich ended a nervy afternoon with a 2-0 win over strugglers Bolton at Carrow Road.

The Canaries dominated the first half and should have been well ahead by half-time, but their profligacy, and the Bolton woodwork, left them frustrated.

The game looked set to peter out into a dull goalless draw until Surman volleyed home in the 70th minute and Pilkington wrapped up the win just before the end with an instinctive finish after Bolton goalkeeper Adam Bogdan had parried Russell Martin's drive.

Substitute Kevin Doyle inspired a second-half Wolves comeback at QPR to secure a vital 2-1 victory in west London.

The Republic of Ireland international came off the bench at half-time and helped set up Matt Jarvis' equaliser 51 seconds later, before going on to net the winner.

Their victory was the first in 10 league attempts and helps relieve some of the pressure on under-fire manager Mick McCarthy.

It had looked like Mark Hughes would be going home with the three points after debutant Bobby Zamora fired QPR into a deserved lead just days after his move from west London rivals Fulham.

Wolves were given a way back into the game, though, when fellow striker Djibril Cisse was shown a straight red card for an altercation with Roger Johnson in the 34th minute.

Wigan benefited from one of the more bizarre goals the league will see this season but had to settle for a 1-1 draw against Everton at the DW Stadium.

It had been a thoroughly forgettable affair until the 76th minute when Phil Neville blocked a Jean Beausejour cross and the ball somehow found its way past Tim Howard for a hugely embarrassing own goal.

But the hosts' lead lasted only seven minutes, substitute Victor Anichebe heading in the equaliser to ensure Everton followed up their win over Manchester City on Tuesday with a point on the road.

  

Source: FOOTYMAD