Arsenal manager Mikel Arteta is confident his team "wants it" after seeing them battle their way to victory at Newcastle and close the gap on Premier League leaders Liverpool.
The champions' 2-1 defeat at Crystal Palace on Saturday presented Arsenal with an opportunity 24 hours later, but it was one they looked like passing up at St James' Park.
With six minutes remaining, Newcastle led 1-0 courtesy of Nick Woltemade's 34th-minute header, but goals from substitute Mikel Merino and, in the sixth minute of stoppage time, defender Gabriel secured a dramatic 2-1 win.
"There are moments in the season and obviously with the start that we had already and the difficult fixtures that we had, today we had the opportunity to close that gap, and do it in a stadium that has a very recent and difficult past for us," Arteta said.
"I think it shows how much the team wants it."
Arsenal were much the better side for long periods, but the heroics of Newcastle goalkeeper Nick Pope, who made a series of fine saves, and some stubborn defending kept them at bay until an eventful conclusion.
The win ended Arsenal's run of three successive defeats in all competitions at St James'.
And that was not lost on stand-in captain Bukayo Saka, who saw his side denied an early penalty for Pope's challenge on Viktor Gyökeres after referee Jarred Gillett had been advised to review his original penalty decision.
Saka told the club's official website: "It was a big result. We've come here in the past and results have gone against us, or decisions and stuff like that.
- Arsenal's attitude proves they belong in title race
- Woltemade refuses to accept Gabriel's apology for 'elbow in my face'
- Liverpool's Van Dijk demands 'quick' improvement after loss
"It was starting to feel like that again today, but we have a big character, a big fight to turn it around, so we're really happy.
"In the past, we've come here and had decisions go against us and whatnot, and almost today, with the penalty and some of the decisions, and Nick Pope having an unbelievable game.
"But we dug in and we showed that character, that resilience we have, so I'm really proud of all the boys. We made a big statement today. It's really good for us, you can see it in all of our faces."
Saka watched from the sidelines as the late drama unfolded having continued his comeback from injury with a 70-minute run-out, and he was a happy man at full time.
He said: "I felt really good out there. I felt we dominated the game, we controlled it, and at the end, we got what we deserved.
"It's a beautiful feeling every time I get to wear the armband, and even better when we get three points, so I'm really happy."
Newer articles
Older articles
Elon Musk’s AI company will make Grok chatbot more accessible, here’s how
IRCTC's AskDisha 2.0: AI Chatbot Streamlines Train Ticket Booking, Refunds, and Information Access
ICC Test Rankings: Pant Climbs to Career-Best, Bumrah Holds Top Spot as Root Reigns Supreme
India's Harshit Rana Released from Test Squad Ahead of Second England Clash
Bumrah's Birmingham Nets Spell: Accuracy, Angles, and Ambiguity Surround India Spearhead
Saucecode:
Nitish Rana Eyes Delhi Return After Disappointing Uttar Pradesh Spell
Gavaskar Calls for Kuldeep Yadav's Inclusion in Second Test; Questions Bumrah's Fitness After Leeds Loss
India's Fielding Woes Blasted by Ex-Selector After Test Defeat Against England; Calls for Patience Amid Transition
Popular Finance YouTuber "financewithsharan" Hacked: Lessons in YouTube Security and Account Protection
India's Batting Collapses Trigger Debate: Gambhir Defends Lower Order, Cites Missed Catches, Workload Management as Factors in Test Loss