Declan Rice struck with a last-gasp header to break Luton hearts and send Arsenal five points clear at the top of the Premier League after a thrilling 4-3 victory for Mikel Arteta’s team at Kenilworth Road.
The Gunners looked to be missing out on the chance to extend their lead over Liverpool and Man City after a battling display from Luton, but Rice’s header 23 seconds into the seventh minute of a minimum of six additional minutes sparked dramatic celebrations amongst the Arsenal fans and players.
Rice, speaking after the game, described it as a big moment in Arsenal’s season.
“Luton are a top side, they can no way be overlooked in this league because of the quality they’ve got,” Rice said.
“They made us pay tonight [Tuesday] with set pieces, us being sloppy at the back but for us to score last minute and keep that momentum building is massive for us in this season.”
Luton went toe to toe with the league leaders in the early stages, but Arsenal pounced after Thomas Kaminski had to kick the ball out of play following a poor back pass, Bukayo Saka teeing up Gabriel Martinelli for the 20th-minute opener to undo all the home side’s good early work.
All was not lost for Luton, though, and they responded five minutes later through Gabriel Osho’s header to lift the noise levels at Kenilworth Road once again.
However, Arteta’s side quietened the atmosphere once again on the stroke of half-time as Gabriel Jesus headed home from close range to restore the visitors’ lead.
David Raya was once again in the spotlight early in the second half as his errors allowed Luton to turn the game on its head with goals from Elijah Adebayo (49) and Ross Barkley (57), but Arsenal found a response through Kai Havertz on the hour mark to bring the game level again.
There was plenty of time left for a winner and Arsenal’s dominance grew, but roared on by the home fans, Rob Edwards’ side looked to be heading for a valuable point but Rice’s heroics broke Luton’s resistance and kept his side’s title challenge firmly on track.
How Rice broke Luton hearts…
Arteta was expecting a physical battle with the Gunners boss going for the size and strength of Jakub Kiwior and Kai Havertz over Oleksandr Zinchenko and Leandro Trossard. A physical contest was exactly what Arsenal got as Luton more than held their own against the league leaders in what was a bright start for the home side.
However, a poor back pass to Thomas Kaminski forced the goalkeeper to kick the ball out of play. Jesus quickly retrieved the ball before taking a swift throw-in to Saka, who got into the area. The England winger, making his 200th Arsenal appearance, raced to the byline and pulled the ball back for Martinelli to sweep home into the bottom left corner, undoing all Luton’s good early work.
Roared on by the home fans, Luton responded quickly as the Gunners’ lead lasted just four minutes and 40 seconds. Alfie Doughty’s out-swinging corner picked out Osho, who ghosted in behind Jesus and the defender thumped a perfect header into the left corner of the net.
The game had burst into life and there was now space for Arsenal to run into as Luton needed Kaminski to deny Jesus, Martinelli and Saka in quick succession.
But he had no chance of stopping Arsenal regaining the lead just before the break as Jesus headed home Ben White’s inviting cross from close range for just his second Premier League goal of the season.
The break worked for Luton and they came out with renewed energy, and the hosts got their reward with a helping hand from Raya. It was another moment to forget for the Arsenal goalkeeper as he was beaten in the air by Adebayo as Luton pegged back the Gunners again.
Luton turned the game on its head in the 57th minute when Raya let Barkley’s shot through him to hand the hosts the lead for the first time in the game, but three minutes later Havertz was picked out by Jesus before the former Chelsea player provided a smart finish to continue his scoring form and bring the scores level again.
Arsenal started to dominate the game again with wave after wave of attacks, but Luton defended resolutely and even looked a threat on the counter-attack on occasions.
The home fans roared one more time as the fourth official put a minimum of six additional minutes up on the board, willing their side to a point, but Rice popped up 23 seconds into the seventh minute of added time to add to the belief that this could be Arsenal’s year.
What’s next?
Luton will play live on Sky Sports this weekend as they take on Man City in the Premier League on Super Sunday, kick-off 2pm. On Saturday December 16, they travel to Bournemouth in the Premier League, kick-off 3pm.
Arsenal are also on Sky Sports this weekend as they travel to Aston Villa on Saturday Night Football, kick-off 5.30pm. They then play their final Champions League group game on Tuesday December 12 away to PSV Eindhoven, kick-off 5.45pm.