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Arsenal End Nine-Year Trophy Drought With FA Cup Win

Aaron Ramsey’s extra-time winner ensured Arsenal ended their nine-year wait for a trophy by coming from two goals behind to beat Hull City in a … Continue reading Arsenal End Nine-Year Trophy Drought With FA Cup Win


Arsenal-trophyAaron Ramsey’s extra-time winner ensured Arsenal ended their nine-year wait for a trophy by coming from two goals behind to beat Hull City in a dramatic FA Cup final at Wembley.

The Gunners started as firm favourites but were stunned as goals from James Chester and Curtis Davies gave Hull a flying start inside the first 10 minutes.

Santi Cazorla’s superb free-kick put Arsenal back in contention before half-time and Laurent Koscielny scrambled in the equaliser after 71 minutes.

And as Arsenal looked the stronger, superior team in extra time, Ramsey, whose absence through injury hit them so hard in the latter part of the season, completed the comeback with an instinctive strike with 11 minutes of the extra period left.

Arsenal survived anxious moments as Hull pressed forward in desperation – but referee Lee Probert’s final whistle signalled the end of the agonising 3,283-day wait for manager Arsene Wenger to taste success after they won the FA Cup against Manchester United on penalties in Cardiff in 2005.

The winner came when Ramsey scored with the outside of his right foot to give Arsenal their 11th FA Cup win, equalling the all-time record held by Manchester United.

“We wanted to make history and win the game. It was the turning point in the life span of this team,” Arsenal manager, Arsene Wenger said.

“If we hadn’t come back it would have been terrible. I praised the spirit many times of this team. Congratulations to Hull they played very well.”

The start of the match defied logic given recent form as well as the two teams’ hugely contrasting histories.

In some ways the goals came too early for Hull as Arsenal had plenty of time to get back into the match, which is how it panned out.

Chester, returning from injury, made the early breakthrough. Arsenal failed to clear a corner and the Hull defender planted the ball past the despairing lunge of Fabianski.

Hull quickly went 2-0 ahead when Arsenal failed to clear another set-piece and although Fabianski got a hand to a header from Alex Bruce to palm the ball on to his left-hand post, Davies lashed it in from the tightest of angles.

Hull almost went three up four minutes after that when a looping header from Bruce, the son of manager Steve, was dropping into the Arsenal goal until Kieran Gibbs headed it clear from under his own crossbar.

Arsenal were back in the game after Bruce fouled Santi Cazorla some 25 metres from the Hull goal.

The Spaniard took the free kick himself and his brilliantly-taken effort dipped and swerved into the back of the Hull net giving keeper Allan McGregor no chance.

After dominating for most of the match, Arsenal’s equaliser came when they got a couple of lucky deflections at a corner with the ball falling to Koscielny, who turned and scored from close range.

Gibbs then had a superb chance to win it for Arsenal eight minutes later but missed the target when he looked certain to score.

With neither team able to score again the match moved into extra time and Olivier Giroud had a golden chance to put Arsenal ahead in the 94th minute but thundered a header against the bar.

Ramsey found the net for the winner but there was still time for Hull substitute Sone Aluko to go close with an ambitious angled effort that went wide after Fabianski raced out of goal but failed to make contact.

“It’s such a great feeling right now, I’m quite emotional thinking about it,” matchwinner Ramsey said.

“We have conceded early a few times this season but we showed great strength and character today.

“That’s up there with the most important goals I’ve scored and hopefully this is the first of many to come.”