The game was in the balance, Manchester United pushing hard and threatening an equaliser for 2-2, Arsenal on their heels.
Then, in an isolated raid forward by the home team, Granit Xhaka brought his left foot down like a sledgehammer and everything changed.
Bruno Fernandes had just missed a penalty for United. Now he was caught in possession on the edge of his own area by Mohamed Elneny and, when the ball was worked to Xhaka 25 yards out, the Arsenal midfielder had only one thing on his mind. The connection was sweet and the shot screamed past David de Gea.
It had been a fraught afternoon for Arsenal, one Mikel Arteta described as a rollercoaster. But United were broken and it would be Arsenal who boosted their top-four hopes, their day made better by Tottenham being held to a goalless draw at Brentford in the late kick-off. United are surely out of the race.
After all the criticism in the wake of the 4-0 humbling at Liverpool last Tuesday, after the home truths from the interim manager, Ralf Rangnick, including the one about the squad needing open-heart surgery, this was an improved United performance, at least at one end of the pitch.
Arsenal had been the firm favourites to seal their first Champions League qualification since 2016 but it felt as if their young team had been gripped by nerves. Yet Xhaka would bend the narrative to the force of his will and it was certainly a sight for sore eyes to see him blowing kisses to the Emirates crowd, with them returning the love.
Previously cast as a scapegoat, the relationship between him and them forever flawed – to paraphrase Xhaka – he had made himself the hero and Arsenal’s celebrations at full-time reflected the significance of the result. They had carried mental and physical fatigue into the game from last Wednesday’s win at Chelsea. They got over it. For United the misery continues.
Manchester United’s Bruno Fernandes sees his penalty strike a post before deflecting wide.
Rangnick had been forced into a defensive change after the bomb threat to Harry Maguire’s house, not a sentence anybody could ever have imagined reading but one that somehow reflects the fury and chaos around the club.
In came the fit-again Raphaël Varane and he was at fault for the opening goal although he was not the only one. He and Alex Telles missed attempted clearances in slapstick fashion after a Xhaka cross and, when De Gea pushed out Bukayo Saka’s curling effort, Tavares pounced for his first Arsenal goal.
United were a shambles defensively, their last line all over the place. Eddie Nketiah was allowed in for a one-on-one chance De Gea saved but the goalkeeper was beaten again shortly afterwards.
What a strange goal it was, Saka nudging an Emile Smith Rowe flick through for Nketiah and being body checked by Victor Lindelöf after the United centre-half was caught on the wrong side. Nketiah finished on this occasion but VAR called him back for offside. The technology then got to work on the Lindelöf challenge. Penalty. Saka converted calmly.
It would have been easy for United to feel sorry for themselves because they had created a host of opportunities to equalise at 1-0 down. Anthony Elanga twice ran through but he could not finish, with Rangnick complaining that Tavares had manhandled him on the second occasion.
Scott McTominay wasted a headed chance; Fernandes could not unload a chip after Aaron Ramsdale surrendered possession; Ronaldo’s touch let him down on a high ball; and Dalot rattled the crossbar from 25 yards. There was also the moment when Jadon Sancho ran at Cédric Soares and appealed loudly for handball against the defender.
The first half was particularly wild. Arsenal were equally loose at the back, putting their fans through agonies as they tried and sometimes failed to play out. Ronaldo got in front of Gabriel too easily to convert a Nemanja Matic cross, and there was still time in the first half for De Gea to save from Elneny and Martin Ødegaard, and Ramsdale to beat away a Telles blast.
Paul Pogba, missing because of a calf injury and out of contract in the summer, tweeted during the interval that he hoped to return before the end of the season. “It’s not over, United we would stand,” he wrote, the conditional tense slightly weird.
he same could be said of Tavares’s decision to jump for a United corner with his arm outstretched, the ball hitting it for a penalty. The game had turned into an ordeal for the left-back but he was reprieved when Fernandes stuttered, hopped and dragged the kick against the outside of a post.
United continued to push. McTominay tested Ramsdale, Ronaldo spun and lashed home, only to be denied by the tightest of offside calls, and Dalot rattled a post. The equaliser felt as though it was coming. Xhaka had other ideas.