Arsenal comfortably see off Spurs in FA Cup

Gunners ease to 2-0 win over north London rivals thanks to goals from Cazorla and Rosicky

Theo Walcott of Arsenal makes a ‘2-0’ gesture to the Tottenham fans as he is stretchered off the pitch at Emirates Stadium. Photograph:  Clive Rose/Getty Images
Theo Walcott of Arsenal makes a ‘2-0’ gesture to the Tottenham fans as he is stretchered off the pitch at Emirates Stadium. Photograph: Clive Rose/Getty Images

Arsenal 2 Tottenham 0

Arsenal swept aside north London rivals Tottenham 2-0 at the Emirates Stadium to take their place in the fourth round of the FA Cup on Saturday evening.

Santi Cazorla drilled in a fine opening goal on 31 minutes, before Tomas Rosicky doubled the lead on the hour with a well-taken finish after robbing Danny Rose on the halfway line and sprinting clear.

Tottenham, who had shown signs of improvement under new boss Tim Sherwood, were overrun in midfield as their strike pair Emmanuel Adebayor and Roberto Soldado failed to cause many problems.

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The victory came at a cost, however, with England forward Theo Walcott carried off on a stretcher in the closing stages after appearing to suffer a knee injury, which if proved serious could force manager Arsene Wenger into the transfer market to bolster the depleted attacking options of the Barclays Premier League leaders.

It was a bright start by both sides. Spurs created the first opening on nine minutes as a deflected clearance sent Christian Eriksen in on goal. However, Arsenal number two Lukasz Fabianski spread himself well at the near post and put the ball behind for a corner.

Arsenal then broke quickly as Serge Gnabry fed Walcott, and the England forward took his shot early from 20 yards, which was bouncing into the bottom left corner before Hugo Lloris touched it wide.

Walcott continued to stretch the Spurs defence, with a curling effort deflecting off Vlad Chiriches and just wide before, from the resulting corner, Gnabry fired a shot inches over.

On 18 minutes, Arsenal captain Thomas Vermaelen, recalled to the heart of the defence, upended Mousa Dembele on the edge of the penalty area. Referee Mark Clattenburg — who had been at the centre of a row with Southampton captain Adam Lallana earlier this week — reached straight for his yellow card.

The pace of the match showed no signs of relenting as Cazorla whipped a 20-yard effort only a foot off target before Walcott beat the offside trap, but his low shot was kicked away by Lloris.

Arsenal swept into the lead just after the half-hour Gnabry collected Bacary Sagna's pass and drove towards the Spurs penalty area. As Kyle Walker came across to cover Michael Dawson, the German stabbed the ball out to Cazorla on the overlap down the left and the Spaniard unleased a fierce drive back into the bottom corner.

Spurs, who beat Manchester United last weekend, looked to rally with Aaron Lennon again the main outlet. The visitors, though, could well have been down to 10 men when Dembele pushed the back of his head into Jack Wilshere's face as the pair tussled following a coming-together in the centre-circle.

However, despite appearing to be close to the incident, referee Clattenburg took no action. After some positive Spurs possession at the start of the second half, Adebayor failed to connect properly with Lennon’s cross through the Arsenal penalty area - much to the amusement of the home fans in the Clock End.

On the hour, Walcott cut into the right side of the Spurs box and rounded Lloris, but the angle was too tight and his cut-back hit the side-netting. It was 2-0 moments later, though. Rose dawdled on the halfway line, which allowed Rosicky to nip in and take the ball from the Spurs defender. The Czech playmaker sprinted clear and on into the penalty area, where he held off Walker to dispatch a lovely chip over the keeper and send Arsenal into round four.

Fabianski held onto a low drive from Dembele, before Arsenal brought on Matheiu Flamini for Wilshere and then, to underline the new strength in depth introduced club-record signing Mesut Özil for Mikel Arteta.

Walcott was unfortunate again to see a low effort curl just wide from 15 yards after more defensive lapses. Spurs felt they should have been given a penalty when Walker flicked the ball up onto Cazorla's arm, but neither the referee or his near-side assistant Peter Kirkup were interested.

Arsenal had to play the closing stages with 10 men as Walcott was carried off on a stretcher after appearing to jar his knee. The forward was taken around behind the Arsenal goal, in front of the Spurs fans — some of whom threw objects, which appeared to include coins and plastic bottles.

Walcott signalled a “2-0” gesture with his hands, before donning an Arsenal scarf as he was carried on around the stadium.