Arsenal 4 - 0 Aston VillaArsenal finish second as Olivier Giroud hat-trick sees off Aston Villa
Home team scorersOlivier Giroud 5
Olivier Giroud 78
Olivier Giroud 80
Mark Bunn 90 +2:00 o.g.
Olivier Giroud’s first Premier League hat-trick meant Arsenal beat Aston Villa to secure a second-place finish at the expense of Tottenham.
It was an afternoon of ‘what might have been’ after the Gunners had entered 2016 top of the table and looking in good shape to claim their first title in 12 years. Instead the 4-0 victory over long-relegated Villa meant Arsenal leapfrogged Spurs as Giroud picked the perfect time to show Arsène Wenger he can lead the line at the Emirates Stadium next season, with a last-gasp Mark Bunn own goal sealing the win.
The win, coupled with Tottenham’s capitulation at Newcastle, means Arsenal have not finished below their neighbours since 1995 and were able to toast ‘St Totteringham’s Day’, the name fans have given to the point where they are assured of finishing above Spurs, once again.
It could have been a simple end-of-season knockabout but, with second spot still up for grabs, Wenger’s side at least had something to play for and they needed just five minutes to breach Villa’s leaky defence.
Nacho Monreal broke down the left and crossed for an unmarked Giroud to head home past a despairing Bunn – although Mesut Özil had appeared to run the ball out of play in the build-up.
Villa came close to levelling soon after but André Ayew’s ball across the Arsenal goal was cleared by Gabriel Paulista after the forward had burst past Hector Bellerín and into the box.
Alexis Sánchez arrowed a shot wide as Arsenal looked to double their advantage before the break, although arguably the loudest cheers of the half came when news filtered through of Newcastle taking the lead over Spurs.
With England manager Roy Hodgson watching in the stands, Jack Wilshere should have scored when picked out six yards out but the 24-year-old – starting his first game in almost a year – could only turn his chance into the side-netting.
The Gunners were almost made to pay as Scott Sinclair was allowed to get a shot away, but it was wide of Petr Cech’s far post and Jordan Lyden’s cutback could not find a Villa shirt. The second half was a bland affair as the hosts struggled to create chances, while Villa did not look threatening on the rare occasions they committed men forward.
Wilshere’s afternoon came to an end when he was replaced by Mohamed Elneny after 68 minutes and the Egypt midfielder was guilty of spurning a great chance as he wildly lashed a volley over from close range.
The killer goals Arsenal so desperately coveted came in a two-minute window in the closing stages; firstly the Frenchman swept home Ozil’s low cross before staying onside to beat Bunn to Bellerin’s tantalising through-ball.
A fourth goal in stoppage time, an own goal by Bunn rather than a most-fitting finale for departing club captain Mikel Arteta – whose effort was tipped on to the bar before hitting the unwitting Villa defender and rolling over the line, wrapped up the afternoon.
Guardian