Newcastle United 1 - 1 Arsenal
Newcastle 1-1 Arsenal: Taylor restores pride

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Emmanuel Adebayor scores an early strike for Arsenal at St James' Park.
| Scoring Summary | |
| Newcastle United | Arsenal |
| Steven Taylor (60) | Emmanuel Adebayor (4) |
| Match Stats | ||
| Newcastle United | Arsenal | |
| Shots (on Goal) | 13(8) | 6(2) |
| Fouls | 9 | 10 |
| Corner Kicks | 6 | 6 |
| Offsides | 2 | 2 |
| Time of Possession | 45% | 55% |
| Yellow Cards | 3 | 2 |
| Red Cards | 0 | 0 |
| Saves | 3 | 5 |
| Match Information |
|
Stadium:
St James' Park, England
Attendance: 50,305 Match Time: 14:45 ET Official(s): M Dean (Referee) |
| Teams | |
| Newcastle United | Arsenal |
| 1 Shay Given | 24 Manuel Almunia |
| 4 David Rozehnal | 10 William Gallas |
| 27 Steven Taylor | 5 Kolo Toure |
| 21 Habib Beye | 27 Emmanuel Eboue |
| 22 Nicky Butt | 22 Gaël Clichy |
| 20 Geremi | 3 Bacary Sagna |
| 16 James Milner | 7 Tomas Rosicky |
| 7 Joey Barton | 19 Gilberto Silva |
| 14 Charles N'Zogbia | 8 Lassana Diarra |
| 17 Alan Smith | 25 Emmanuel Adebayor |
| 9 Obafemi Martins | 9 Eduardo |
| Substitutes | |
| 13 Steve Harper | Jens Lehmann 1 |
| 3 Sanchez Jose Enrique | Alexandre Song Billong 17 |
| 30 David Edgar | Denilson 15 |
| 5 Belozoglu Emre | Theo Walcott 32 |
| 36 Mark Viduka | Nicklas Bendtner 26 |
| Substitutions | |
| Mark Viduka for Geremi (77) | Nicklas Bendtner for Eduardo (68) |
| Yellow Cards | |
| Joey Barton (41) | Lassana Diarra (45) |
| Shay Given (59) | Bacary Sagna (63) |
| Habib Beye (72) | |
| · Club Rosters: Newcastle United | Arsenal | |
Updated: December 5, 2007, 5:31 PM ET
Geordie Steven Taylor proved the hero as Newcastle rediscovered their form just in time for boss Sam Allardyce to hold Premier League leaders Arsenal at St James' Park.• Smith welcomes Toon improvement
After a run of five games which had yielded just one point, the prospect of an Arsenal rout on Tyneside, where both Portsmouth and Liverpool had won at a canter in recent weeks, was too much to bear. However, Allardyce's men produced a performance of real character despite Emmanuel Adebayor's delicious fourth-minute opener to deny the Gunners a six-point lead at the top of the table and prevent themselves from slipping to a third successive home defeat for the first time in the Premier League. A single point alone may not turn Newcastle's season or Allardyce's fortunes around, but the bulk of a crowd of 50,305 went home confident that better times lie ahead for the first time in weeks. They will hope their side can build upon that platform when Birmingham head for the north-east on Saturday with pride restored and the relationship between players and supporters, which has appeared strained at times, renewed. Allardyce and owner Mike Ashley shared a joke in the directors' box before kick-off on a night which was perhaps never going to be decisive for the manager, but was one on which his team needed to provide hopes that things will turn. The smiles, however, had disappeared within four minutes as a piece of sheer quality illuminated the Tyneside night. Unfortunately for the vast majority of the spectators, it came from a man in a red and white shirt as Adebayor, who had earlier earned the jeers of the home fans for complaining about Taylor's innocuous challenge, silenced them with a breathtaking finish. Whether or not he should have been allowed to get in between central defenders Taylor and David Rozehnal will no doubt have been discussed in the dressing room at half-time, as the Togo striker controlled Emmanuel Eboue's cross on his chest before thumping an unstoppable volley past Shay Given. It was just what Allardyce and his players did not need, but to their credit - and backed by fans who had booed them mercilessly during and after their 3-0 home defeat by Liverpool 11 days earlier - they fought back. Few teams in the Premier League can match Arsenal's movement and passing, and the current crop of Magpies are not one of them. However, there was no faulting their effort, commitment and desire to scrap for their lives as Joey Barton and Nicky Butt snapped into challenges and Alan Smith, playing in his favoured striking role, caused the Gunners problems throughout. While Arsene Wenger's men were at times almost irresistible on the counter, Newcastle tried to hit back, and where they had not managed a single shot on target against Liverpool, threatened on several occasions. Skipper Geremi saw a looping header fall just wide with Manuel Almunia beaten seconds after Adebayor's strike, and then sent the keeper full-stretch to keep out his 28th-minute free-kick. Almunia just managed to get a hand to Taylor's goal-bound header 10 minutes before the break and Obafemi Martins saw a gilt-edged opportunity pass him by when Smith's 40th-minute flick-on skidded across goal without the Nigerian getting a touch. The half-time whistle for once brought warm applause, but Newcastle returned knowing the hard work had barely started. They started brightly once again as Charles N'Zogbia warmed Almunia's hands with a rising left-foot strike from distance which might have caused him real problems had it been set off a yard to his right. But the threat posed by the visitors was reinforced on 50 minutes when Tomas Rosicky effortlessly made space for himself to play in Eboue down the right, although the full-back wastefully picked out only Given at his near post. Gilberto threw himself into the path of Geremi's 53rd-minute shot, but it took some fine recovery work from Rozehnal and Barton at the other end seconds later after Adebayor had flicked the ball around the Czech defender and launched a lightning break with Rosicky. However, Newcastle got their reward on the hour when Smith flicked on Habib Beye's cross and Martins dummied it for Taylor to fire home off the foot of the post. Arsenal were clearly rattled as the Magpies sensed the tide had turned, but as time ran down, they started to find their feet once again. However, although they continued to play with a swagger as the final whistle approached, it was the home side who came closest to winning it at the death.Newcastle midfielder Alan Smith believes tonight's 1-1 draw with Premier League leaders Arsenal is a step in the right direction for the Magpies. Sam Allardyce's side are now six games without a win - but Steven Taylor's goal on the hour earned Newcastle a deserved point at St James' Park, cancelling out Emmanuel Adebayor's early goal for the Gunners. And Smith said: 'I think tonight showed everyone is 100% behind everything we're doing. 'We need everyone together and we showed that tonight. With commitment like that we can only go forward.' He added on Sky Sports One: 'I know people say we need time but that wasn't a team that need time tonight. 'If we play with passion like that we won't go far wrong. 'The goals people score against us are unstoppable and tonight's was a kick in the teeth - but it means everything if a teams is together.' Allardyce, meanwhile, was pleased to see his players rewarded for their efforts after what he felt was an unlucky 3-1 defeat against Blackburn last time out. 'I think we've lost the last two home games poorly and it was difficult to take for us all. 'I didn't want to see confidence ebb away. I then saw a performance at Blackburn but not a result, tonight I've seen a performance and a result.' The former Bolton chief even believes his team were close to claiming the win thanks to some attacking play in the closing stages. 'Once we scored we saw Arsenal on the back foot and they could not get going. 'We pursued an equaliser and then pursued a winner for the entire 45 minutes. I feel very unlucky not to have won the game because we had the chances and could not find the finish.'
