Opening-day woe for Leicester

Opening-day woe for Leicester

Jamie Vardy of Leicester City scores his side's third goal in their Premier League opener, which they ultimately lost 4-3, against Aresnal on Friday night in London. (Reuters Photo)
Jamie Vardy of Leicester City scores his side's third goal in their Premier League opener, which they ultimately lost 4-3, against Aresnal on Friday night in London. (Reuters Photo)

LONDON: Thai-owned Leicester let a chance for victory slip away as Arsenal came from behind to win 4-3 in a thrilling English Premier League season opener on Friday night.

It took the arrival of Aaron Ramsey and Olivier Giroud from the bench in the second half to turn it around against Leicester and give Arsenal only its second opening-day victory in eight seasons.

In the league's first Friday night start, Arsene Wenger's side was trailing 3-2 with seven minutes remaining but Ramsey grabbed the equaliser and Giroud headed in an 85th-minute winner.

"We kept going and the spirit of the team was absolutely outstanding," Wenger said. "If you look at that from a neutral point, for a first game it was a top quality game.

"You want the Premier League to be the best league in the world and I think it has to produce these kind of games to produce interest and quality."

Even if the thrilling attacks were aided by such fragile defending.

Arsenal record-signing Alexandre Lacazette launched his English league career in style by heading in the opener after 94 seconds.

A predictable Arsenal implosion followed, with Shinji Okazaki and Jamie Vardy putting Leicester in front. Even after Danny Welbeck levelled on the stroke of halftime, Vardy restored Leicester's lead after the break. Leicester was heading for something it didn't even achieve in its astonishing 2015-16 title-winning campaign: a win at Arsenal.

"We saw it though for 83 minutes," Leicester manager Craig Shakespeare said, "and to concede two late set-plays in the manner we did is obviously hard to take."

Instead, Wenger avoided a third consecutive season-opening loss at the start of his new two-year contract.

The Frenchman will be hoping it's a sign of changing fortunes after a season when he reached his nadir. Although Arsenal signed off in May by lifting the FA Cup, a fifth-place finish ensured the north London club failed to qualify for the Champions League for the first time in two decades.

Opening weekend activity continues later Saturday with Liverpool visiting Watford in the early match and six other contests starting later.

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