Alexander Isak’s rich goalscoring form continued as Newcastle United claimed a dominant first-leg victory over Arsenal in the Carabao Cup semi-final at Emirates Stadium.
Newcastle, chasing their first-ever Carabao Cup triumph, are now on the brink of their second final in three seasons. To secure their place, they need to avoid defeat—or lose by just one goal—in the return leg at St James’ Park on 5 February.
Arsenal, sitting second in the Premier League, entered the tie as favorites but now face a tough challenge in the second leg.
Isak Leads the Way
Isak scored his “14th goal in 15 games” to give Newcastle an early lead, continuing his stellar form. Goalkeeper Martin Dubravka’s free-kick was flicked on by Sven Botman, and Jacob Murphy set up Isak, who calmly chipped the ball past Arsenal’s David Raya.
Anthony Gordon doubled Newcastle’s lead in the 51st minute, slotting home a rebound after Raya parried another shot from Isak.
Arsenal had chances to turn the game around, with Gabriel Martinelli hitting the post and both Jurrien Timber and William Saliba missing close-range headers.
The Magpies have not lifted a major trophy since winning the Fairs Cup in 1969, but this performance has reignited hope. “Eddie Howe’s men are showing the fight and form to end their long wait for silverware.”
Since 1987-88, all eight teams with a two-goal advantage in the first leg of a semi-final have gone on to reach the final. Newcastle’s fans will be hoping history repeats itself.
Newcastle’s defense stood firm against Arsenal’s pressure, with crucial blocks from Dan Burn and Sven Botman and an outstanding save from Dubravka to deny Gabriel.
The Magpies are in fine form, having won their last seven matches across all competitions. Recent victories against Leicester, Manchester United, and Tottenham have lifted them to fifth in the Premier League, putting them in contention for Champions League football next season.
Newcastle will now shift focus to an FA Cup tie and four Premier League fixtures before the decisive second leg. St James’ Park promises a raucous atmosphere on 5 February, as fans dream of a return to Wembley and a chance to finally lift the Carabao Cup.




