How Gabriel Jesus' superb hat-trick saw Arsenal beat Crystal Palace 3-2 and move into the Carabao Cup last four

Arsenal vs Crystal Palace

How Gabriel Jesus' superb hat-trick saw Arsenal beat Crystal Palace 3-2 and move into the Carabao Cup last four

The Brazilian forward came into the game with one goal in his previous 33 Arsenal outings in all competitions but his treble rescued Mikel Arteta's side - who fell behind to a fourth-minute Jean-Philippe Mateta strike.

It was a poor goal for the Gunners to concede, especially for Jakub Kiwior who was outmuscled too easily by the Palace forward from Dean Henderson's route-one punt, leaving the Frenchman to finish past David Raya.

It was another night where Arsenal's attacking quality, particularly its depth, was in question. Their best first-half chances came from set-pieces as Jefferson Lerma cleared Leandro Trossard's corner from off the line, before Henderson palmed Raheem Sterling's free-kick away from the top corner.

Arteta brought on captain Martin Odegaard at half-time which fixed these issues. Sterling should have put the Gunners ahead when he was found by a good cross from Kieran Tierney, making his first Arsenal start after 548 days, but he fired straight at Henderson, then hit the bar from the rebound.

But Jesus eventually broke the Palace resistance eight minutes after the break when the influential Odegaard found the striker in the box and his turn bamboozled Marc Guehi. His deft chip over Henderson was even better.

Jesus thought he had a second when he turned well again in the area - but Henderson palmed his effort into the side-netting.

Arsenal brought on Bukayo Saka in a further momentum shift as he, like Odegaard before him, set up Jesus off the bench.

The England winger played the Brazilian into the box and it was another quick turn from the forward before his finish into the far corner - although there was a hint of a tight offside from the forward with no VAR in play. "It was offside," said Palace boss Oliver Glasner at full-time.

Eight minutes later, Jesus had his third as he broke away with the freedom of north London - again finding that far corner to claim the matchball - his first hat-trick since April 2022, when he was playing for Manchester City.

Arsenal thought they were home and dry until Eddie Nketiah - let go by the Gunners over the summer - put in a superb header to create a nervy finish. But the Gunners did enough to reach the Carabao Cup semi-finals for the second time in three seasons.

Player ratings

Arsenal: Raya (6); Partey (5), Timber (6), Kiwior (5), Tierney (6); Jorginho (6), Merino (7), Nwaneri (6); Sterling (6), Jesus (9), Trossard (7)

Subs used: Odegaard (8), Saliba (7), Saka (7), Lewis-Skelly (6), Gabriel (n/a)

Crystal Palace: Henderson (5); Chalobah (6), Lacroix (6), Guehi (5); Kporha (5), Lerma (6), Hughes (7), Mitchell (6); Sarr (6), Mateta (7), Eze (6)

Subs used: Clyne (6), Nketiah (7), Kamada (6), Schlupp (n/a), Devenny (n/a)

Player of the match: Gabriel Jesus (Arsenal)

Arteta: Now we can rely on Jesus

Arsenal manager Mikel Arteta:

"I'm so pleased for him [Jesus]. It's been a long period for him without goals and today, to score three goals, the three types of goals that he scored - and the many actions he was involved in - he looked very sharp.

"I think it's a great thing for him and the team that we can rely on a player of such quality. It's the same with Kieran [Tierney] and other players who haven't started many games and today they had the chance to do so.

"He has a quality, a way of creating and innovating situations that is quite unique. So Gabi at that level is a big asset for us.

"It's now about consistency. Now this is a moment of spark that will bring so much confidence, not only to him, but to the team as well that we can rely on him to change games.

"Now we need to take it and give him more games and chances. We need to give him more chances because when a player is in that moment it's important to continue that."

Analysis: Does this mean Arsenal don't need a new striker?

Sky Sports' Sam Blitz at the Emirates Stadium:

Your No 9 turning up with a hat-trick just in time for Christmas is the perfect antidote when your attack is being questioned.

Arsenal's recent open-play slackness and their reliance on set-pieces brought up the now-annual debate about whether a new striker is needed in January. So what now with Jesus looking in the groove, for one half of football at least?

Arsenal and Jesus proved in that second half that their issue is not a 'striker' one. Many claimed the Gunners needed a forward last January and they ended up on 91 Premier League goals - the most in their history in the competition.

What Arsenal have proved - which needs addressing - is there exists a reliance on Saka and Odegaard. It is a creativity problem more than a striker one.

Arteta's side barely looked like scoring until those two came on in separate substitutions and provided incisive assists for Jesus within minutes of arriving on the pitch.

So whether it is improving the left-winger position or getting better understudies for Saka and Odegaard - Trossard and Sterling failed to impress but Ethan Nwaneri looked promising - that is where Arsenal's focus needs to be, if they are to move in January.

Glasner: We were too cautious - Arsenal deserved it

Crystal Palace manager Oliver Glasner:

"It was a perfect start but already in the first half we played with too much respect, way too cautious in finding the moment.

"In possession, we lost the ball too easily, we didn't support each other in possession in how it needs to be from their press.

"We need a performance at a top level, then it's possible to win here. It was not a top-level performance. Then you lose here.

"What is positive is we scored two goals, it's not easy to score here. That's why it's frustrating, because then it should be a penalty shoot-out. It's a deserved win for Arsenal.

"But we gave them too many chances in the second half where they could score. It was two or three great balls. Every situation was quite similar, the way they found the goals and we made too many mistakes. There was not enough pressure - it was too cautious."