Erling Haaland does Marcus Rashford celebration and Jack Grealish scores key goal as Man City go above Arsenal in Premier League with win

Jack Grealish and Erling Haaland gave Manchester City a huge title boost with a 3-1 win in their top-of-the-table clash at Arsenal.
The £100million man struck beyond Aaron Ramsdale in the 72nd minute having been laid off by teammate Ilkay Gundogan following good work from Haaland.
Haaland, who signed for £53m, then got on the scoresheet ten minutes later as he slotted the ball home with his right foot. The Norwegian then
City took the lead through Kevin De Bruyne's expert lob over Ramsdale, the Belgian taking advantage of a poor back pass from Takehiro Tomiyasu.
Arsenal got level through Bukayo Saka's composed penalty after Ederson clattered into Gunners striker Eddie Nketiah.
Pep Guardiola's side thought they had a penalty of their own early in the second half but Arsenal were spared when Haaland, who was brought down by Gabriel, was shown to be offside in the build-up to the foul.
But in the end the penalty drama didn't matter for City as they claimed a crucial three points at the Emirates Stadium in what could be a crucial moment in the title race.
The result sees City go level on points with Arsenal and above the Gunners at the top of the Premier League, although the champions have played one more league match than them.
The atmosphere inside the Emirates Stadium was crackling even before kick-off, the gravity of the occasion lost on no one as City aimed to entirely erode the eight-point lead Arsenal had once held.
Arsenal started well, Eddie Nketiah seeing a shot blocked after Granit Xhaka - without his usual midfield partner Thomas Partey due to a muscular injury - intercepted a pass to set the forward in behind.
Haaland had his first sniff of goal after 15 minutes, getting in behind the recalled Takehiro Tomiyasu but not managing to get a shot on target from an acute angle.
The best chance of the early stages fell for Nketiah but he could not even hit the target with a header from a pinpoint Oleksandr Zinchenko cross.
City would break the deadlock soon after, a combination of poor defending and world-class finishing putting the visitors ahead.
A long ball over the top was nodded towards Tomiyasu and he looked to play a pass inside to goalkeeper Aaron Ramsdale but he did not put sufficient power on his effort.
It was intercepted by De Bruyne, whose first-time shot was perfectly weighted, lifted over Ramsdale and just inside the post.
Arsenal reacted well to the setback and forced City into time-wasting and long-balls, Ederson eventually shown a yellow card for delaying a number of restarts.
The City goalkeeper was, therefore, arguably lucky to stay on the pitch as referee Anthony Taylor pointed to the penalty spot after he clattered into Nketiah.
Saka was on hand to coolly slot home the spot-kick and deservedly draw Arsenal level but they had the crossbar to thank for going in even at the break, Nathan Ake getting the final touch with Ramsdale beaten.
The second-half started where the first had ended, both sides full-blooded as Mikel Arteta and De Bruyne were involved in a spat after the Arsenal boss nudged the ball away from the Belgian as he looked to retrieve it for a throw-in.
City were awarded a penalty of their own as Gabriel Magalhaes bundled Haaland over in the box as the pair tussled for the ball.
Unlike Ivan Toney's equaliser here on Saturday, there was a VAR reprieve for the hosts, Haaland narrowly offside in the build-up as the penalty was ruled out.
Guardiola turned to his bench, abandoning his surprise tactic of playing Bernardo Silva at left-back after the playmaker had been given a torrid evening by Saka.
Manuel Akanji was his replacement and the defender almost put City ahead only to see his effort cleared off the line by Jorginho, impressing on his full Arsenal debut.
For the first time, the home side were starting to look ragged as Zinchenko was caught in possession trying to play out - only Ramsdale's reactions preventing Haaland scoring.
The sloppiness creeping in soon proved Arsenal's undoing as a weak backpass from Gabriel led to Haaland crossing for Grealish to curl home and re-establish the lead.
The points were safe as Haaland turned home a De Bruyne cross with eight minutes remaining, City extending their winning run over Arsenal in the Premier League to 11 games and leaving Arteta now having to change the mindset of his players from hunted to hunters.