Manager Arsene Wenger lifts the FA Cup during an Arsenal bus parade in north London, yesterday.Manager Arsene Wenger lifts the FA Cup during an Arsenal bus parade in north London, yesterday.

Aaron Ramsey’s winning goal for Arsenal in their 3-2 FA Cup final victory against Hull City was a moment of sublime redemption for the player, his manager, his club and the old competition itself.

His brilliantly executed shot, delivered with the outside of his right foot is likely to be remembered among the best of FA Cup final goals in the years ahead as it completed one of the greatest comebacks in FA Cup final history and ended Arsenal’s nine-year wait for silverware.

A work of exquisite construction and skill, it also sealed Ramsey’s permanent place in Arsenal’s folklore as an FA Cup winner and ended what started out as a great season for the 23-year-old Wales international midfielder on a high after he suffered a long spell injured on the sidelines.

Ramsey battled back from a serious leg fracture suffered at Stoke in 2010 to reclaim his place in the Arsenal side and was enjoying his best spell at the club with 13 goals by the end of December before a thigh injury curtailed his season for more than three months.

His absence coincided with Arsenal’s fall from the summit of the Premier League while his return last month saw their form revive with five straight wins to clinch fourth place and Champions League football for a 17th successive season.

His 108th minute winner brought them their first tangible success since they beat Manchester United in the 2005 Cup final on penalties and ended all hopes Hull had of winning their first major trophy and emulating the likes of Swindon Town, Luton Town and Birmingham City who have all scored huge upset wins over Arsenal in League Cup finals in the past.

Hull’s trophy drought has lasted considerably longer than Arsenal’s – ever since they were formed in 1904 – and even when they went 2-0 up in the first eight minutes, few people believed the cup was already secured.

Arsenal recovered from that dreadful start with a brilliant free-kick from Santi Cazorla that put them back in the game and there was an air of inevitability about Laurent Koscielny’s 71st minute equaliser after a gutsy resilient fightback.

The winner came with penalties looming and was a goal worthy of winning any match as Olivier Giroud back-heeled the ball into Ramsey’s path enabling him to arrow the ball in with the outside of his right foot through a narrow gap between Hull keeper Allan McGregor and the post.

Arsenal manager Arsene Wenger could hardly contain his usual urbane self-control at the end as his long wait for a trophy finally ended.

He was chased across the Wembley pitch and doused in champagne by his joyous players and had to change out of his suit into a club tracksuit for his post-match interviews when he confirmed he was extending his 18-year stay at the club.

Important success

Though few doubted he was leaving, defeat to Hull might have been one too many for a man unfairly dubbed as “a specialist in failure” by Chelsea’s Jose Mourinho, who actually ended up winning nothing in his first season back at Chelsea.

But while Wenger delighted in what he described as the most important success of his eight major trophies at Arsenal he was confident this success was not the end of a journey, but the start of a new one.

“It was an important moment in the life of this team,” said Wenger.

“To lose would have been a major setback but to win will be a good platform to build on.”

More than 200,000 Arsenal fans were out in the north London sunshine yesterday celebrating their club’s overdue success and while they will be enjoying the moment, they, like Wenger, know the truth.

They might have turned the corner, but there are plenty more obstacles to overcome if they are to enjoy the kind of sustained success they enjoyed in Wenger’s early years at the club.

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