Vardy ties scoring record as England honors Paris victims
MANCHESTER, England (AP) - Jamie Vardy tied the Premier League record for scoring in consecutive games on Saturday to help Leicester maintain its stunning start to the season, on a day English football paid tribute to the victims of the Paris attacks.
The England international's goal, which set Leicester on its way to a 3-0 win at Newcastle, meant he has scored in 10 straight matches - a feat Ruud van Nistelrooy also achieved for Manchester United across two seasons in 2003.
Ahead of the late game between Manchester City and Liverpool, Leicester - a team that narrowly avoided relegation last season - is provisionally the surprise leader after 13 games after leapfrogging Arsenal, which lost 2-1 at West Bromwich Albion. Santi Cazorla missed a late penalty for Arsenal.
Manchester United needed a 90th-minute own goal to beat Watford 2-1 and also moved above Arsenal, while Chelsea beat Norwich 1-0 thanks to Diego Costa's second half goal and ended its three-game losing run.
The French national anthem was played before every Premier League game to honor the 130 people killed in the Paris attacks, with England's top division resuming after the international break amid tightened security.
Vardy picked up where he left off two weeks ago, shrugging off an injury that forced him to withdraw from England duty last week to score in first-half injury time with a low shot inside the near post.
Vardy's scoring run began against Bournemouth on Aug. 29, and the hard-working striker can break Van Nistelrooy's record by scoring against Man United next weekend.
"I've managed to get there, let's see what happens next week," said Vardy, who was sent a good-luck tweet by Van Nistelrooy ahead of the match. He was playing non-league football only four seasons ago, but is currently the top scorer in the Premier League with 13 goals and reportedly attracting lots of interest from top clubs.
Leicester has only lost one league game this season under new coach Claudio Ranieri, who took over in the summer after the team won seven of its last nine games last season to survive.
"I'm very proud, because the players play like a team, suffer, run, and play good football," Ranieri said.
On a day England put on a show of solidarity with France, Olivier Giroud - one of 72 Frenchmen playing in the Premier League - put Arsenal ahead only for James Morrison to equalize before an own goal by Arsenal substitute Mikel Arteta in the 40th minute.
Cazorla missed a penalty in the 84th when he slipped as he was about to shoot to complete a miserable day for Arsenal, who lost two more players - Francis Coquelin and his replacement, Arteta - to injury.
Watford striker Troy Deeney scored a 90th-minute own goal, soon after converting an equalizing penalty, to gift Man United victory at Vicarage Road. Netherlands winger Memphis Depay - playing as an emergency forward to solve the side's striker shortage - put United in front in the 11th minute.
Costa ended a six-game scoring drought in all competitions by running onto a quickly taken free kick from Cesc Fabregas, cut inside a defender and curled a shot into the far corner in the 64th minute. The win allowed Mourinho some breathing space after consecutive losses to West Ham, Liverpool and Stoke left Chelsea in 16th place, for the worst start to the season by a Premier League champion.
Also, Everton beat Aston Villa 4-0 courtesy of doubles from Ross Barkley and Romelu Lukaku, who became the fifth player - after Michael Owen, Robbie Fowler, Wayne Rooney and Cristiano Ronaldo - to reach 50 top-flight goals before the age of 23.
Stoke beat Southampton 1-0 away and Swansea rallied from two goals down to draw 2-2 at home to Bournemouth.