Arsenal made it 10 wins in a row on Monday Night Football as they came from behind to beat Leicester City 3-1 at the Emirates Stadium.

Hector Bellerin's unfortunate own goal in the 31st minute gave Leicester the lead, but on the stroke of half-time the Spanish right-back set up Mesut Ozil to equalise.

A quick-fire brace from substitute Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang then sealed victory, with the Gabon's second goal a stunning team effort that featured flicks, nutmegs and one-touch passing.

Arsenal are now up to fourth in the Premier League and only two points behind the leaders Manchester City and Liverpool.

Unai Emery has worked wonders since replacing Arsene Wenger in the summer and said after the Leicester win that he wants his players to start controlling games from start to finish.

"First half we didn't control the match with possession and positioning," the Spaniard told Sky Sports. "We are happy because we are progressing.

"We need to play with organisation but also with heart. We are beginning to play with heart. When you continue to improve your demands are very high.

"We need to control the matches more than we are doing now. First half we didn't play well but then we played with quality and heart. This feeling together is very good.

"We need the No.10 position sometimes with Mesut Ozil and sometimes with Aaron Ramsey. We can't play with both sometimes.

"Last match was away and we played it with two strikers. Today Mesut was very good but I believe in every player and different positions for the players."

Clear-cut chances were at a premium for Leicester against Arsenal, with Kelechi Iheanacho's coming close with a header in the second period.

One man who had a night to forget in north London was Jamie Vardy, who was caught running off the pitch in the 88th minute.

Leicester manager Claude Puel put Vardy's exit down to illness - make of that what you will - and now a truly embarrassing statistic has emerged that sums up the striker's performance.

Despite playing the whole game, Vardy completed only ONE pass at the Emirates.

That's pretty insane when you think about it. Vardy attempted just four passes throughout his 88 minutes on the pitch, meaning he recorded a pass completion of 25%.

Seems link-up play isn't the 31-year-old's forte.