🧨 THE LOOSE CANNON: "Leandro Lobs, Leno Loses, and VAR Loiters" 🧨
By your ever-so-tolerant north London correspondent, reporting from the riverside of restless neutrals and ruined hopes: Craven Cottage.
⚽ ONE GOAL, THREE POINTS, AND TWENTY MINUTES OF VAR FOREPLAY
Leandro Trossard doesn't just score goals; he relieves tension. After 45 minutes of football that made beige paint seem avant-garde, the Belgian finally decided to end the nonsense, poking home from about three feet after Gabriel flicked on Saka's corner. Cue relief, mild joy, and Mikel Arteta exhaling like a yoga instructor who's been holding his breath since August.
It was our 10th different scorer in the league this season — which either proves Arsenal's beautiful collective spirit, or that no one wants to commit to being a proper striker. Either way, top of the league again. Just don't say it too loudly: Spurs fans can smell happiness from two postcodes away.
😴 FIRST-HALF INSOMNIA CURE
The first 45 minutes were a public service announcement for melatonin. Fulham's early efforts came courtesy of Raul Jiménez, who briefly forgot he's supposed to be retired, while poor Martin Zubimendi took a 90 mph clearance to the stomach — his greatest contribution to date.
Then Riccardo Calafiori nearly announced himself with a thunderbolt disallowed for offside — a goal so good it should have been allowed on artistic merit alone. The rest was a series of half-chances and mis-timed through balls, until Rice's late curler reminded us that Declan occasionally fancies himself as a poet.
💥 TROSSARD STRIKES, VAR STALLS
Trossard could have scored earlier but apparently wanted to build suspense. When the goal came, it was pure Arsenal: a clever corner routine, a Brazilian forehead, and a Belgian toe. That's diplomacy at its finest.
Minutes later, Bukayo Saka was kicked halfway to Putney by a bloke named Kevin (a name that screams "VAR won't give this"). Anthony Taylor pointed to the spot, VAR got stage fright, and after several replays, decided Kevin's toenail had legally grazed the ball. Penalty cancelled. Justice? Maybe. Entertainment? Not even close.
🧱 THE GREAT WALL OF GABRIEL
Credit where it's due — Gabriel and Saliba defended like men who've been personally insulted by the concept of conceding. Eight clean sheets in eleven games now. Somewhere Aaron Ramsdale is polishing his gloves, whispering, "Remember me?"
Viktor Gyökeres (that's right, he's still not Nketiah) had two chances to make it comfortable but fired one into the Thames and the other straight at Bernd Leno's ego. No matter: we'd done enough.
📊 CANNON STATS (THE ONLY ONES THAT MATTER)
- Arsenal top the league. You read that right. Again.
- Eight wins from ten — or as the pundits call it, "unsustainable form."
- 63 goals from corners since 2021/22 — because set pieces are art.
- David Raya's 54th Premier League clean sheet, achieved mostly by glaring at defenders.
- Gabriel now has 20 goal involvements as a centre-back. At this rate, he'll be our top scorer by Christmas.
- Leandro Trossard: three goals, four assists in 12 games. Basically our low-budget Eden Hazard who actually runs back.
🏟️ WHAT'S NEXT
Three straight at home: Atlético Madrid (Champions League), Crystal Palace (the obligatory banana skin), and Brighton (Carabao Cup, aka "the one we might actually win").
If we keep this up, the Emirates will need defibrillators in every aisle — not for the players, but for fans who can't cope with Arsenal being consistent.
Verdict: One scrappy goal, one long VAR delay, one smug grin from Arteta. Job done.
Bring on Atlético. And maybe — just maybe — keep the corners coming.