Wednesday, 4 March 2026

Winning Ugly Is All That Counts


Ugly, Gritty, Glorious — Arsenal Win the Kind of Game Champions Win



There are victories that dazzle. There are victories that dominate.


And then there are victories like this — the sort that leave you wondering how on earth three points ended up in the bag.


Arsenal were desperately average on the south coast. There's no dressing that up. For long stretches they looked second best, hanging on in a scrap and offering very little going forward. Brighton dictated the rhythm, pressed higher, moved the ball quicker and spent most of the evening asking the questions.


Yet when the final whistle blew, the away end celebrated like the title had already been lifted.


Because sometimes football isn't about beauty. Sometimes it's about survival.



A Gift from Verbruggen



The decisive moment came early, and it came with a slice of fortune.


Bukayo Saka — making his 300th appearance for Arsenal at the age of just 24 — struck what should have been a routine effort. Brighton goalkeeper Bart Verbruggen, however, turned routine into catastrophe, fumbling the shot and allowing the ball to creep into the net.


It was hardly a masterpiece. More a clerical error.


But Arsenal weren't complaining.


Saka's goal would prove to be almost the only moment of genuine attacking threat from the visitors all night. Brighton continued to probe, circulate the ball and look for openings, but Arsenal increasingly retreated into their own half, absorbing pressure rather than creating anything themselves.


Up front, Viktor Gyökeres endured one of those evenings where he seemed to disappear entirely, anonymous before eventually being replaced.



Gabriel Builds a Wall



If Arsenal were going to leave the Amex with anything, someone was going to have to defend like their life depended on it.


Step forward Gabriel.


With William Saliba absent, the Brazilian centre-back produced one of those performances that defenders dream of and forwards hate. Headers cleared, crosses attacked, tackles timed to perfection — he seemed to be everywhere.


At one point it felt less like a back four and more like a one-man barricade.


Brighton threw bodies forward late on, committing numbers in search of an equaliser. Gabriel simply kept heading things away.


One moment in particular summed it up: spotting danger in the box, he flung himself into a desperate headed clearance to protect David Raya's goal.


It wasn't glamorous. It was heroic.



Arteta: "The Effort Was Astronomical"



Mikel Arteta admitted afterwards that the game had been far from straightforward.


"This was a really difficult one after everything we've been through in the last few weeks. Every game in the Premier League offers you different things. Big credit to the boys because the effort they put in is astronomical."


With injuries mounting in the back line, Arteta praised the commitment of his squad.


"We are missing quite a lot of players in the backline. The commitment of every player is unbelievable."


And on Saka's milestone appearance:


"I didn't know it was that many, but at his age it is incredible the consistency he shows."



The Moment the Away End Erupted



The celebrations at full-time were already loud.


Then the news arrived.


Nottingham Forest had drawn at the Etihad.


Suddenly the away section went from satisfied to delirious. The travelling Arsenal fans roared, chanting the words every supporter dreams of hearing:


"We're going to win the league."


Whether that proves prophetic or premature remains to be seen. But there was a sense, in that moment, that something important had happened.



Champions' Wins Aren't Always Pretty



Arsenal didn't control this game.

They didn't dominate possession.

They barely created anything.


But they defended like their season depended on it.


And there is a quiet statistic lurking behind the result:


Arsenal have now kept 14 clean sheets in 30 Premier League games — their best defensive record at this stage since the 2005–06 season.


Titles are rarely won with perfect football every week.


Sometimes they are won in ugly stadiums, on uncomfortable nights, when everything feels like it might slip away — and somehow doesn't.


Arsenal didn't play like champions.


But they won like champions.


And at this stage of the season, that might matter far more. 🔴⚪


Sunday, 1 March 2026

Timber! Set-Piece Royalty and Raya the Redeemer

There are games you control.

There are games you survive.

And then there are games like this — a full-throttle, nerve-shredding, corner-kick carnival where Jurrien Timber rose highest and David Raya decided that absolutely nobody was ruining his Saturday night.


2–1. Five points clear. Eleven unbeaten against the Blues. Title-race oxygen restored.





CORNERS COME TO THE FORE (Again. Obviously.)



Seven days after dismantling Spurs, Mikel Arteta stuck with the same XI. No tinkering. No rotation. Just vibes and verticality.


We pressed like caffeine had been added to the pre-match isotonic drinks. Viktor Gyokeres nearly mugged Robert Sanchez inside five minutes. Martin Zubimendi dragged one wide. Eberechi Eze attempted the halfway-line audacity special.


But the breakthrough? Of course it was a corner.


Bukayo Saka whipped it in. Chaos ensued. Gabriel Magalhães recycled it brilliantly. And then up popped William Saliba, craning that elegant neck to nod home his first league goal of the season via a deflection.


1–0. Emirates purring.


And because this season refuses to allow comfort, we promptly conceded from… yes… a corner. Reece James swung it in, Piero Hincapié flicked it the wrong way, and suddenly it was 1–1 at the break.


Set pieces: the Premier League's unofficial religion.





TIMBER'S WINNER — Record-Breaking Routines



The second half began with a wobble. Enzo Fernández tested Raya. Another flicked corner required more alert goalkeeping.


But champions respond.


On 66 minutes, another Rice delivery arced into the mixer. Unmarked. Unbothered. Unapologetic. Timber powered it home.


Our 16th Premier League goal from a corner this season — equalling the divisional record with nine games still to play.


Sixteen.


We don't just score from corners. We industrialise them.





CHAOS, CARDS & RAYA'S RESCUE ACT



Three minutes later, the temperature rose further. Pedro Neto hacked down Gabriel Martinelli and walked for a second yellow. Numerical advantage secured.


Game finished? Of course not.


Moises Caicedo launched a thunderbolt that whistled past the frame.

Alejandro Garnacho flashed a wicked ball across goal that somehow evaded everyone — except Raya, who clawed it out like a man refusing to blink in a staring contest with destiny.

Liam Delap thought he'd levelled late on after another scramble, but the flag spared our blood pressure.


Raya wasn't just good. He was defiant. Elastic. Unreasonable.


Sometimes title races hinge on strikers.

Sometimes they hinge on goalkeepers who simply decide: Not today.





The Bigger Picture



Five points clear.

Nine games to play.

Unbeaten in 11 against Chelsea.


And this team — this relentless, corner-converting, nerve-enduring team — looks like it believes.


Next up: Brighton & Hove Albion away in midweek. Then the FA Cup trip to Mansfield Town. Then Europe calls against Bayer Leverkusen.


Three competitions.

One mentality.

And a centre-back pairing that now treats corner kicks like open invitations.


Loose Cannon verdict?


We're not just winning games.

We're winning ugly, dramatic, breathless football matches that make champions.


And if Timber keeps rising like that…


The rest of the league might want to start defending corners properly.



Sunday, 22 February 2026

Four-midable

There are wins.

There are derby wins.

And then there are statement wins — the kind that echo around north London for weeks and leave lilywhite curtains twitching long into the night.


Four goals.

Two for Viktor Gyökeres.

Two for Eberechi Eze.

Top of the league.

Five points clear.


And Spurs? Still Spurs.





EARLY DOMINANCE: THE CALM BEFORE THEIR PANIC



From the first whistle at the Tottenham Hotspur Stadium, we played like a side that knew exactly who they were. Composed. Aggressive. Clinical. The ball lived at our feet.


Gyökeres bullied centre-halves early. Trossard nearly embarrassed Guglielmo Vicario from 30 yards when David Raya went full quarterback. Radu Dragusin did his best impression of a man trying to clear a beach ball in a hurricane.


Momentum was briefly halted by "technical issues" — which feels like the most Spurs thing imaginable. Even the officiating equipment wanted out.


But pressure tells.


Bukayo Saka twisted Pape Matar Sarr inside out on the byline and drilled it into the danger zone. Eze — calm, elastic, inevitable — cushioned it, swivelled, and smashed it home.


1–0. Deserved. Controlled. Clinical.


And then — because derbies rarely allow comfort — Declan Rice was robbed, Randal Kolo Muani drove forward, and suddenly it was 1–1.


A reminder: switch off for a second here and they'll bite.





SECOND-HALF STATEMENT: GYÖKERES UNLEASHED



Whatever was said at half-time worked.


Jurrien Timber rolled the ball into Gyökeres just outside the area. One touch. Set. Bang.


A finish so pure Vicario was still moving when it hit the net.


14th of the season. And counting.


Spurs thought they'd equalised again — Kolo Muani bundling one in — but Gabriel isn't the sort you shove around without consequences. Disallowed.


Then came the killer.


A move flowing through Gyökeres, Eze and Saka — silk, steel and swagger. Saka crowded out, loose ball spills, and Eze pounces.


Second of the afternoon.

Fifth against Spurs this season.

Five goals at this ground in three appearances.


Some players like the derby.

Eze has annexed it.





THE DAGGER



Richarlison nearly made it awkward — Raya producing a claw-back save through his own legs that will not get the headlines it deserves but might quietly win us points in May.


Then came the exclamation mark.


Injury time.

Gyökeres holding off Archie Gray like a man shielding his chips.

Composed finish.


4–1.


North London. Painted red again.





THE NUMBERS THAT HURT THEM MOST



  • First time we've won four straight away at Spurs since 1955.
  • First five consecutive derby wins home and away since 1989.
  • League double over them in back-to-back seasons — first time since the late 80s.
  • Five points clear at the summit.
  • Spurs winless home and away in 2026.



Igor Tudor's reign begins with a derby defeat. History repeats; Spurs oblige.


Gyökeres now leads the calendar-year scoring charts. Eight of his 15 have come in 2026 alone.

Eze joins rare company — only Robert Pires and Emmanuel Adebayor have more Premier League derby goals for us.


This isn't just a good side.

It's a ruthless one.





THE FEELING



What makes this sweeter isn't just the scoreline.


It's the control.


No chaos. No smash-and-grab. No backs-to-the-wall. We dictated it. We absorbed their punch. We hit harder.


Spurs are relegation-threatened. We are title-hunting.


That gap felt very real on that pitch.





WHAT'S NEXT?



A rare quiet midweek (we almost don't know what to do with ourselves).

Chelsea at home next Sunday.

Brighton away midweek.

FA Cup trip to Mansfield Town.


Momentum matters.

Confidence compounds.


If this is how we treat the derby, the rest of the league might want to start checking their fixtures.


north London is red.


And it's looking increasingly like the Premier League might be too.



Wednesday, 18 February 2026

Sob Story In The Sleet

Top versus bottom. Title charge versus survival scrap. Five minutes in, we're ahead. Sixty minutes in, we're cruising. Ninety-plus, we're staring at the abyss as the ball pinballs off a post, off Riccardo Calafiori, and into our net like some cruel physics experiment designed by north London's least favourite deity.


Two points? Gone. Title momentum? Jolted. Blood pressure? Elevated.


Saka Through the Middle: Arteta's Gamble (Mostly) Pays


After the Wigan experiment, Mikel doubled down. Bukayo Saka through the centre again. Five minutes later: vindication.

Gabriel Martinelli tees up Declan Rice, Rice floats it delicately, and Saka ghosts in to nod home. Fifteen games without a goal? Over. Clinical. Intelligent. Ruthless.

It also extended our scoring run against Wolves to 37 consecutive meetings — which sounds impressive until you realise that runs mean nothing if you don't win the match attached to them.

Rice nearly made it two. José Sá went full octopus to deny Madueke and Martinelli in quick succession. We were dominant without being devastating — and you know how that story ends.

The sleet came down. The tempo dropped. Wolves stopped and started with injury breaks that killed rhythm. Classic midwinter away performance: efficient, unspectacular, controlled.

Until it wasn't.

Hincapie's Moment — Then the Unravelling

Ten minutes into the second half, Gabriel slices Wolves open with a pass that would make a neurosurgeon nod appreciatively. Piero Hincapié times the run, shrugs off a defender, finishes emphatically.

Flag up. Groans. VAR intervenes. Onside. First Arsenal goal after 23 games.

Two-nil. Game management time.

Except this Arsenal side does not do simple.

Five minutes later Hugo Bueno — who had previously looked about as threatening as a damp sock — bends one into the top corner. Spectacular finish. Raya stranded. Game on.

Suddenly Molineux remembered it had a voice.





Calafiori and the Cruel Gods of Molineux



Thirty minutes of scrappy football followed. Conditions worsening. Control slipping. Neither keeper especially troubled.


Then chaos.


A late collision sees Trossard off, Calafiori on. Within moments: calamity.


Cross in. Gabriel and Raya hesitate — never a good sign. Raya punches half-clear. Tom Edozie shoots. Post.


And then…


It hits Calafiori. On the line. Spins in.


There are own goals. And there are own goals that feel like a punchline delivered by fate itself. This was the latter.


You could see it on Calafiori's face. The kind of stunned disbelief reserved for lottery winners and defenders caught in physics they didn't sign up for.





The Bigger Picture



Let's be blunt:


  • Wolves had lost 10 of 13 at home.
  • We were two goals up.
  • We allowed belief to creep back in.



Title winners suffocate games at 2–0. They don't let right wing-backs cut inside uncontested. They don't miscommunicate in stoppage time.


Arteta's midfield tweak worked offensively. But once Wolves punched back, we lacked composure. There's a fragility in these moments that feels psychological as much as tactical.


And now?





What's Next: No Time to Sulk



Sunday: north London derby away.

Then Chelsea at home.

Then Brighton away.


Three matches that will define tone and trajectory.


You don't get to mourn own goals in February. You respond.


If we channel the frustration correctly, Wolves becomes a footnote. If we don't, it becomes the chapter people point to in May.


As for Calafiori — he'll bounce back. He's not the villain. Football is cruel, especially in sleet.


But if we're serious about silverware, we must learn one simple lesson:


When you have the boot on the throat, don't ease up.


COYG.