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.