Arsenal didn’t just win this — they staged a controlled demolition with a Champions League dress rehearsal tucked neatly inside it.
Six points clear. Say it slowly.
Arsenal walked out at the Emirates and did exactly what title-winning sides are supposed to do: turn pressure into routine, and routine into inevitability. Fulham were less opponents, more witnesses.
And at the centre of it all? Bukayo Saka — back, sharp, and frankly a bit disrespectful.
Saka returns — and immediately ruins someone’s evening
Ninth minute. Welcome back, Bukayo.
He sizes up Raul Jimenez, glides past him like he’s late for a train, and rolls it across for Viktor Gyokeres to tap home. One-nil, and the tone is set: this is going to be one of those nights.
No easing in. No rust. Just instant incision.
Five minutes before the break, they switch roles. Gyokeres threads it, Saka curls it, and Bernd Leno gets beaten at his near post — which, if you’re a goalkeeper, is the footballing equivalent of being mugged outside your own house.
Gyokeres: 21 goals and still being doubted?
Let’s deal with this properly.
Gyokeres now sits on 21 goals in all competitions. That’s not “settling in.” That’s not “promising.” That’s output.
His second — a thumping header from Leandro Trossard’s cross — killed the game before half-time stoppage time had even finished apologising for existing.
And yet, there’s still been noise about him since the move from Sporting.
Nonsense.
The last Arsenal player to hit 20+ in a debut season? Alexis Sanchez. That’s the company he’s keeping.
Arteta gambles… and it pays off (again)
Credit where it’s due: Mikel Arteta rolled the dice and won comfortably.
- Myles Lewis-Skelly in midfield — composed, intelligent, unfazed
- Riccardo Calafiori bombing on — unlucky not to score (bar rattled, goal disallowed)
- Eberechi Eze adding fluidity
This wasn’t just rotation. This was functional rotation. The kind that keeps rhythm instead of breaking it.
And crucially — Saka off at half-time, legs protected, job done. That’s management with Tuesday in mind.
The bigger picture: this is where titles are won
Let’s not pretend this is just about Fulham.
Manchester City have games in hand. They always do. They lurk, they calculate, they suffocate.
But Arsenal have done the only thing you can do — win first, apply pressure, and make City’s margin for error microscopic.
Goal difference? Improved. Goals scored? Up. Momentum? Building.
Three games away from ending a 22-year wait.
Now… Atletico
All of this — the control, the efficiency, the early kill — it’s a prelude.
Because looming over everything is Atletico Madrid.
1–1. Semi-final. Emirates.
If Arsenal play like this — sharp, ruthless, slightly arrogant in possession — they don’t just have a chance.
They have belief.
And that’s new. That’s dangerous. That’s title-winning behaviour bleeding into Europe.
Loose Cannon verdict
Professional. Efficient. Slightly ominous.
The kind of performance that says: we’re not chasing this anymore — we’re controlling the narrative...well, for now, at least!
For the chasers, Man City, you're not just playing Everton, you're playing the scoreboard.