There are cup ties.
There are banana skins.
And then there are first-half demolitions served with a side of north London rain.
Arsenal 4–0 Wigan.
Game over by the time some of the late arrivals were still shaking drizzle off their scarves.
For the first time since 2020, we're into the fifth round of the FA Cup — and we did it the old-fashioned way: by treating lower-league opposition with ruthless, borderline disrespectful efficiency.
⚡ FAST START? More Like Lightning Strike.
The first omen came before kick-off. Riccardo Calafiori pulled out in the warm-up. Mild panic? Not really. Instead, Bukayo Saka wandered into midfield like he'd been playing there his entire career.
Alongside Eberechi Eze, he pulled the strings from minute one.
Ten minutes in, Saka split the Wigan defence with a pass so clean it deserved its own highlights package. Noni Madueke ran onto it, took a breath, and finished beyond Sam Tickle with the composure of a man ordering coffee.
1–0.
Seven minutes later?
Christian Nørgaard → Eze → Gabriel Martinelli.
Bang. 2–0.
Martinelli now has four in this season's competition and looked like he fancied double figures before the half-hour mark.
🌧 Goals Pouring Like the N5 Rain
The third was chaos in its purest cup form.
Madueke to Saka.
Saka into the mixer.
Jack Hunt doing his best unwitting Thierry Henry impression at the wrong end.
Own goal. 3–0.
Before Wigan had processed that trauma, Nørgaard launched an inch-perfect long ball that deserved slow-motion replays. Gabriel Jesus did what Gabriel Jesus does against lower-league sides — delicate, cheeky, inevitable. A dink over Tickle.
Four goals inside 30 minutes.
Apparently, we're now the first Premier League side ever to score four in the opening half-hour of an FA Cup tie. File that under: "things you don't expect to say on a wet afternoon in N5."
🧤 Clean Sheet Culture
It wasn't entirely one-way traffic. Joe Taylor had a sniff. Raphel Rodrigues had a pop. But Kepa Arrizabalaga was alert, gloves firm, ego intact.
That's 22 clean sheets in 2025/26.
Twenty-two.
You don't luck your way to that number.
🔁 Second Half: Controlled Cruise
Half-time change: Viktor Gyökeres for Saka. The Swede nearly made it five within ten minutes, thundering a deflected effort off the woodwork after being released by Ben White.
Eze tried to add gloss. Free-kick deflected. Dribble into the box. Side netting. He deserved one, but sometimes dominance is its own reward.
👶 The Future Checks In
With 30 to go, the moment arrived.
Marli Salmon — 16 years old — home debut. Saliba off. Emirates applause. A glimpse of tomorrow.
He looked composed. No drama. No nerves. Just positioning, simple passes, maturity. The kind of cameo that makes you wonder what the academy chefs are feeding these kids.
Then another debut bow: Tommy Setford on for Kepa late on, claiming his first free-kick like he'd been doing it for years. The cheers from the N5 faithful said everything.
📊 What It Means
• First FA Cup fifth round since 2020
• 22nd clean sheet of the season
• Four goals inside 30 minutes
• Squad rotation that didn't wobble
• Youth pathway alive and kicking
This wasn't just a win.
It was a statement about depth.
When your "rotation" side looks like it could compete for silverware on its own, you're doing something right.
🔜 What's Next
Away to Wolves at Molineux.
Then the short trip across north London. You know the one.
Momentum matters in February. And right now, Arsenal look like a side that understands exactly when to accelerate.
The Loose Cannon verdict?
Clinical. Professional. Slightly ruthless.
And about as enjoyable as a cup tie gets.