Saturday, 27 June 2026

Forget Bruno – Crysencio Summerville Is the World Cup Star Arsenal Should Be Chasing

Every World Cup produces one player who suddenly forces Europe’s biggest clubs to ask an uncomfortable question.

“Why didn’t we move sooner?”

This summer, that player is Crysencio Summerville.

Two goals. One assist. Endless problems for defenders. And perhaps most importantly, he’s playing exactly the kind of football Mikel Arteta loves.

While everyone has become distracted by Arsenal’s latest pursuit of Bruno Guimarães, another Premier League player has quietly been making a far stronger case for a move to North London.

Summerville has been electric.

Playing on the right for the Netherlands, despite spending much of last season on the left for West Ham, he has shown exactly why elite wingers are so difficult to find. He beats defenders on either side, drives directly towards goal, works relentlessly without the ball and, unlike so many modern wide players, looks equally comfortable using either foot.

His goal against Japan with his supposedly weaker left foot wasn’t just technically superb—it demonstrated something Arsenal increasingly value: unpredictability.

Defenders simply cannot show him one way.

That matters.

For all Arsenal’s brilliance last season, there were too many matches where they dominated possession but lacked someone capable of simply embarrassing a full-back.

Bukayo Saka can do it.

Gabriel Martinelli can do it on his day.

But after that?

The drop-off is considerable.

Arteta demands control, structure and defensive discipline, but his system also needs chaos in the final third. Players willing to receive the ball, attack defenders and make something happen when intricate passing breaks down.

Summerville provides exactly that.

What has perhaps impressed most in this World Cup isn’t even the goals.

It’s the work rate.

Every time possession changes hands, he immediately sprints back to help his full-back. He’s aggressive in pressing, intelligent in his positioning and never gives the impression that defending is someone else’s responsibility.

That mentality is non-negotiable under Arteta.

Arsenal’s recruitment over recent years has consistently prioritised character alongside ability. Summerville appears to possess both.

Meanwhile, Arsenal’s reported interest in Bruno Guimarães raises more questions than answers.

There’s no denying the Brazilian is a superb footballer.

His vision, passing range and leadership have been central to Newcastle’s rise. His World Cup performances—three assists in three group games—have reminded everyone why he is regarded as one of Europe’s finest midfielders.

But Arsenal already possess Declan Rice, Martin Zubimendi, Martin Ødegaard, Mikel Merino and the rapidly developing Myles Lewis-Skelly.

How many elite central midfielders does one squad actually need?

Even if Guimarães arrived, where does everyone play?

Would Lewis-Skelly’s development stall?

Would Merino spend another season watching from the bench?

Would Rice be pushed into an unfamiliar role?

The numbers simply don’t add up.

The same cannot be said out wide.

Arsenal have relied heavily on Saka for years. Every season supporters talk about reducing his workload, yet every season Arteta ends up needing him for virtually every important fixture.

Summerville would finally give Arsenal genuine flexibility.

He can play on either wing.

He can rotate with Saka.

He can start alongside Saka.

He can change games from the bench.

Most importantly, he wouldn’t force Arsenal to redesign the entire midfield to accommodate him.

Then there’s the financial side.

Reports suggest Newcastle would demand well over £60 million for Guimarães—and perhaps considerably more if Tottenham complete a deal for Sandro Tonali.

Would that represent good value for a player approaching 29?

Perhaps.

But Arsenal’s recent recruitment has consistently focused on players entering their peak rather than edging towards its latter stages.

Summerville, at just 24, fits that profile perfectly.

He’s Premier League-proven.

He’s improving every season.

And his ceiling still feels some distance away.

This isn’t simply a World Cup overreaction.

He has already demonstrated he can thrive against Premier League defenders. Now he’s proving he can do the same against international opposition.

Those are different tests.

He’s passing both.

Of course, Arsenal may still pursue another midfielder. Arteta has never been shy about strengthening positions that already appear well stocked.

But if Andrea Berta truly wants to make Arsenal “very ambitious, very fast and very smart”, as Arteta recently demanded, then perhaps the smartest move isn’t adding yet another midfielder.

Perhaps it’s signing the tournament’s most explosive winger before everyone else joins the queue.

Because while Bruno Guimarães remains an outstanding player, Crysencio Summerville looks like the kind of signing Arsenal might regret watching someone else make.

Sometimes the obvious transfer isn’t the right one.

This feels like one of those times.



Sent from my iPhone

Saturday, 20 June 2026

Arsenal’s Winger Hunt Goes Into Overdrive: Barcola, Rodrygo and Tzolis All Linked

Just when you thought Arsenal’s summer transfer window couldn’t become any more chaotic, three names have emerged at once: Bradley Barcola, Rodrygo and Christos Tzolis.


And somehow all three make sense.


The headline name is Bradley Barcola. Arsenal are reportedly preparing a bid for the PSG winger as Mikel Arteta looks to add more pace, unpredictability and one-on-one quality to his attack. The interest appears genuine rather than speculative. No offer has been submitted yet, but reports suggest Arsenal are working through the details before making a formal approach.


Barcola would be a fascinating signing. At 23, he already combines elite-level experience with room for further development. He’s quick, direct, technically gifted and capable of producing moments of brilliance from wide areas. The problem? PSG have absolutely no reason to sell cheaply.


Luis Enrique’s side are overflowing with attacking talent. Desire Doue, Ousmane Dembele and Khvicha Kvaratskhelia have all been prominent figures, creating questions about Barcola’s long-term role. But questions about his role do not automatically mean PSG want him out the door. If Arsenal want him, they will likely have to pay a premium.


Then there is Rodrygo.


The Brazilian has been admired by Arsenal for years and remains one of the most talented wide forwards in world football. If Real Madrid are genuinely willing to listen to offers, every major European club will be paying attention.


Rodrygo is the sort of signing that changes the perception of a squad overnight. He has Champions League pedigree, versatility across the front line and the technical quality to thrive in Arteta’s positional system. The issue is obvious: cost.


Between transfer fees, wages and competition from other clubs, Rodrygo would be one of the most difficult deals Arsenal have attempted in recent years. He feels less like a transfer target and more like a dream target.


Which brings us to Christos Tzolis.


The Club Brugge winger is perhaps the least glamorous name on the list, but possibly the most attainable. Reports suggest Arsenal are monitoring him closely, although Brugge have little interest in selling and would demand a fee that could break the Belgian Pro League transfer record.


At 24, Tzolis is entering his prime years. He’s productive, energetic and far more proven than many supporters may realise. While he lacks the superstar profile of Rodrygo or Barcola, he could represent the sort of smart acquisition that successful squads are built upon.


So what does all this tell us?


Firstly, Arsenal clearly want another winger.


Secondly, Arteta and Andrea Berta appear determined to increase competition in wide areas rather than rely solely on Bukayo Saka and Gabriel Martinelli for another season.


Finally, Arsenal seem to be casting a wide net. Barcola looks like the premium developmental option. Rodrygo is the blockbuster statement signing. Tzolis could be the value play.


If Arsenal somehow landed Rodrygo, supporters would be dancing down Holloway Road.


If they landed Barcola, there would be genuine excitement about securing one of Europe’s brightest attacking talents.


If they landed Tzolis, there would initially be scepticism followed by thousands of fans claiming they had been watching Belgian football for years.

Welcome to transfer season.

Loose Cannon Verdict: If all three were available at realistic prices, I’d rank them 1) Rodrygo, 2) Barcola, 3) Tzolis. The problem is that only one of those deals feels remotely realistic, and Arsenal’s recruitment team know it. The most interesting question isn’t who Arsenal want — it’s which club is actually willing to sell.



Sunday, 31 May 2026

Hungarian Heartbreak - But We’ll Be Back

Football can be wonderfully cruel.


One moment you’re dreaming of immortality. The next you’re watching one of your heroes stand with his head in his hands while a sea of opposition supporters celebrate around him.


The image that will dominate the back pages is not PSG lifting the trophy. It is Gabriel Magalhães, Arsenal’s warrior centre-half, being comforted by Brazil team-mate Marquinhos after blasting his penalty into orbit and handing Paris Saint-Germain the Champions League.


For rival fans, that’s the story.


For Arsenal fans, it shouldn’t be.


Because if anyone deserves protection from the inevitable nonsense that will follow, it is Gabriel.


Let’s be honest. Without him Arsenal probably aren’t Premier League champions. Without him there is no title parade through north London. Without him there may not even have been a Champions League final to lose.


Yet football has a habit of reducing entire seasons to single moments.


John Terry slipping in Moscow.


Roberto Baggio blazing over in Pasadena.


And now Gabriel in Budapest.


The cruel reality is that history rarely remembers the hundreds of tackles, headers, blocks and match-winning moments that got a team there in the first place.


It remembers one kick.


Arsenal started brilliantly. Kai Havertz thundered home after six minutes and for a brief, glorious spell it felt as though destiny had finally arrived wearing red and white.


But PSG are champions of Europe for a reason.


They monopolised possession, squeezed Arsenal deeper and deeper, and eventually dragged the game into the lottery of penalties after Ousmane Dembélé’s equaliser.


Once it reaches a shootout, football stops being a sport and starts becoming a nerve test.


Technique matters.


Preparation matters.


But luck matters too.


Arteta revealed afterwards that Gabriel had trained specifically for this moment. He wanted the responsibility. He volunteered.


That tells you everything you need to know about his character.


Cowards don’t step forward.


Leaders do.


Unfortunately, leaders sometimes miss.


The sight of Gabriel wiping away tears afterwards was difficult to watch. This is a player who has dragged Arsenal through countless battles over the past few seasons. A player who transformed Arsenal’s defence from soft-centred chaos into one of Europe’s toughest units.


Yet while social media will spend the summer replaying one missed penalty, Arsenal supporters will remember something else.


The towering headers.


The last-ditch clearances.


The 96th-minute winner against Newcastle.


The partnership with William Saliba that helped bring the Premier League trophy back to Arsenal after 22 painful years.


Those things matter far more than one kick.


And while the defeat hurts, perspective remains important.


Arsenal have just won the Premier League.


Read that again.


Premier League champions.


After years of being mocked, written off and told they weren’t ready, Arteta’s side climbed back to the summit of English football.


Would every Arsenal supporter have taken that at the start of the season?


Without hesitation.


Of course they would.


The Champions League dream will sting. It may sting for months. Perhaps even years.


But sometimes defeat becomes fuel.


Manchester United lost European finals before they won them.


Manchester City suffered heartbreak before finally conquering Europe.


Arsenal’s journey isn’t over.


If anything, Budapest felt less like the end of a story and more like the end of a chapter.


Arteta already sounds determined. New signings are expected. The squad remains young. Myles Lewis-Skelly, Ethan Nwaneri, Max Dowman and others represent an exciting future.


The foundations are there.


The experience is there.


And the hunger is certainly there.


So while PSG celebrate, Arsenal should not allow one painful night to overshadow an extraordinary campaign.


The defining image of this season is not Gabriel’s penalty disappearing into the Budapest sky.


It’s Bukayo Saka lifting the Premier League trophy.


It’s Arsenal back where they belong.


And if Gabriel’s tears become the motivation for the next step, then perhaps this heartbreak will eventually be remembered not as the end of a dream — but as the beginning of an even bigger one.


The pain is real.


But so is the progress.


And Arsenal aren’t going anywhere except to the top. We'll be back!



Monday, 25 May 2026

Mind The Gap - Seven Point Clear Of Nearest Title Rivals Says It All

Arsenal didn’t so much beat Crystal Palace as stroll through south London with the relaxed swagger of a side that already knew the hard work was done. The scoreline said 2-1. The mood said carnival. The travelling support said everything else.


Selhurst Park was supposed to belong to Palace for one last emotional send-off. Instead, it became the scene of Arsenal’s coronation parade — complete with heat breaks, experimental line-ups, and the strange feeling that everyone involved was already mentally packing for bigger things next weekend.


Because let’s not pretend this was played at full throttle. Palace have a European final on Wednesday. Arsenal have a date with destiny against Paris Saint-Germain on Saturday. The intensity levels hovered somewhere between testimonial and pre-season friendly. Nobody was flying into tackles. Nobody was risking their hamstrings for pride. The loudest exertion came from Arsenal fans singing about being champions for two straight hours.


And honestly? Fair enough.


Twenty-two years. Twenty-two long years.


When Gabriel Jesus finally finished one of his chances just before half-time, there was almost a sense of inevitability about it. Palace looked like a side already on the beach. Arsenal looked like a side floating six feet above it. Then came Noni Madueke, arriving from another set-piece routine that probably causes opposition analysts physical pain at this point. Corner. Chaos. Goal. Repeat.


That should have been that.


Of course, because Arsenal are Arsenal, there had to be a tiny sliver of drama. Jean-Philippe Mateta pulled one back after Kepa wandered into that familiar territory somewhere between bravery and catastrophic decision-making. Yeremy Pino then thought he’d stolen an absurd equaliser in stoppage time before VAR spotted Evann Guessand interfering from an offside position.


Even fate, apparently, had decided this was Arsenal’s afternoon.


The biggest roar before kick-off was probably reserved for two names: Max Dowman and Eberechi Eze.


Dowman became the youngest player ever to start a Premier League match for Arsenal at just 16 years and 144 days old — another reminder that this club suddenly looks frighteningly healthy from top to bottom. Meanwhile Eze returned to Selhurst Park wearing Arsenal colours for the first time after his £67 million move, greeted like the prodigal son by Palace supporters still grateful for last season’s FA Cup heroics.


That’s the difference now. Arsenal don’t just buy players. They attract them. Big players. Prime-age players. Match-winners. The sort of signings champions make.


And that word matters now.


Champions.


Say it slowly. Enjoy it.


For years Arsenal were “nearly men.” Too soft. Too young. Too emotional. Too naïve. Always one step behind Pep Guardiola’s machine. Every season ended with progress reports instead of silverware.


Not anymore.


This title means more than ending a drought. It’s the psychological breakthrough that changes everything around the club. Mikel Arteta hasn’t just built a good side — he’s climbed over the final mountain that stood in front of him: Guardiola himself.


That matters enormously.


For years Manchester City were the final boss Arsenal couldn’t defeat. Now Guardiola is leaving, City suddenly look mortal, Liverpool are wobbling under questions surrounding Arne Slot, Chelsea remain a billion-pound identity crisis, and Manchester United are still rebuilding despite improvement under Michael Carrick.


Suddenly Arsenal are no longer the hunters.


They’re the standard.


And Arteta knows it.


“I said to the boys that this shirt now represents something else,” he said afterwards.


Exactly right.


That shirt carries weight again.


There was something telling about the trophy lift itself. Arteta looked emotional, yes, but not overwhelmed. Not satisfied. More like a man ticking off the first major target on a much longer list. The messaging has already shifted from “we can compete” to “we must dominate.”


That’s why next Saturday feels so enormous.


Because this title could either become the emotional peak… or merely the beginning.


Arsenal have already spent like a club determined to build a dynasty. Viktor Gyokeres. Martin Zubimendi. Proven winners. Win-now signings. Andrea Berta’s recruitment strategy suddenly looks terrifyingly coherent. There’s more spending coming too, with another midfielder, left winger and striker reportedly on the list.


Josh Kroenke openly talking about emotional and financial investment would have sounded like satire five years ago. Now Arsenal fans hear it and nod along because, for once, the ownership’s actions actually match the words.


The scary part?


This team still feels unfinished.


There are teenagers coming through. Key players approaching their prime. Tactical flexibility everywhere. Depth. Athleticism. Leadership. A manager who has learned through failure and finally crossed the line.


And now the pressure is gone.


That’s the thing rivals should fear most.


Arsenal no longer play like a club desperate to prove they belong. They play like a club expecting to win. The nervous energy has disappeared. The old fragility has gone with it.


The celebrations at Selhurst Park weren’t just about finally lifting the Premier League trophy after 22 years.


They felt like the opening ceremony for something much bigger.