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.


Wednesday, 20 May 2026

Let Them Eat Cake

I'm planning a little celebration at work. The plan is buy an Arsenal cake and make the Man U fans I know eat it without choking on our success. They said we'd choke, but they were wrong: we are made of sterner stuff and thank you Bournemouth for doing their bit as well to bring back the league title to Arsenal! 

We trusted the process and now it's our time to taste victory and a title-winning team that was forged together slowly, obsessively, painfully — hammered into existence by a manager who refused to blink even when the rest of England laughed at the process.


Twenty-two years.


Twenty-two years since Arsenal last stood on top of English football.


Now we stand there again.


Not because of one miracle season. Not because of luck. Not because Manchester City finally slipped. But because Mikel Arteta built something so intense, so emotionally charged, so relentlessly detailed that eventually the entire club began moving to the rhythm of one man’s vision.


And somehow, in the middle of it all, there was a boat speech, a training-ground fire, and an AI TikTok anthem.


Football’s gone completely mad.



“Jump on the boat”



Back in January, after another draining defeat to City, Arteta delivered one of those speeches that sounded slightly unhinged at the time but now belongs in Arsenal folklore.


“Jump on the boat.”


That was the message.


Not analysis. Not tactics. Not percentages. Belief.


Because this Arsenal side has always been emotional. Sometimes too emotional. For three seasons they flirted with greatness before falling away when the pressure tightened around their throats. The old Arsenal would wobble. The old Arsenal would start calculating.


This team eventually stopped calculating and started hunting.


And Arteta? He stopped managing like an apprentice trying to prove he belonged. He started trusting instinct.


That change won Arsenal the title.



The fire never stopped burning



Only Arteta could literally light a fire at the training ground during a poor run of form and somehow make it work.


Players were reportedly told to throw negative thoughts into the flames. Most managers would get laughed out of the room for something like that. Arteta somehow made millionaire footballers buy into it completely.


Because by now, Arsenal isn’t just coached by Arteta.


It feels like Arteta.


The intensity. The obsession. The emotional investment. The paranoia. The standards. The refusal to accept comfort.


Even the analysts scream from the stands now.


Gabriel Heinze arrived and introduced pre-match defensive huddles that sound like scenes from a war film. Barbecues at London Colney became part therapy session, part family gathering, part cult recruitment drive.


And somehow it all fused together into the most connected Arsenal squad in a generation.


Not a collection of stars.


A tribe.



“Make it happen”



Then came the AI TikTok song.


Because of course it did.


An AI-generated anthem naming every member of the squad somehow became the soundtrack to the season. Players loved it. Fans blasted it everywhere. TikTok turned it into a movement. And buried inside the ridiculousness was Arteta’s favourite phrase:


“Make it happen.”


That line became the mission statement of the season.


Not “hope.”


Not “maybe.”


Make it happen.


And Arsenal finally did.



Viktor Gyokeres changed everything



Let’s not pretend otherwise — Arsenal finally solved the striker problem.


For years they danced around the issue. False nines. Fluid systems. Havertz experiments. Beautiful football with nobody ruthless enough to finish the meal.


Then Viktor Gyokeres arrived like a battering ram.


Andrea Berta deserves enormous credit here. Edu built most of the structure of this squad, absolutely. But Berta was brought in for one reason only:


Get Arsenal over the line.


And he did.


Gyokeres gave Arsenal brutality. Verticality. Fear. Suddenly defenders couldn’t push up comfortably because the Swede would explode into the space behind them. Suddenly Arsenal weren’t just artists — they were killers.


Early on, Arteta had to adapt tactically. Arsenal became slightly more direct. Slightly more savage. Slightly less obsessed with perfect geometry.


By spring, Gyokeres looked unstoppable.


And the terrifying thing?


This still feels like the beginning.



The spine of champions



Every title-winning side has a spine.


This one had monsters.


Declan Rice played like a man powered by caffeine and vengeance, dragging himself through three matches a week without slowing down. William Saliba and Gabriel Magalhães became arguably the best centre-back pairing in Europe. David Raya gave Arsenal calm. Control. Authority.


And then there’s Bukayo Saka.


The academy kid who became the soul of the club.


Alongside him came the next generation — Myles Lewis-Skelly, Ethan Nwaneri and the absurdly talented Max Dowman, who already has scouts whispering words no teenager should have attached to his name.


For years Arsenal fans dreamed of becoming a superclub without losing their identity.


Now they’ve done it.



The Kroenkes finally got serious



This matters too.


For years, Arsenal supporters viewed the Kroenkes with suspicion ranging from mild irritation to outright fury. But internally, there’s a growing feeling that Josh Kroenke finally understood what this club actually means.


More presence. More involvement. More visibility.


Not just corporate ownership from 5,000 miles away.


And crucially, Arsenal stopped behaving like a club terrified of elite ambition.


They spent big. They acted aggressively. They built infrastructure. They empowered football people. They stopped acting grateful just to be in the Champions League conversation.


The mentality changed from “qualify” to “dominate.”


That shift matters.



From nearly-men to champions



That’s the real story here.


Arsenal had already become very good.


But becoming champions requires something uglier. Harder. Less romantic.


You have to survive pressure. Survive panic. Survive setbacks. Survive your own history.


This team lost cup finals. Dropped points. Stuttered. Heard the noise building again.


And still kept going.


Because eventually the process stopped being a slogan.


It became reality.


Now Arsenal head to Budapest chasing the Champions League against Paris Saint-Germain F.C. with the Premier League already secured.


And suddenly an impossible question no longer sounds ridiculous.


Could this become the greatest Arsenal side of all time?


For now, though, one thing matters above everything else.


After 22 years of waiting, north London belongs to Arsenal again.