Saturday, 4 April 2026

Saints March Over Cracking Artillery

So that's that then. The FA Cup, once the competition that practically had our name engraved on it every other spring, is gone before the daffodils have fully bloomed. Quarter-final stage. St Mary's. Southampton 2, Arsenal 1. Another one of those maddening afternoons where control without incision met chaos without punishment.


And the really irritating thing? We had enough of the ball, enough of the moments, and more than enough warnings.


Southampton arrived on a 14-game unbeaten run and played like a side that genuinely believed Wembley was theirs to touch. From the first whistle they were sharp, aggressive, and direct. Tom Fellows kept trying to turn the game into a sprint down our left, only to keep running into Gabriel, who spent the opening exchanges playing the role of north London's emergency services.


The Saints screamed for a penalty when Leo Scienza went down under Gabriel's challenge, but Sam Barrott waved it away. Correctly, from where I'm sitting. Not every tumble in the box needs the nation to hold its breath.


At the other end, Martin Ødegaard's return immediately gave us rhythm. One glorious clipped ball over the top sent Martinelli away, but the finish lacked the ruthlessness the move deserved. Then from the resulting corner, Martinelli thought he'd found the top corner only for Taylor Harwood-Bellis to intervene with a superb block.


It had that familiar smell: Arsenal probing, Arsenal threatening, Arsenal not killing.


And then came the warning signs. Gabriel's header accidentally sent Scienza clean through, and only a heavy touch plus sharp recovery work from Christian Mosquera spared us. A let-off. The sort you remember later.


We began to dominate possession properly as the half wore on. Ødegaard, understandably rusty but still the clearest football brain on the pitch, twice went close. One venomous hit from a set-piece routine forced Daniel Peretz into a strong save. Another drifted just wide after lovely work from Martinelli.


Kai Havertz had a pop from range too, deflected narrowly off target.


But just as it felt like the game was tilting our way, Southampton reminded us of football's oldest cruelty: dominance means absolutely nothing if you switch off once.


James Bree surged forward, clipped in a dangerous ball, Ben White misjudged the flight, and Ross Stewart did the rest—lashing beyond Kepa to send St Mary's into orbit.


One attack. One goal. One sucker punch.


The second half began with Arsenal doing what Arsenal do when behind: circling, pressing, teasing. Max Dowman nearly levelled, only for Ryan Manning to throw himself into the kind of block that usually ends up on end-of-season montages.


Then Southampton nearly buried us. Fellows fired over after an ugly mix-up, before Scienza bent a beauty against the bar. That should have been the moment we took the hint.


To Mikel's credit, the bench changed the story. On came Riccardo Calafiori, Viktor Gyökeres and Noni Madueke, and suddenly there was thrust where previously there had been patience.


The equaliser was beautifully worked. Gabriel threaded the killer pass, Havertz showed excellent awareness to square, and Gyökeres did what elite forwards do: one touch, one finish, one surge of belief. 1-1 with 22 minutes left, and it felt inevitable.


Except this version of Arsenal currently has an alarming habit of making the avoidable feel inevitable too.


Dowman forced a brilliant save from Peretz. Martinelli then fired wide after a slick corner routine. We were pushing. The game was there.


And then, in the kind of sequence that drives supporters to stare silently into the middle distance, Southampton went straight up the other end and won it.


The move came down our left, the cut-back arrived, and substitute Shea Charles—composed, calm, utterly unbothered by the occasion—rolled it into the bottom corner.


2-1. Wembley for them. Head-in-hands for us.


The closing minutes were all frantic noise and desperate bodies, but Peretz shut the door and Arsenal's second defeat in a row was confirmed.


The Loose Cannon verdict? This wasn't about effort. It was about edge. Southampton had it, we didn't. They took the moments that mattered, while we spent too much of the game admiring our own structure. Another thing: Arsenal won't win cups with Kepa in goal. Raya is that important that if he's not there it affects the whole team. Kepa did okay, but Arsenal depend on Raya to set the tone.


Now the focus swings sharply to Lisbon and Sporting CP in the Champions League quarter-final and let's hope Gabriel's knee has recovered in time. Bigger stage, better opposition, and absolutely no room for another afternoon of pretty football with a rotten ending.


Because cup exits become habits if you let them.


And this one had all the hallmarks of a team that forgot knockout football is about blood, not beauty.



Sunday, 22 March 2026

Calamity Kepa’s Costly Cup Fumble

There are defeats, and then there are these defeats. 


The ones that don't just hurt — they linger. The ones that whisper uncomfortable truths you've been trying to ignore since August. Wembley was supposed to be a stepping stone to history. Instead, it was a slap across the face. Manchester City didn't just beat Arsenal — they reminded everyone exactly who they are when the lights get bright and the medals are on the table.


And Arsenal? They froze, especially after Kepa's mistake. Raya oozes confidence, when he plays. It's catching. Don't mention that word to Kepa, who actually played quite well apart from his monumental error that gifted the game to City. 


Let's not dress it up. This wasn't a smash-and-grab. This was a deserved, controlled, almost routine dismantling once City decided to actually turn up. For 45 minutes, it was cagey. Nervy. Two teams shadowboxing. Then Guardiola flicked a switch — and Arsenal simply couldn't live with it.


Four minutes. That's all it took.


Four minutes to turn a final into a post-mortem.


First, the moment that will follow Kepa Arrizabalaga around for a long time. A routine cross. Bread and butter. Sunday league stuff. Dropped. Gift-wrapped. Thank you very much. Nico O'Reilly nods in and suddenly the entire Wembley narrative tilts.


Then — before Arsenal can even process the damage — it's two. Same man. Same method. Different postcode in the box. Far post, free header, game over. Guardiola sprinting down the touchline like he's just won the lot again. Because, in truth, he probably felt like he had.


And here's the uncomfortable bit.


This was self-inflicted.


Mikel Arteta, for all his brilliance, overthought it. He blinked. He stuck with his cup keeper — the romantic decision, the loyal decision — instead of the correct one. Finals are not the place for sentiment. They're not development games. They're not auditions. You play your best XI. You trust your best players.


David Raya watches. Kepa fumbles. Trophy gone.


That's the margin.


But it wasn't just the goalkeeper. That would be too easy. Arsenal, as a whole, played like a team waiting for permission. Passive. Safe. Predictable. This wasn't the free-flowing, front-foot, ruthless side that's been tearing through the league. This was a version weighed down by the occasion — cautious to the point of irrelevance.


City, meanwhile, smelled it.


They pressed harder. Ran sharper. Played with purpose. And when the door opened — courtesy of a pair of catastrophic headers conceded — they didn't hesitate. That's the difference. That's what serial winners do. Even in a "transition" season, even when they've been wobbling, even when everyone's writing their obituary.


You give them a sniff, and they take your silverware.


There's a broader question here, and it's not a comfortable one:

Are Arsenal still learning how to win, while City already know?


Because this felt familiar. Not identical — but familiar. The slight hesitation. The big-game tension. The moment where control slips and suddenly everything unravels faster than it should.


Now, let's be clear — this isn't a crisis. That was just an egg cup. The league is the real deal.



Tuesday, 17 March 2026

Eze Ignites, Rice Closes – Arsenal Glide Into the Last Eight

Some nights in European football are wars of attrition.

Others are exhibitions.


This was the latter.


Arsenal didn't just beat Bayer Leverkusen — they controlled them, managed them, and ultimately dismissed them with the kind of authority that whispers something dangerous:


This team thinks it belongs at the very top.





🎯 Eze Steps Into the Spotlight



With Martin Ødegaard absent, there was a creative void to fill.


Enter Eberechi Eze — and not quietly, either.


One touch to settle.

One swivel to create space.

One emphatic strike to announce himself to the Champions League.


Top corner. No saving it. No arguing with it.


It wasn't just a goal — it was a declaration. Arsenal might have stumbled onto a new rhythm in attack, and Eze looks increasingly like the man conducting it.





🧊 Rice Does What Rice Does



If Eze provided the spark, Declan Rice provided the certainty.


Leverkusen half-cleared. Rice arrived. Tie over.


No fuss. No theatrics. Just a composed finish rolled into the bottom corner like he'd done it a hundred times before.


This is what separates good teams from serious ones — the ability to kill games the moment they wobble.





🧠 Control Over Chaos



Arsenal didn't need to go through the gears. They didn't need a grandstand finish.


They just needed control — and under Mikel Arteta, that's exactly what they've mastered.


  • Set-pieces looked dangerous (as ever), with Gabriel twice going close
  • The press was organised, suffocating Leverkusen's build-up
  • The tempo was dictated, not chased



Leverkusen weren't poor — they were managed out of the game.


And that's a far more worrying sign for the rest of europe.





🏆 One Eye on Wembley



Perhaps the biggest compliment you can pay Arsenal is this:


They won a Champions League knockout tie… and still had the luxury of thinking ahead.


Arteta rotated. Key players were protected. The engine was dialled down once the job was done.


Because next up is Manchester City at Wembley — a Carabao Cup final that suddenly feels like more than just a domestic trophy.


Win that, and belief turns into momentum.

Lose it, and the old doubts creep back in.





🔮 The Bigger Picture



Sporting await in the quarter-finals — unpredictable, chaotic, dangerous in bursts.


But Arsenal? They're becoming something else entirely.


Structured. Efficient. Ruthless.


Fourteen wins in seventeen home Champions League games under Arteta isn't a coincidence — it's a blueprint.


And now comes the real test:


Can this team turn control into trophies?




Loose Cannon Verdict:

Eze lit the fuse. Rice slammed the door. Arteta orchestrated the lot.


No drama. No panic. Just a professional dismantling.


And if you're looking for a sign of a team ready to win something big…this was it!



Saturday, 14 March 2026

Boy Wonder Breaks Toffees



There are moments in football when the ground tilts slightly and the future arrives earlier than expected. On a tense evening at the Emirates, that future wore the number on the back of a shirt that still looks slightly too big. His name is Max Dowman, he is 16 years and 73 days old, and he has just written himself into Premier League history.


Arsenal edged past Everton 2–0, but the scoreline barely tells the story. This was a night about belief, patience, and a teenager who finished the evening by sprinting away from defenders who looked suddenly very, very old.


For most of the match Everton played the role of stubborn party crashers. They defended well, broke forward with menace, and very nearly took the lead themselves. Dwight McNeil twice threatened to silence the Emirates — first when Riccardo Calafiori produced a frankly outrageous acrobatic block, and then when the Everton winger curled one against the post from the edge of the area.


Arsenal, meanwhile, huffed, puffed and occasionally looked like a team that had misplaced its usual rhythm. They also felt aggrieved when Kai Havertz tangled with Michael Keane in the box — an incident that on another day might have resulted in a penalty. Not this time.


As the clock ticked toward ninety minutes, it began to feel like one of those nights. The kind that title challengers dread: dominance without reward.


Enter Viktor Gyökeres.


With the game drifting toward stalemate, the substitute pounced in the 89th minute, tapping home after Jordan Pickford made an absolute hash of dealing with Dowman's dangerous cross. It was the sort of messy, opportunistic goal that wins championships — the footballing equivalent of kicking the door open when the lock won't turn.


But the story didn't end there.


Everton threw everyone forward for a stoppage-time corner, Pickford included. When Arsenal cleared their lines the ball fell to Dowman near halfway. What followed was pure instinct.


Two defenders were beaten. The pitch opened. The goalkeeper was nowhere.


Dowman ran — the stride of someone who has spent his life dreaming of exactly this moment — before calmly rolling the ball into the empty net.


The Emirates erupted.


And just like that, the kid from the academy became the youngest goalscorer in Premier League history, beating the record set by Everton's James Vaughan (16 years, 270 days) back in 2005.


Sixteen years old. Seventy-three days.


Let that sink in.


For Arsenal supporters who have watched Dowman's rise, however, none of this feels like a shock. Records have followed him around the way defenders try — unsuccessfully — to follow him around a pitch.


This season alone he has already become:


  • Arsenal's youngest Champions League player
  • The youngest player to start a match for the club
  • The youngest Gunner to feature in the FA Cup
  • And now the youngest scorer in Premier League history



Not bad for someone who was still doing homework a couple of years ago.


Dowman has been training with the first team since he was 14, and Mikel Arteta has been unable to hide his excitement. The Arsenal manager once joked he would have been "blind" not to notice the teenager's talent. Comparisons — including whispers of Lionel Messi — have inevitably followed.


But Arsenal have been careful. Very careful.


The club has managed his minutes, protected his development, and ensured that the hype does not swallow the player. In January, Dowman committed his long-term future to Arsenal by signing a pre-contract agreement, with full professional terms ready when he turns 17 on 31 December.


For now, though, the story is simpler.


Arsenal are ten points clear at the top — temporarily at least — and even when Manchester City later trimmed that margin to nine with a draw at West Ham, the message from north London was unmistakable.


This team is relentless.


And now it has something else too.


A sixteen-year-old who looks like he was born for this stage.


The Premier League has seen prodigies before. Some fade. Some burn brightly and disappear. A rare few become legends.


After a night like this, Arsenal fans can't help but wonder which one Max Dowman might become.