ARSENAL HEAD BURNLEY INTO SUBMISSION"
They say Turf Moor is where title dreams go to die, but not for this Arsenal side. Not this machine built on corners, counter-attacks, and cold-blooded composure. Two first-half headers — one from Viktor Gyökeres, the other from Declan "Iron Chef" Rice — secured a fifth straight Premier League win and a seventh consecutive clean sheet, as Mikel Arteta's men made the most of another afternoon of set-piece sorcery.
SET-PIECE FC STRIKES AGAIN
We used to be allergic to corners. Now we're addicted to them.
Before a single claret shirt could blink, Declan Rice whipped in a beauty that found Gabriel Magalhães at the far post. Big Gabi, channelling his inner ballet dancer, cushioned a volley back across goal for Gyökeres to nod home from roughly the distance between Arteta's hairline and perfection. One-nil, one yard, one headache for Burnley.
Every subsequent corner had the away end roaring like it was a penalty. Trossard — making his 100th Premier League appearance in red and white — was buzzing like a caffeine-addled bee, testing defenders and statisticians alike. Even Calafiori joined the party, forcing another save as we pummelled Burnley's box with the regularity of a metronome.
RUTHLESS RICE AND THE COUNTER-CRUSADE
If the first goal was poetry in short range, the second was a sprinting sonnet.
Saka — fresh from tormenting full-backs for sport — cleared a Burnley corner with a deft flick. Gyökeres, half Viking, half delivery driver, pinged a glorious cross-field ball to Trossard. The Belgian, all composure and cruelty, spotted Rice galloping into the box and delivered an inch-perfect cross. One thunderous header later, and the Burnley net was shaking like a leaf in the Lancashire wind.
It was the kind of counter-attack that used to happen to us. Now it's us doing the haunting.
DEFENCE WINS TITLES (AND MAKES BORING TEAMS JEALOUS)
Burnley tried, bless them. They floated, they prodded, they prayed. But Gabriel and Saliba were immovable objects, while Raya barely needed to grass-stain his gloves. Esteve's header went begging, Florentino Luís aimed for the moon, and Marcus Edwards struck the post with Burnley's dying gasp.
Meanwhile, the clean-sheet count keeps rising. Seven on the bounce. The Emirates firewall remains intact.
THE KIDS ARE ALL RIGHT
Ethan Nwaneri nearly capped things off with a low drive that whistled just wide, and Christian Nørgaard fancied a pop too — though Dubravka's gloves were the only thing Burnley fans could applaud by the end.
Arteta even gave Gyökeres an early rest, bringing on Mikel Merino — because when you've already decapitated your opponent, why not sharpen another blade?
WHAT'S NEXT?
Next stop: Prague. The Champions League awaits on Tuesday, November 4, with Slavia in our sights. Then it's back to domestic duties on Sunday, November 8, up at Sunderland's Stadium of Light — where we'll look to turn the Black Cats into black-and-blue ones.
FINAL THOUGHT
Arsenal are not just winning anymore — they're controlling the narrative. Corners are weapons. Counters are art. Defence is doctrine.
This isn't the Arsenal of old. This is The Arsenal, with a blueprint written in set-piece drills and headed goals.
At Turf Moor, we didn't just beat Burnley — we rose above them. Literally.
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