@mancityhardcore Why are you lying you pathetic loser 🤣🤣🤣 115 charges, all the money & Pep Guardiola but you still could not win. Then your manager runs away because he knows your club is guilty. Plus your fanbase has no soul. Stop lying to your people foolish ugly man.
🚨 Champions League full draw! ✨
🇫🇷 Monaco vs PSG 🇫🇷
🇵🇹 Benfica vs Real Madrid 🇪🇸
🇦🇿 Qarabag vs Newcastle 🏴
🇹🇷 Galatasaray vs Juventus 🇮🇹
🇩🇪 B. Dortmund vs Atalanta 🇮🇹
🇧🇪 Club Brugge vs Atletico Madrid 🇪🇸
🇳🇴 Bodø/Glimt vs Inter 🇮🇹
🇬🇷 Olympiacos vs Bayer Leverkusen 🇩🇪
Till you leave this club, I’ll support the hell out of you. You are the best thing that’s happened to my club in over two decades. I WILL ALWAYS always support you, Arteta.
The reaction to Arsenal losing to Manchester United, compared to Bayern Munich being beaten by Augsburg, says a lot about how football is viewed in the Premier League versus the Bundesliga.
In England, one defeat turns into a full-blown crisis. It becomes a judgement on the manager, the players, the mentality, and even the entire project. In Germany, it’s more often seen for what it is — a bad day at the office that happens over a long season.
The Premier League’s intensity, media pressure, and constant narrative-building mean perspective gets lost very quickly. Every result is treated like it defines everything that came before and everything that comes next.
Same outcome on paper, big team beaten, completely different reaction. One league panics, the other moves on.
❤️🤍 Arteta: “I was just watching Kai Havertz move and his awareness, the way he needs to move, when he needs to move, in relation to what he moves”.
“We miss him big time. He's back with us and now we need to maintain his fitness because he's a very important player for us”.
Mikel Arteta was not meant to coach yet.
He finished his playing career quietly.
No farewell tour.
No coaching offers waiting.
Then Pep Guardiola called.
Manchester City.
Learning as an assistant coach.
Arteta arrived early every day.
Set up rondos.
Moved cones.
Adjusted spacing.
He stayed after sessions.
Studied build up patterns.
Defensive shapes.
Pressing triggers.
For three years, he learned beside Guardiola.
Listened more than he spoke.
Absorbed everything.
Arsenal took the risk.
First head coaching job.
One of the biggest clubs in England.
The squad was fractured.
Late arrivals.
Poor fitness.
Low standards.
Arteta wrote rules immediately.
Exact training times.
Dress standards.
Behavior expectations.
When players ignored them, he acted.
Removed captains.
Moved on senior names.
Results did not come fast.
Losses stacked up.
Fans turned.
He kept the plan.
Clear roles.
Clear principles.
Young players became leaders.
Saka.
Martinelli.
Saliba.
He rebuilt trust season by season.
Training intensity rose.
Consistency followed.
An FA Cup came first.
Then Champions League football returned.
Then title challenges.
From assistant with cones
To leader with conviction.
Not because he rushed the process.
But because he stayed firm.
Arteta's story shows:
success only follows high standards.
📲 Eberechi Eze is left in disbelief after a message from his idol, Thierry Henry, after signing for Arsenal. 🥹❤️
🗣️ “He’s got a statue outside, bro. You know what? When you use words, you can ruin something. This for me, it’s the feeling. This is powerful.”
@JonLowrie@JasonJames_73@IpswichTown Guarantee if Davis goes into the back of Declan Rice, Rice does not get booed all half. Call it out for it is. Stay classy.