The Empire State Building shines red and white tonight in celebration of @Arsenal’s Premier League Title and trophy celebration.
See the lights live: https://t.co/iavtXSm3Fx
end to the europe heatwave discourse should be that i, a man born and raised in texas and very used to dfw summers, am currently sprawled on a cooling mat made for dogs fighting for my life in germany
"External critics formed a caricature they choose not to see beyond. Arteta is not a manager they care to try to understand."
But he has got Arsenal, and Arsenal have got him.
Free to read - the roots of Arteta's passion for his club.
https://t.co/13X0KhEvzu via @NYTimes
astronomical levels of begging going on about “i’m not an arsenal fan but im coming to the parade” do people realise this ain’t a motive if you don’t support arsenal. get out my of my way so I can tell Declan Rice that I love him
Much of the Arsenal squad’s closeness originates from Mikel Arteta and his determination to create an atmosphere of unity within the first-team set-up. The Spaniard is a cultural architect as much as he is a football tactician.
A few years ago, a member of staff confided to Arteta that his son was being bullied at school. Arteta’s response was to invite the boy into the training ground and allow him to use the gym in the evenings, to build his confidence.
Sam Dean looks at how Arteta’s unique methods created a united and strong enough squad to end their 22-year wait for the title ⤵️
https://t.co/Z3a6Tk5iex