So it turns out we were right and this should have been a penalty and 4-2 on 87 minutes.
Arsenal could have won the League at The Emirates on Monday night.
Will Arsenal be worthy champions if they get over the line? There is plenty of criticism of Arsenal's football, the set-piece arts/dark arts, the antics of Arteta in the technical area, and triumphalism of some fans such as the one with that presumptuous “champions” shirt. Throw in the usual club tribalism and that season-defining VAR decision (correct call but officials inconsistent in punishing grappling this season) and there’s plenty of antipathy towards Arsenal.
But it is a truism universally acknowledged that the team that finish top first are worthy champions. It’s a marathon of 38 sprints and Arsenal have demonstrated the required ability, character and stamina. They have had their mentality questioned all season (and before). From Raya to Rice, Gabriel to Gyokeres, all of the squad have shown resilience. Battlers, not bottlers. Rice in particular embodies their will to win.
It’s good to see a club keeping faith in a talented manager during the near-misses; keeping financial balance (top with fourth largest wage bill); and building a squad so that hugely capable players can come off the bench and make a big difference as Odegaard did against West Ham. And isn’t it more refreshing to see a range of champions (if they do hold on)? Five different clubs have been champions since Arsenal in 2004.
It’s also important to see a club committed to their academy, creating a pathway for Saka, Lewis-Skelly, Dowman and others, and giving them a chance to shine; it’s good for sustainability, culture and connection with fans. It’s encouraging to see a club working with fans to improve atmosphere (tifos, coach greets).
Off-field, too. All clubs have vital community departments; Arsenal in the Community is widely acknowledged as the oldest and one of the most impactful at home and abroad with around 100 full-time and part-time staff. There is much good about Arsenal. If they do hold on, Arsenal will be worthy champions on and off the pitch. #AFC
Pep Guardiola couldn’t win the Champions League in 4 attempts with that Bayern Munich super team.
It took him 7 attempts to finally win it with Manchester City.
Jürgen Klopp has only one Champions League trophy in his entire managerial career.
José Mourinho was hired by Real Madrid with unlimited resources to deliver the Champions League… and he failed.
And somehow, people still downplay what Mikel Arteta has achieved in just his third Champions League campaign with Arsenal.
From bringing Arsenal back to Europe’s biggest stage… to turning us into genuine contenders again.
People forget where this club was before he arrived. No identity, no direction, no belief.
Now? Arsenal are competing with Europe’s elite again, feared again, respected again.
That doesn’t happen by luck. That’s the result of vision, patience, and rebuilding the club the right way.
We may fall short sometimes, but this team keeps rising. And when the moment finally comes, it’ll mean even more because of the journey.
Trust the process ❤️🤍💪
My Gaffer 🫶🏻