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𝗣𝗮𝗶𝗱 𝗖𝗼𝘂𝗿𝘀𝗲 𝗙𝗥𝗘𝗘 (PART - 1)
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2019/20: 8th
2020/21: 8th
2021/22: 5th
2022/23: 2nd
2023/24: 2nd
2024/25: 2nd
2025/26: 1st
That is not luck. That is not “one good season”. That is one of the clearest rebuild curves modern football has seen.
When Mikel Arteta arrived at Arsenal in 2019, Arsenal were emotionally broken as a football club. The squad had talent, but no structure, no authority, no collective mentality. The dressing room had too many disconnected personalities, the standards had dropped, fans had lost belief, and the team had become soft mentally and physically. Even the atmosphere around the club felt empty.
Arteta did not just coach Arsenal. He rebuilt the entire environment.
One of Arteta’s first acts as Arsenal head coach, following his appointment in December 2019, was to call his players into a meeting and flip the furniture upside down. His message to the room was that the overturned chairs represented them on the pitch: a complete mess.
At the time, the same was true off the pitch. The squad inherited by Arteta lacked many of the basic qualities that a successful team requires. It was full of cliques, unprofessional stars and too many players who simply did not like each other. There were stories of senior squad members barely being able to stand each other. Arsenal had talent, but they did not have unity, trust or collective direction.
The first thing Arteta changed was standards.
People forget how ruthless he had to be early on. Big names left because they did not fit the culture he wanted. It did not matter how talented they were. He chose suffering in the short term for stability in the long term. That is one of the hardest things to do at a massive football club because supporters always want immediate success.
Instead, Arteta stripped everything back and rebuilt from zero.
That is why those early years were ugly sometimes. Arsenal finished 8th twice because he was basically tearing the squad apart while trying to build a new football identity at the same time. He inherited a team built for different managers, different ideas and different eras. Some players could not press, some could not play positional football, some could not handle responsibility in possession. So before Arsenal could become beautiful, they first had to become stable.
People laughed at the defensive football in the beginning, but it was necessary. He needed to stop Arsenal from being chaotic every week. The FA Cup win in 2020 mattered because it gave players belief that his methods could actually work.
But of all Arteta’s qualities as a manager, it is his ability to capture a footballer’s mind and soul that is perhaps the most important.
When Arteta first spoke to Riccardo Calafiori, for example, he came into the meeting with pictures of the Italian’s family and asked him to explain what they meant to him. It won Calafiori over, amid strong interest from other big European sides.
Declan Rice too, was convinced from the first conversation. Martin Ødegaard once said: “Honestly, I challenge anyone to come away from a meeting with Arteta and not believe everything he tells you.”
That ability to emotionally connect with players changed everything at Arsenal.
Arteta’s passion, conviction and ability to explain his vision has underpinned every aspect of Arsenal’s rise. He convinced the players to follow him, the club’s owners to back him and the supporters to believe in him on this long, turbulent journey to the top.
Then came recruitment. This is where Arsenal became elite again.
Every signing had a profile. Arsenal stopped signing random names. They started signing personalities.
Ødegaard became the emotional conductor of the team. Quiet leader, obsessive worker, technically secure, tactically intelligent. Arteta saw somebody that could represent how he wanted Arsenal to play.
Rice was not signed just because he was a good midfielder. He was signed because he is a mentality monster. Leadership, physicality, discipline, emotional control, consistency. Arsenal needed players that could carry pressure.
Ben White was mocked because of the transfer fee, but Arteta saw a defender comfortable in buildup, aggressive in duels and mentally fearless.
William Saliba and Gabriel Magalhães became the foundation of a monster defence because Arteta wanted defenders that could dominate physically while defending huge spaces.
Kai Havertz is another example. Many people did not understand the signing initially, but Arteta saw intelligence, tactical flexibility, pressing ability and emotional resilience.
Then there is Bukayo Saka.
Saka is probably the biggest representation of Arteta’s Arsenal. Academy player. Humble. Hardworking. Selfless. Elite quality but team-first mentality. Arteta built around him carefully, protected him through difficult periods and turned him into one of the leaders of the project.
But what truly separates this Arsenal side is the collective spirit Arteta created.
Arsenal have recruited the right characters, set higher standards and forged a sense of genuine belief in their project. The result is a genuinely tight-knit group of players.
There is, for example, a group of devout Christians who pray together before matches. Ødegaard and Havertz are such close friends that Havertz was a groomsman at Ødegaard’s wedding. Ødegaard and Havertz are also part of a four-man group, along with White and Leandro Trossard, who play fiercely competitive matches of Parchís on away trips.
When Arsenal were looking at signing Noni Madueke, Saka gave a glowing reference because the two wingers have known each other since childhood and their fathers are friends.
Piero Hincapié instantly connected with the other South Americans in the squad because of his energy and personality. Mikel Merino and Eberechi Eze can often be found having deep conversations about life in the sauna at the training ground.
These details matter.
This is not just a group of talented footballers. It is a connected dressing room filled with relationships, trust and emotional chemistry. You can see it every week in the way they celebrate blocks, tackles, recoveries and goals together.
Arteta has installed a sign at the training ground which reads “WE > ME”, to make the point that the collective must always come above the individual.
Over the years, he has used all sorts of methods to build this togetherness. In one season, he showed the squad a picture of a rowing boat and challenged them to call out anybody pulling in the wrong direction. He even invited pilots from the Royal Air Force into the club to speak about communication and collective responsibility.
Some people mocked these methods from the outside, but inside Arsenal they became part of the culture shift.
And maybe that is the most impressive thing about Arteta’s rebuild: Arsenal stopped behaving like a collection of players and started behaving like an elite team again.
Old Arsenal sides used to collapse emotionally under pressure. One setback and heads would drop. This team kept returning stronger after painful moments. Losing title races. Injuries. Criticism. Near misses. Every year they came back more mature, more controlled and more resilient.
2022/23 taught them belief.
2023/24 taught them control.
2024/25 taught them endurance.
2025/26 completed the story.
Arteta also rebuilt the connection between the supporters and the club. Fans can forgive mistakes when they see commitment, hunger and emotional investment. This Arsenal side genuinely feels like it belongs to the supporters again.
And that is why this title means so much.
Because people are not just celebrating one trophy. They are celebrating six years of pain, patience, rebuilding and growth. They watched a young manager walk into a broken football club, remove the toxicity, raise the standards, build relationships, convince elite players to believe in his vision and slowly turn Arsenal back into champions.
Arteta did not inherit the best team in England.
He built one.
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What a loss for us on this side of eternity!
We were shocked and saddened by the passing of Pastor Taiwo Odukoya. However, we look from God’s perspective and choose to see Christ leading the reception party for a General of the Faith. He was an amazing leader who inspired many into greatness. He faced adversity with unusual grace and was one of the kindest humans. His walk with God and love for others continue to inspire us greatly.
We pray for God’s deep comfort and strength for the Odukoya family, the leadership of The Fountain of Life Church, all members of the church, and all of us.
Congratulations saints, you made it to the middle of the year; Glory be to Jesus. God will set you on high and will disappoint the devices of the evil doers against you in Jesus name.
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