Hi All,
Have Olivia Dean tickets available for tomorrow please message us if you’re after any
Floor currently available others can be sourced in
#oliviadean#O2#London
Hi All,
Hope you’re enjoying the weather
We have a few Tyson v Makhmudov tickets left please DM us if you’re interested
#tysonfury#fury#makhmudov#London#O2
Arsenal are not walking into Wembley chasing a moment, they are walking in trying to confirm one.
For the last two seasons, the conversation around this team has followed them everywhere.
Talented, but not quite there.
Close, but not enough.
Good enough to compete, but not yet built to win when it matters most.
That narrative has been repeated so often it started to feel like fact.
But this season has looked different.
Top of the table.
Control in games that used to slip away.
A side that no longer looks like it is reacting, but dictating.
And now the timing matters.
Odegaard is back.
Saka is sharper than ever.
The spine of the team is no longer learning on the job, it is operating with intention.
That is what changes finals.
Because Wembley is not about potential.
It is about clarity.
The last time Arsenal lifted a major trophy was August 2020. An FA Cup final, behind closed doors. No fans. No noise. No release.
Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang, a cast off not long after, scored twice that day against Chelsea.
Arsenal did not dominate. They endured.
They sat deep, absorbed pressure and waited for moments to strike.
It was a different team.
A younger Arteta. A side still being shaped.
A win built more on resilience than control.
That was survival.
This is something else.
Because now the expectation is not to stay in the game, it is to take it over.
Then, Arsenal arrived at Wembley as underdogs.
Now, they arrive as a side that has spent the season setting the pace. Then, the moment felt like a breakthrough. Now, it feels like a confirmation.
Six years on, the distance between those two teams is not just time.
It is identity.
And that is what will be tested.
Not whether Arsenal can rise to the occasion.
But whether they have already become the team they have been building towards.
We are Ticket Link.
We connect people to the moments that matter, before they’re gone.
Your link to sold out events.
Repost and follow for more.
Manchester City are not walking into Wembley chasing validation. They are walking in to remind everyone what happens when they get there.
This is a team that does not treat finals as moments. They treat them as outcomes.
Four League Cup finals under Guardiola.
Four wins.
That is not form.
That is pattern.
And patterns matter at this stage.
Because while the narrative around City often focuses on control, possession, systems, the truth is simpler than that when it comes to days like this.
They know how to finish. That is what separates them.
Arsenal arrive with momentum, belief, a season that feels like it has been building towards this.
City arrive with something else.
Experience of this exact moment.
Understanding of what shifts a final.
And the calm that comes from having done it before, repeatedly.
And then there is Guardiola.
A manager who has spent years refining control to the smallest detail.
Not just how his team plays, but how they manage moments. Tempo. Space. Pressure.
Finals rarely give you everything you want.
They test what you fall back on when things break.
City do not break often.
And when they do, they recover quickly.
Because they have seen it all before.
That is the difference.
One team is stepping into what could be a defining moment.
The other has made a habit of defining them.
Wembley does not reward potential.
It recognises certainty.
And City arrive with it.
We are Ticket Link.
We connect people to the moments that matter, before they’re gone.
Your link to sold out events.
Repost and follow for more.
Gunna is not just touring right now.
He is rebuilding in public.
The Wun World Tour looks like a normal run on the surface.
Dates. Venues. Performances.
But this version of Gunna is not the same one people were watching a few years ago.
Before everything stopped, his rise was built on sound and aesthetic.
Drip Season. Wunna. Melodies, fashion, momentum.
A style that made him one of the most recognisable voices out of Atlanta at the time.
Then came the pause.
And when he came back, the conversation around him had changed.
So did he.
The music was still there.
But the focus shifted.
Discipline. Routine. Control over image.
A version of himself that looked more intentional than before.
That is where Wunna Run comes in.
Because this is not a random add-on to a tour.
It is a reflection of that shift.
It started in New York.
Prospect Park. A simple 5K. No barriers to entry. Just movement.
Now it moves with him.
City to city.
Johannesburg. London.
Morning runs before night shows.
That is not how tours usually work.
Most artists build anticipation for the performance.
He is building connection before it even begins.
And that changes the audience.
Fans are not just turning up to watch anymore.
They are showing up earlier. Taking part. Becoming part of the same routine he is pushing.
That kind of shift does not just reshape an image.
It reshapes who stays with you.
Because now it is not just about the music.
It is about what sits around it.
London is the only European stop where that plays out.
One run. One show. One moment where both sides of that transition meet in the same city.
Before, it was about presence.
Now, it feels like purpose.
Some artists come back and try to pick up where they left off.
Others return differently.
This looks like the second.
We are Ticket Link.
We connect people to the moments that matter, before they’re gone.
Your link to sold out events.
Repost and follow for more.
Roc Nation did not just announce two shows at Yankee Stadium. They announced a timeline.
July 10th and 11th are not random dates. They sit exactly thirty years after Reasonable Doubt and twenty five after The Blueprint. Two albums that did not just define Jay-Z’s career, but reshaped the sound and direction of hip-hop in completely different ways.
Reasonable Doubt was the beginning. Cold, calculated, built on pressure and paranoia. There is no celebration in it. Just the reality of a life where every move has consequences. It wasn’t even fully appreciated when it dropped. That came later. Over time, it became something else entirely.
The Blueprint was the shift. Warmer, sharper, more certain. Kanye West’s soul samples, Just Blaze’s production, a sound that didn’t just dominate its moment but redirected where hip-hop would go next. It arrived on September 11th, 2001, and still managed to cut through everything.
That contrast is the story.
One album questions everything, the other sounds like it has already figured it out. And now both are being put on stage. Back to back. In New York. That is why this feels bigger than a concert, it is not just about performing songs. It is about stepping into two moments that shaped everything that came after.
And the setting matters.
Yankee Stadium is not a casual choice. It is scale. It is legacy. It is where moments are meant to feel permanent. Jay-Z has spent years away from stages, building quietly, moving differently. So when he comes back like this, it is rarely just for nostalgia.
It is usually for something intentional.
Some nights are concerts. Some nights are moments people realise they should have been at after they are already gone. We are Ticket Link.
We connect people to the moments that matter, before they’re gone. Your link to sold out events.
Repost and follow for more 🎫🔗