If Arsenal do what, with each passing week, seems increasingly likely then this moment will resound through the years. The best title-winning campaigns all contain those flashes in time that set fate’s course: as Arsenal’s substitutes and coaching staff piled on to the pitch in delirium, the Emirates stands a blur of limbs and faces to an extent rarely seen, it was hard not to feel that Reiss Nelson had conjured one.

Arsenal could have felt faintly good about clawing parity from two goals down against a Bournemouth side that, against all odds, had led for most of the game. But in reality a draw was never going to satisfy: it would have tilted the balance and momentum back to Manchester City, cutting their lead to three points. When Martin Ødegaard stepped up to take their 17th corner, with the seventh minute of added time almost up, the truth was they needed something.

Continue reading…

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You May Also Like

‘I spent six years working to get to this place’: Everything I know About Love actor Marli Siu

As a struggling actor, she used to commute from Scotland to London…

UK housing is ‘worst value for money’ of any advanced economy, says thinktank

British properties are ‘expensive, cramped and ageing’ compared with other similar economies,…

‘A horrible way to die’: how extreme heat is killing Italian workers

Factory workers and labourers call for furlough as heat becomes too intense…