They've done it. Arsenal are Premier League champions. Let that sink in for a minute.
After years of heartbreak, after coming agonizingly close, after watching Manchester City celebrate while they nursed wounds from near-misses, Mikel Arteta's Gunners have finally, finally broken through.
This isn't just about ending a title drought. This is about validation. About proving that those painful runner-up finishes weren't failures - they were preparation. They were building something real in North London, and now we're seeing the payoff.
Here's what makes this even more special: Arsenal didn't just win the Premier League. They joined an elite group. All four teams from the 2024/25 Champions League semifinals - Arsenal, Real Madrid, Barcelona, and Liverpool - went on to win their domestic leagues the following season. That's not a coincidence. That's dominance. That's proof that Arteta built a team that belongs in the conversation with Europe's elite.
Remember when people questioned whether Arteta was the right man for the job? Remember the doubters who said Arsenal were pretenders? I do. And I remember saying on the radio that you can't judge this squad until they get over the hump.
Well, they got over it. They didn't just climb it - they bulldozed straight through.
Bukayo Saka, Martin Ødegaard, William Saliba - these players grew up before our eyes, transformed from promising talents into champions. The Emirates is going to be absolutely electric when they lift that trophy.
This is redemption. This is the coronation North London has been waiting decades for. And it tastes so much sweeter because of how hard they had to work for it.
That's what sports is all about, folks.
