Folks, if you left early to beat the traffic, you missed something special at the Emirates Stadium.
Manchester United walked into Arsenal's house and stole a 3-2 victory in the dying minutes, with Matheus Cunha smashing home the winner in the 89th minute. That's what sports is all about, folks.
The drama started early. Jurrien Timber put the Gunners ahead in the 30th minute, and North London was buzzing. But Bryan Mbeumo answered back seven minutes later to level it at 1-1. Then Patrick Dorgu gave United the lead early in the second half.
When Mikel Merino equalized in the 70th minute, you could feel the momentum shifting. Emirates Stadium was rocking. Arsenal looked like they were about to complete the comeback.
Then Cunha happened.
One minute left in regulation. United on the counter. And the Brazilian made no mistake, silencing 60,000 fans with one strike.
"These are the moments you dream about as a kid," one United player said after the match, according to the post-match thread.
This was Ruben Amorim's United showing character, showing fight, showing they're not done yet. Arsenal controlled possession, had the home crowd behind them, but sometimes in sports, it's not about controlling the game - it's about taking your chances when they come.
David Raya made several key saves to keep Arsenal in it, but he couldn't stop the late dagger. On the other end, United keeper Maxime Lammens stood tall when needed.
For Arsenal, this is a massive blow in the title race. Dropping three points at home to a resurgent United side? That's going to sting. They dominated stretches of this game but couldn't close it out.
For United? This is the kind of win that can change a season. Road victories at top-six rivals don't come easy. Bruno Fernandes orchestrated from midfield, Amad Diallo ran the channels, and the defense - led by Lisandro Martinez - held firm when it mattered most.
Sometimes you control the game. Sometimes the game controls you. Tonight at the Emirates, United proved that finishing matters more than possession. Three goals from five quality chances. Clinical. Ruthless. Championship mentality.
That's what sports is all about, folks.
