After more than two decades of heartbreak, near misses and painful collapses, Arsenal are champions of England once again.
North London exploded into celebration after Manchester City dropped crucial points against AFC Bournemouth, officially handing Arsenal the 2025/26 Premier League title.

For Arsenal fans, this was more than just a trophy.
It was the ending of a 22-year emotional journey filled with frustration, banter, rebuilds and endless questions about whether the club would ever return to the top of English football again.
The Night Arsenal Fans Had Been Waiting For
Inside the Vitality Stadium, Manchester City knew only a win could keep the title race alive.
But Bournemouth had other plans.
The Cherries held Guardiola’s side to a costly draw, a result that instantly crowned Arsenal champions before the final day of the season.
The moment the final whistle blew, celebrations erupted across North London, with fans flooding social media and streets around the Emirates Stadium in scenes many younger supporters had never experienced before.
Arteta Completes Arsenal’s Resurrection
When Mikel Arteta first took charge of Arsenal, many doubted whether the former captain could rebuild a broken team drowning in inconsistency.
There were difficult seasons, criticism and moments when the project looked close to collapse.
But this title triumph now feels like the completion of one of football’s most remarkable rebuild stories.
Arteta transformed Arsenal from a struggling side fighting for relevance into the kings of English football.
And for many fans, that makes this title even sweeter.
Havertz Delivers the Defining Moment
Arsenal had already moved within touching distance of the trophy after their tense 1-0 victory over Burnley F.C. on Monday night.
The breakthrough came from Kai Havertz, who powered home the winning goal from a dangerous corner delivered by Bukayo Saka.
It was a gritty performance rather than a glamorous one — the kind of victory champions are often forced to grind out.
That result pushed Arsenal five points clear and piled enormous pressure on Manchester City heading into their clash with Bournemouth.
The End of City’s Dominance?
For years, Manchester City looked almost unstoppable under Pep Guardiola.
Season after season, rivals collapsed while City marched relentlessly toward titles.
But this season felt different.
Arsenal showed resilience, hunger and consistency at the exact moments previous teams would have crumbled.
The title race exposed signs that City’s grip on English football may finally be weakening.
And across the Premier League, rival fans will now believe Guardiola’s empire can be challenged again.
Bournemouth’s Historic Season Adds to Arsenal’s Joy
While Arsenal celebrated, Bournemouth also made history.
The Cherries stretched their unbeaten run to 17 league matches — an incredible achievement that secured European football for the first time ever in the club’s history.
What was expected to be a routine City victory instead became one of the defining nights of the Premier League season.
The Ghost of the Invincibles Finally Rested
Arsenal’s last league title came back in the legendary 2003/04 campaign under Arsène Wenger, when the famous Invincibles went the entire season unbeaten.
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Since then, Arsenal fans have watched rivals lift trophies while enduring years of disappointment and ridicule.
But now, the wait is over.
A new generation of Arsenal supporters finally has its own title-winning story to celebrate.
And after 22 painful years, the red half of North London can once again call itself the home of champions.
