Twenty-two years in the making - how Arsenal celebrated title win
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Twenty-two years in the making - how Arsenal celebrated title win
Arsenal supporters gathered outside Emirates Stadium and in nearby pubs as Manchester City played Bournemouth, with City needing a win to keep the title race alive. City drew, confirming Arsenal as champions for the first time in 22 years. Cheers erupted across north London when the final whistle sounded, and celebrations also took place at Arsenal’s training ground where the squad gathered. Players and staff danced, hugged, and chanted “Campeones, Campeones, Ole Ole Ole!” Arsenal captain Declan Rice had previously insisted “it’s not done,” but posted “It’s done” after the title was secured. The win came in Mikel Arteta’s seventh year, reinforcing the value of giving a manager time to build a team.
"Supporters had gathered outside Emirates Stadium and nearby pubs while rivals Manchester City played Bournemouth, needing a win to keep the title race alive. In the end, Pep Guardiola's side could only draw - confirming Arsenal as champions for the first time in 22 years. As the full-time whistle went on the south coast, there was an explosion of cheer in pubs across north London as Arsenal fans celebrated a moment they felt, after recent title near misses, might never come."
"That is where the Arsenal squad had gathered for the evening and, much as in the pubs, the final whistle was greeted by huge celebrations. layers and staff danced and hugged while chanting: "Campeones, Campeones, Ole Ole Ole!" Last month, Arsenal captain Declan Rice was seen insisting "it's not done" after the Gunners lost to Manchester City. But on Tuesday, with the title race decided, he posted a picture on social media of players celebrating, captioned: "It's done.""
"The title win came in Mikel Arteta's seventh year in charge, and underlined just what can be achieved if a manager is given time. "Mikel Arteta's been there a long period of time. The best gift you can give a good manager is time," former Premier League goalkeeper Paul Robinson told BBC Radio 5 Live. "Yes you can give them hundreds of millions of pounds but you have to mould that money into a team, into a dressing room, a winning side. "You give a good manager time? There's the proof.""
Read at www.bbc.com
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