After 22 Years, Arsenal Finally Let Us Breathe Again

I started writing about Arsenal again at the beginning of this season. I had been away from it for two years, and I came back for one simple reason. I felt this year could be special.
Arsenal had been close enough in recent years to make the next step feel real. After the near misses, after the injuries, after all the talk about what this team could become, I thought this might be the year when it all came together.
Then life got in the way. I had some health issues. I lost my rhythm. After the League Cup final, I stopped writing. It was never a grand decision. I kept thinking I would get back to it, then another week passed, then another.
Now Arsenal are Premier League champions, and it has put the whole thing back in front of me. It reminded me why I love writing about this club in the first place.
The Wait I Never Saw Coming
I think back to 2004 a lot.
Arsenal won the league without losing a match. The Invincibles felt historic in the moment, but I do not think any of us really understood what would come next. There was no part of me that thought we were about to go 22 years without winning another league title.
How could you think that?
This was Arsenal. This was Wenger’s Arsenal. This was a club that had given us style, edge, personality, and some of the best football I had ever seen. A long wait felt possible. Football is hard. Cycles change. Teams fade and rebuild.
Twenty-two years did not feel possible.
And yet that is what happened.
The years after 2004 became this long, strange mix of hope, frustration, and self-protection. You talked yourself into belief, then watched it get taken away. You laughed at the jokes, took the digs, and pretended some of it did not bother you as much as it did.
There is a Byron line I have always liked: “And if I laugh at any mortal thing, ‘Tis that I may not weep.”
That feels close to the Arsenal experience across much of the last two decades. At some point, you laughed so you did not have to admit how much it hurt.
The Pain Behind the Celebration
The reaction to this title was never only about this title.
It was about Paris in 2006. It was about Birmingham in 2008 and the sick feeling after Eduardo’s injury. It was about the League Cup final against Birmingham, when a trophy seemed there for us and then disappeared in the worst way.
It was about 2015, Danny Welbeck’s header against Leicester, and that brief, wild belief that the corner had finally been turned. Then came the stumble that killed the dream.
It was about the late Wenger years, when the football became harder to recognize and the club felt stuck between memory and reality. It was about watching our best players leave for places that seemed to match their ambition better than we did.
It was about Baku. It was about missing the Champions League. It was about the years when Arsenal became too easy to mock and too hard to defend.
And it was about the recent pain too.
I never thought 2022-23 was the year. I thought we arrived early. That team gave us hope before it gave us heartbreak. In 2023-24, I thought maybe it could happen, but City still felt like a machine. Last season, with all the injuries and no real striker for key stretches, finishing second and reaching a Champions League semi-final said a lot about Mikel Arteta.
I know some people will never give him credit easily. I get that every manager has flaws. But last season made me respect him more. Arsenal had every reason to fall apart. They did not.
That mattered.
This Season Felt Different, Until It Started to Feel Heavy
The first half of this season felt strong. By November and December, I started to think it out loud, at least to myself.
This could be the year.
Then the weight started to show. Arsenal became more pragmatic. The risk came down. The football still had control, but you could feel the pressure in it. Maybe that is what happens when a team moves from chasing to carrying expectation.
The League Cup final loss to City worried me. Wolves scared the life out of me. Every narrow game felt like one more test of nerve.
And then Arsenal kept going.
That is the part I keep coming back to. People can debate style. They can debate the moment the title was confirmed. They can debate whether it felt clean, dramatic, lucky, or strange.
I do not care.
Arsenal still had to beat Burnley. Arsenal still had to beat West Ham. Arsenal still had to handle the pressure when everyone was waiting for the old story to return.
City had their chance. Arsenal had theirs.
Arsenal did the job.
For years, people said this club did not have it in them. They said Arsenal were soft. They said Arsenal played nice football, but could not finish the task. They said we would blink.
Well, tell me now who blinked.
What It Means to See That Trophy Again
The pictures are what got me.
The captain lifting the trophy. The players with their families. Arteta finally standing there with the thing this whole project had been building toward. The supporters outside the stadium, in the streets, at the final match, everywhere.
I have spoken to Arsenal supporters who cried. I understand every tear.
Those tears were not only for this group of players, though they deserve every bit of love they are getting. They were not only for Arteta, though I am thrilled for him. They were not only for the football.
They were for the wait.
They were for every season that ended with anger, excuses, or silence. They were for every time we had to watch someone else lift what used to feel connected to Arsenal. They were for every argument about ambition, ownership, recruitment, mentality, and identity.
They were for what this club used to be, what it became, and what it has fought to become again.
I met Arsenal in the 80s, when I was in the U.S. Navy. I got to see them play. I got to go often for a time. Then life changed. Marriage, family, money, all the normal things that make football trips harder to justify.
But Arsenal stayed with me.
That is why this means so much. The club became part of my life from a distance and up close. It became part of how I experienced football, frustration, joy, and community.
So seeing Arsenal win the league again after all this time is hard to explain in a neat way. It is relief. It is pride. It is disbelief. It is the feeling of finally exhaling after holding something in for years.
I do not know what comes next. Defending a title is hard. Liverpool showed that this season after their own title win last year. City will not disappear. Nobody hands you anything in this league.
But that can wait.
This piece is not about the next trophy. It is not about squad planning, transfer targets, tactical tweaks, or whether Arsenal can repeat it.
This is about this moment.
Arsenal are champions again. After 22 years, that sentence still feels strange to type.
Maybe that is why I had to write it.
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