It’s so weird to think that until yesterday, we hadn’t heard a peep from Mikel Arteta. The man who has spent the most time of anybody associated with the ‘process’ under the greatest scrutiny hadn’t been seen or heard of (that I can see) until yesterday’s press conference and media day ahead of the Champions League final next week. Which, in itself, is a little weird, because today he’ll be doing a whole new set of media duties related to the Palace game. Unless they did a ‘two-for-one’ yesterday and did both? I think there are sponsorship requirements that need to be fulfilled in the media process, so I think he will be doing a separate Palace one too. Again, bit weird, but there you go.

<<< Oh, wait, no, I was wrong. He did both yesterday. I can’t be arsed to delete all of the above text, so I’ll just leave it in there. >>>

And here we go. I am still on Cloud Nine, but today I’m thinking about Super Mik Arteta. He knew exactly what we needed. And he delivered it to us. He has overseen something special, and he and his players have been able to deliver happiness to millions of fans around the world. I watched a video of him talking about his wife with a Sky Sports reporter in one of their video rooms, and it was genuinely lovely to see him give her praise, to talk about how much she means. You could see he was welling up when he was speaking about the emotions of the moment.

There are idiot rival fans and pundits that say idiotic things about Arteta like “I hate him. he’s so annoying, waving his arms up and down and running around on the touchline like a maniac”, which is exactly what Klopp used to do – with an added feature of snarling at third officials with those massive chompers of his. They completely ignore how he talks about his players, they don’t watch the interviews like that, they ignore his innovative ideas and how he’s constantly having to evolve and change Arsenal’s game to keep us a neck ahead. They focus on one attribute, and they ignore everything else.

But if they actually took the time to see what this man has achieved, how he has turned us from a divided fanbase into one that mobilised outside the armoury in an estimated 100,000 army in a matter of a couple of hours – unprompted – then, even deep down, I guarantee they would appreciate and give respect for what he has achieved. The “He ain’t won nuffing tho” crowd are finished. Rising from their ashes should be a begrudging collective of people who frustratingly acknowledge his status as an elite manager.

Arteta recalling the moment he found out was lovely. With his family, in the garden, the kids are crying, all hugging. Beautiful stuff. And then when he said he got a video from Martin Odegaard saying “Boss – come out” – that was lovely too. There’s plenty of talk about Arteta and his ‘antics’, but he is a man who recognised that in that moment it was better for the players to have the unbridled joy of being champions themselves, without their manager. He is ‘the boss’ after all.

He did deliver some team news and the best of all was that Mikel Merino is back in full training. That’s great. I suspect he might get a token 10 or 15 minutes at the weekend, then it means he has a chance to be available for the matchday squad in the Champions League in a week. Timber, too is getting there, but he wasn’t pictured in training yesterday, with Mikel admitting it would be a ‘few days’ before he is ready. I wonder if they will try to get him in there for Sunday? There is another training session today, which won’t be filmed, but if he can be with the group then that would be great. It does feel like he’s close. He was out on the pre-match walkabout pre-Burnley, so I just wonder if they’ll think about getting him in on the bench for Sunday, to give him hopes of making the squad for the final.

The rest of the stuff he said was about the journey, which he admitted was a tough start for us, and it’s funny because you don’t realise all of those highs and lows whilst you’re still basking. But there have been so many. I remember after we got over that initial tough period of games intact and still up there, thinking “that’s a great foundation to build on”, and, ultimately, it was. We have pretty much been top of the league for the whole season. We took it off Liverpool in match week seven and never looked back. We had wobbles, particularly in 2026, but the team course-corrected on several occasions and were able to hold off City’s title charge attempt. It takes some mental toll to be leading the whole time, especially after what happened in 2022/23, as well as us being chased down in 2023/24 like we were. But this time, this group of players and the manager held their nerve, and we are all in ecstasy because of it.

He also talked about a story in which, at the start of the season, they gathered around a tree he asked to be planted when he arrived, to symbolise the growth journey they had to go on. I love things like this. The little innovations that Arteta tries. I’ve seen people suggest it is a little David Brenty, but I think that belies the reality of what Arteta needs to do to motivate a team of professional athletes. These are young men in their 20s/30s. If you deliver the same message in the same way every week, they will become blinded to it. Mikel Arteta is a tactical innovator, but he’s also a ‘details’ guy. Yes, that includes things like set-pieces, throw-ins, stuff that happens on the pitch, etc. But he also understands the psychology of the modern-day footballers. These guys have to be motivated and stimulated mentally, as well as on the training ground, so he is constantly finding new approaches, new ways to challenge their minds, and it has manifested itself with the Premier League title this week – a reward for statistically being the best team in the Premier League on points for the last three seasons anyway.

I salute you Mikel. Thank you for everything.