After a tense 2-1 defeat to Manchester City at the Etihad Stadium on Sunday, Arsenal’s 22-year wait for a first Premier League title has grown even more agonizing, as Pep Guardiola’s side took a decisive stranglehold on the 2025/26 season’s championship race. Mikel Arteta’s Gunners still cling to the top spot of the table for the moment, but their place at the summit is set to be taken as early as this Wednesday, when City travel to face relegation-bound Burnley with a game in hand on their title rivals.
What has made this late-season slump so familiar to Arsenal’s long-suffering fanbase is the pattern that has repeated itself for four straight seasons. Before a League Cup defeat to City last month, Arteta’s side had dropped just three matches across 49 games in all competitions this term. But in the six outings that have followed, Arsenal have only managed a single win, including four straight losses across domestic competitions – a run that leaves them facing the prospect of another empty trophy season. This collapse mirrors the events of the 2022/23 and 2023/24 campaigns, where Guardiola’s relentless City side hunted down and overtook Arsenal in the final stretch, with the Gunners finishing outside the top spot once again last season behind a resurgent Liverpool side.
A stark statistical contrast highlights the historic trend of late-season struggle for Arsenal and surge for City: across Guardiola’s 10-year tenure in Manchester, the City boss has claimed 31 wins from 39 Premier League games played in April, as he chases a seventh league title. By comparison, Arteta has only notched 11 April league victories from 27 matches across his six-and-a-half year spell in charge of the Gunners.
Arteta argued after the match that fine margins and bad luck had cost his side, and the run of play backed up that claim. In contrast to their nervy home defeat to Bournemouth the previous weekend, Arsenal started strongly, fought back quickly after Rayan Cherki gave City an early opening goal. Kai Havertz charged down an attempted clearance from City keeper Gianluigi Donnarumma to equalize just minutes after falling behind, and the Gunners created a string of good chances to take all three points. A strike from Eberechi Eze bounced off the post and rolled along the goalline rather than crossing, while Gabriel Magalhaes saw a deflected late header also hit the woodwork in a frantic closing 10 minutes.
But ultimately, Arsenal’s repeated failure to convert clear chances – a long-unresolved flaw in the side – proved their downfall. Havertz, who was handed a full 90 minutes by Arteta despite 18 months of injury struggles, missed two gilt-edged second-half chances: he failed to beat Donnarumma in a one-on-one situation, then nodded over the bar from an unmarked position deep into stoppage time, leaving Arteta collapsed to his knees in despair on the technical area. The German forward’s inclusion ahead of summer signing Viktor Gyokeres raised further questions; the Sweden international, signed last summer to solve Arsenal’s long-running search for a prolific starting striker, is the club’s top scorer this season with 18 goals across all competitions, but he was left on the bench until the final minutes, and has repeatedly struggled to deliver against top opposition.
For City, the difference came down to the clinical finishing that Arsenal lacked, with world-class striker Erling Haaland delivering the decisive moment. Haaland was tightly marked for most of the match in a physical battle with Gabriel, but the Norwegian got ahead of his marker to slot home the 72nd-minute winner – his 47th goal for club and country across the 2025/26 season.
Speaking to Sky Sports after the match, former Arsenal captain Patrick Vieira said the gap in quality between the two sides’ top talent decided the match. “You can see the difference today on the field and those top players made a difference today,” Vieira said. The ex-Gunner also questioned Arteta’s side’s mental fortitude following the defeat, adding: “They will feel the pressure more now. I always question the mental strength of the team and I will question it more now regarding the result today.”
Arteta acknowledged after the game that City were simply more clinical in front of goal, admitting: “We proved that we are there, but the reality is that in the two boxes there was a difference. That’s what we think is the difference between the two sides, the finishing in the boxes. There is an element of luck, there is an element of timing, of execution. There are a lot of things that have to be your way. At the end, winning or not winning is going to come down to this moment. There are certain individual moments that you need in order to achieve what we want.”
