Arsenal are ‘ugly, cynical, filthy cheats’ but also champions
Arsenal pretty much have the Premier League title in the bag; does it matter that they have done it with such few thrills?
We also have plenty on Liverpool and Man Utd. Mail us at theeditor@football365.com
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Well done Arsenal
Congratulations to Arsenal FC on winning the Barclays English Premiership League (Bestest League in the World) on Tuesday, May 19 2026, at 10:00pm British Standard TimeâĤ
Muthama Gitonga, Nyeri (Mount Kenya)
READ: Arsenal set for six-year Premier League dominance as VAR and Guardiola bottle it
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This Arsenal team is rancid
This Arsenal team are truly rancid. Ugly, cynical, filthy cheats. Eagle-eyed regular mailbox readers may have gathered Iâm not hugely keen on Liverpool, but I can recall many, many games where Iâve watched them play entertaining AND tournament/league winning football whilst cursing under my breath. Canât remember a single Arsenal game this season where I can say the same for this hugely expensively assembled and talented squad playing Artetaâs abhorrent take on the beautiful game.
The referees in this league have to take a large slice of the blame too though, neatly encapsulated in that Havertz assault. It was a red all day long and twice on a Sunday. Anyway, congrats on your hollow victory Gooners, hopefully next season the gameâs administrators will attempt to steer Premier League football back to something we can all enjoy, even if grudgingly when a team we arenât wild about come out on top.
RHT/TS x
(Hope PSG properly humiliate them in the CL)
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Arsenal got away with one
Oh, Arsenal got lucky there. Havertz could have walked and thereâd have been no complaints from me. Thinking of all the stupid reds we got last season, I cannot recall one being that was the same level of bad as Havertz âtackle,â was (who can forget MLSâs red at Wolves away). It was an âorangeâ card at best.
I donât see City winning tomorrow. Bournemouth are at home, fresh, chasing Europe and are on a 16 match unbeaten run in the PL, so I think itâs nearly done.
I could be wrong though, City could win their next 2 games and we could complete the bottling by drawing to Palace on Sunday.
The pessimist in me is still strong.
Izzy, London
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Writing in just to say he doesnât care about Arsenal criticism
Weâll win the league and all the discourse and opinions and complaints will not matter one bit. I will celebrate our fourth league title joyfully and let others feel aggrieved, it will make no difference to me. COYG!
David
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Responding to Man Utd fans and more
So I see now the mighty Man Utd have finally qualified for the Champions League, having had no European football and getting knocked out early of both domestic cup competitions, the focus turns to their bigger more successful Scouse neighbours.
Firstly Garey Vance claiming Jamie Carragher was jizzing himself at the start of the season when they were winning and now heâs changed his mind. Take a look at his response after the first (Ipswich) and subsequent few games of the season repeatedly telling Slot that his attacking formation was too attacking and was leaving Liverpool too exposed. He saw it and called it early.
Then we have Colin Brown (Everton supporter I assume, or a very lost Utd fan trying to find the Manchester Evening news). Of course you are going to get stupid comments in the comments section of a local newspaper online. It seems Alonso wants to be a manager not a coach. He turned Liverpool down and waited a year to take the Real Madrid job and plays 3-4-3 so is not being considered even though itâs the emotional choice a lot of fans would have loved to see. I donât think lumping all Liverpool fans into the same pot as a few randoms posting on the Echo website is a reasonable conclusion to make. F365 is always a decent read with considered opinions (mostly) so hopefully you can hold a few of us to a higher standard.
Then weâve got Tom, handily saying he has been Utd since 79. So a year after Liverpool had retained the European cup, followed it up with another 2, treble winning League One champions and 4 times Milk Cup (the best cup) winners. So Tom had to endure a good 11 years of Liverpool domination which has been conveniently forgotten in his comment about how Liverpool are the ones âreverting to the meanâ. We werenât too bad between 1968 to 1978 either.
Also Tom calls out Virgil van Dijk âgetting away with murderâ. If he wants to look at the stats he actually ranks as the number 1 defender this season so if thatâs getting away with murder then heâs guilty as charged. Aerial dominance, clearances, passing & distribution, overall rating. Heâs also got 6 goals which is higher than any other defender so its a little early to call time. He has had zero support and still put in decent performances.
Liverpool have had a very difficult season for a number of reasons repeatedly posted on this website, but as current champions, will probably qualify for the champions league whilst Utd are âbackâ under the legend Carrick (who knows the club) and are a huge 9 points ahead of us having finally qualified for the Champions League for the first time in a couple of years and losing to relegation contenders Spurs in the Europa final in between.
Itâs a bit early âgiving it the biggunâ (Thanks Frank Lampard). Utd did well this season. Carrick steadied the ship, put players where they are supposed to be and had the luxury of one game a week. Cunha and Mbeumo are decent signings. Mainoo back in the team and Bruno higher up the pitch made sense. Carrick did well at Middlesbrough before it went wrong in his second season.
Letâs see where both sides are this time next year. Focus on your own team, unless you want to be considered a smaller club more concerned with your neighbours travails than your own success.
Hong Kong Ian (a bit of perspective and research goes a long way) LFC
READ: Liverpool should sack Arne Slot and here are a full 20 reasons why
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Arne Slot? Arne Schwarzenegger, more like
The Arne Slot presser is an incongruent experience. Heâs lived under the cosh most of this season which has led to his saying truly daft things with utter conviction, coming across nearly deluded at timesâyet, YET, he doesnât much fluster does he. Heâs unnervingly steady and bought in. It seems an uncanny superpower of his that, more so than any flailing manager in recent memory, he appears so fully convinced of himself. But make no mistake, flailing he is.
This man has perfected flailing while remaining perfectly still. From where his belief sources Iâve no idea, I keep waiting and waiting for that Total Recall bead of sweat to appear, to give up his ghost, to give me the satisfaction knowing ok, heâs cracking, right there, I see it now. Iâve waited all season for a tell, any tell, but the massive Dutch cranium drones on inscrutable as it is inevitable.
So double down then, Arne. Triple down. Start Mo on Sunday, out of line as he was this weekâĤ then sub him off on 11â² and light up a fat stogie on the final whistle and bring it into the post-match and blow smoke at all them front-row journos. Lean into it and get us all back onside then. Go on, Arne, be the hard man, give us a flex.
Eric, Los Angeles CA
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Where is the Slot sympathy?
At the start of the season we were constantly hearing about how the players were having to cope with the loss of a team mate and friend, after the tragic death of Diogo Jota. Surely Arne Slot had to cope with that too, as well as helping the players through an incredibly difficult time. Having won the league the year before, it seems wrong that Slot is not getting the same understanding from the fans that the players are. It seems a shame that after a poor season his achievements from last year are being so easily dismissed.
Dave AFC
READ: Liverpool should sack Arne Slot and here are a full 20 reasons why
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Set-pieces, Barclays and the human side of football
Another set-piece, another Arsenal goal. Itâs a strange trademark for champions to have, but if thatâs how they end up winning the league, then, in the words of Clipse, so be it.
Looking back on this season, I can honestly say I enjoyed my own little slice of Barclays. So many of the things I love about football suddenly came back into fashion again â 4-4-2, flair-filled central attacking midfielders, and the return of deadly set-pieces. Long may it continue.
Going back to our game this weekend, itâs funny how the conversation focused on one particular incident rather than just appreciating how good Morgan Gibbs-Whiteâs finish actually was. But at the end of the day, itâs still a human sport played by humans â mistakes, emotion, unpredictability and all.
Anyway, my only fear heading into next season is whether we finally get the transfer window right and properly fix the heart of our midfield. That all depends on how much trust you place in the minds running the club. Time will tell.
Gaptoothfreak, Manchester United F.C. supporter, New York City
(And La Liga is going to be absolutely off the chain next season.)
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Pep quietly exiting the Citanic before it sinks
Unlike Captain E.J. Smith, Pep Guardiola may have decided heâs not going down with dignity aboard HMS C115Y.
For years football fans were told the game belonged to the people. Communities. Rivalries. History. But modern elite football increasingly looks less like sport and more like geopolitics in shin pads.
Thatâs why the Manchester City case feels bigger than 115 charges. City are owned by Abu Dhabi interests tied to one of Britainâs most important strategic allies in the Gulf. The UK government has historically shown willingness to protect valuable state relationships â from halting the Saudi-related Al-Yamamah investigation over ânational securityâ concerns, to carefully managing criticism of key Gulf allies despite mounting controversies elsewhere.
So when reports emerge that government figures wanted to remain abreast of developments in footballâs biggest financial case, people naturally start asking questions.
Maybe thereâs no interference whatsoever. OOOOH LOOK A FLOCK OF PIGS
But perception matters.
And right now millions of supporters increasingly believe football governance bends differently when sovereign wealth, diplomacy and global investment enter the room.
Meanwhile smaller clubs are punished swiftly while the most politically sensitive case in Premier League history drifts through years of legal complexity, silence and delay.
As for Pep â perhaps heâs simply realised there may never be a better moment to step away. Leave now and his football legacy largely remains intact, untangled from whatever comes next.
Because unless thereâs a miracle ending for City, nobody wants to be standing on deck when HMS C115Y starts taking water below the line.
Alponse J Trump
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Dear FSG
Please just check if Pep fancies the Liverpool gig before you go all in on Slot?
Minty, LFC
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Giving up a Man Utd season ticket after 30 years man and boy
Last week I gave up my United season ticket of 30 years. Iâd been going with my Dad since 96/97 season, heâs now in his 70s and not as mobile as he once was. We sit top of the SAF stand second tier and itâs a become a bit of a struggle these days. He/we had wanted to hand it down to my son. The club wouldnât allow it.
So, we reviewed our options, and in doing so, have decided against it. This was not an easy decision. We were âPlatinumâ season ticket holders.
But, scratching down we found real issues that were unresolved.
30 years ago the atmosphere was different. Forget the results, I mean the community. You knew everyone that came, we became lifelong friends with the lad and dad who sat in front of us. The brothers to our left would always argue but would deeply embrace for each goal. There was smoking, there was a loud singer called Pasty (for some reason), who would get the crowd going. All the seats were the same marginally cramped plastic seats. Weâd then rush off after the game to catch Sports Report on 5 live. De du de duâĤ.
About 15 years ago, all that changed. Although people have drifted over the years, it wasnât until this point that everything began its slow decline. Nothing to do with the on field antics â this was business. We got a letter through saying that our seats that weâd held for 15 years were moving. The reason was to account for âExecutive seatingâ. We had the privilege of being near the half way line at the back of the stand, so from a business perspective, these were valuable seats with easy access to the lounges behind the boxes. Our seats were pushed forward two rows and the whole rows of an entire section had seats removed and repacked by plusher cushioned seats. Because the larger seats were shoehorned into the existing, it meant that things didnât quite line up right. If anyone was over 5â10â, my dad would get knee in the back for the whole game.
The lad and dad were moved half a stand away. No one remained. It was like a little quiet bomb went off in the community. What replaced it was tourists and day trippers on âExecutive World Packagesâ. Half and half scarves. Bags full of merchandise. Phones recording everything. Empty sets until 10 minutes into the second half. Tourists enjoying their once in a lifetime trips whilst United lose 1-0 to Palace in a rain soaked Old Trafford.
I have nothing against these people from all over the world, they have as much right to come to OT as anyone and if they are will to do it whilst LvG, Mou, EtH or Amorim serve up dull football, then thatâs their choice. However, what they donât bring is a sense of a deeper known community. A thin but broad community of worldwide fans. The upshot is the experience for a season ticket holder has diminished.
Couple on the fact United had 2 (TWO) Saturday 3pm kick offs this season at OT and the last one was in September! This has been replaced with Friday nights, Monday nights, Wednesday nights, Saturday nightsâĤeverything except a fabled Saturday 3pm. I checked and in the late 90s we averaged 9-10 Saturday 3pm kick offs and the midweek was a novelty saved for Champions League or Christmas. Itâs just not the same. Sure itâs brought in the TV revenues and we have better players, but once again, the experience is diminished.
When assessing the option to leave being a âplatinumâ season ticket holder, gained through 25 years of continuous attendance/purchasing, must mean something? Well, it meant a plastic sign on the underside of your seat. It used to mean a pen or such like with the physical season ticket. Now itâs all digital, itâs nothing. When I clicked the button stating I wasnât renewing I just got a box saying âokâ. Iâve not had an email, no outreach. Itâs the longest ârelationshipâ Iâve ever had and it ended without as much as a âsorry to see you goâ.
But, they are not sorry to see us go. In fact, I feel itâs been a strategy to remove season ticket holders for a while. I turn up and buy a pie and a bottle of water â thatâs about £7-£8. I park for free. Over a season they might get £200 in additional revenue from a season ticket holder like me. However, the guy or girl who flies over from China/Norway buys a (£120!!) shirt, a programme, a scarf, several drinks, etc etc. And if I resell my ticket, they get double bubble â my £50 seat can go for £80-£120 depending on the game (of course, I get my money back, less a fee, the club takes the rest). Thatâs why they brought in the policy of having to attend a certain amount of games each season and if not, selling it back to the club â and if you didnât hit 15 games attended or forwarded on, you lose your ability to renew.
So, no more community, inability to transfer down the generations, diminished seating, anti-social match times, no reward for loyalty, a feeling of being pushed aside. Thatâs the reality of a modern day United season ticket holder.
The football has been better recently, and I feel the club has turned a corner, but it was never about the on pitch success. It was precious time with my Dad, starting the process again with my son (who had started to get a love for it), the rituals, the community. Iâve had a lot of very good memories and been very fortunate for all of this. But Iâm left considering how the never ending commercialisation of the game has washed over me personally and what that means for the average season ticket holder.
My uni friends who moved to London became Orient fans â their tickets are next but one to each other. The guy who sits between them, unknown beforehand, after 5 years still sits between them. Itâs become an absurdity that they all live out. Thatâs the oddities that only come from a community over years. Itâs going out/gone from the top of the game â maybe it has for many years, and Iâve been too blinded to see it. But I can help looking at my son and thinking that heâs going to miss out.
Tom Parkinson (Scholes goal vs Barcelona will be the highlight)
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