When Arsenal Finally Stopped Looking Over Their Shoulder
By Chris Osa Nehikhare
I watched Arsenal last night, and for perhaps the first time in a very long while, they did not look like a team haunted by history.
They looked like a team chasing it.
A narrow victory over Atlético Madrid was enough to seal qualification to only their second ever UEFA Champions League final, and if you listened carefully, you could almost hear years of frustration leaving North London in one long exhale.
This was not vintage Arsenal of old, the beautiful entertainers who played football like orchestra conductors but occasionally defended like men arguing over whose turn it was to lock the gate.
No.
This Arsenal side looked hardened. Driven. Focused.
And perhaps most importantly… wounded.
Because years of torment can either destroy a football club or sharpen it into something dangerous. Arsenal fans have endured enough memes, enough bottle jokes, enough “maybe next season” speeches to last several lifetimes. Somewhere deep inside that dressing room, all those years of teasing and near misses have clearly become fuel.
You could see it in the way they approached the game.
There was tension, yes. But there was also maturity.
Bukayo Saka produced the moment of magic in the first half, the kind of goal that settles nerves and sends belief racing through an entire stadium. Calm finish. Big moment. Big player.
And then came the real surprise.
Arsenal, a club not exactly famous for making life easy for themselves in Europe, actually held on.
One goal. One lead. No unnecessary panic. No dramatic self-destruction. No defensive comedy sketch in the 89th minute.
They simply defended like a team that had finally grown tired of heartbreak.
Now let me confess something that may shock many readers of this column.
My phone has not stopped buzzing since the final whistle. Calls. Messages. Voice notes from readers reminding me and quite aggressively of my long-running position on Arsenal Football Club.
And yes, in the English Premier League, my relationship with Arsenal remains complicated. If Manchester United are not sitting at the top of the table, I am generally not the happiest man walking around.
That is simply football loyalty. It is a condition with no known cure.
But Europe is different.
In Europe, I support English clubs.
Even Arsenal.
Yes, write it down carefully before some people faint dramatically.
Because when English clubs step onto the continental stage, something changes. Rivalries temporarily loosen their grip and national pride quietly enters the room. (I’m Nigerian, breed in England) You want the league represented properly. You want English football standing tall against the continent’s aristocrats. Same vision and sentiments I have for Nigeria Premier Football League. NPFL. (Adaa Bendel)
And last night, Arsenal did England proud.
From my window, what impressed me most was not just the qualification, it was the mentality. This did not feel like a team merely hoping history might be kind to them someday.
It felt like a team finally trying to take history by the throat.
Now comes the final test.
And somewhere across North London and Nigeria, especially Benin City, this morning, Arsenal fans are daring to dream again, carefully, nervously, but loudly enough for Europe to hear them.
After all these years, perhaps the greatest victory is this:
For once, Arsenal are no longer trying to escape the past.
They are trying to outrun it.