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BRING A BOTTLE

It may have taken Mikel Arteta six years and well over a billion pounds but his team trusted the process and got there in the end. Arsenal are Premier League champions and in scenes that called to mind the closing moments of the movie Fever Pitch, jubilant Gooners spilled out of homes and pubs around Highbury and Islington in a collective release of tension and pure, unadulterated joy to mark the occasion. However, unlike Fever Pitch, it wasn’t broad daylight at 9.55pm and instead of Colin Firth and Ruth Gemmell, it was Robbie Lyle from AFTV and Ian Wright who got their smooch on as fans partied long into the night outside the stadium. Any doubts that a brooding and occasionally intense man from a small town near San Sebastián might not have been up to the task of getting Arsenal over the line had finally been dispelled and for that, Andoni Iraola deserves great credit. His Bournemouth side’s draw against Manchester City means Arsenal can no longer be caught.

On Sunday, they will hoist the Premier League trophy aloft at Selhurst Park following a kickabout against Crystal Palace destined to be so convivial and relaxed that even the lesser-spotted Christian Nørgaard might fancy his chances of getting a run-out. You would have needed a heart of stone to begrudge Arsenal fans their evening of fun, what with them having been repeatedly fed through the emotional mincer by their own team in recent months but needless to say there were no shortage of cynics prepared to denigrate their achievement. Yes, there is certainly a case to be made that Arteta’s brand of belt-and-braces football can be a tough watch – as riveting and repetitive as an EasyJet safety demonstration – but actual Arsenal fans are prepared to tolerate it as long as it delivers trophies.

With the Premier League already in the bag, a Bigger Cup final against Paris Saint-Germain to come and Tottenham still in the relegation mix, Arteta has certainly delivered this season. “We now have the chance to cap one of the greatest seasons in our 140-year history ... when we head to Budapest next week to contest our second-ever Bigger Cup final,” parped the club’s website at 3am, just a couple of hours before early birds Declan Rice, Bukayo Saka, Jurrien Timber and Eberechi Eze were spotted mooching around a by-now deserted Emirates.

While the question of what on earth four Arsenal players were doing wandering north London at that ungodly hour may well be answered over the next couple of days, it will take longer to find out if winning the title after three consecutive near misses will mark the beginning of a sustained era of dominance. With most of their rivals facing uncertainty at best, Arsenal are in pole position to make hay while the sun shines and with a giant orangutan off their back, Arteta and his players no longer have to contend with the label of “bottlers”. Even the club dog, Win, is finally living up to her name and no longer in breach of the canine trade descriptions act.

LIVE ON BIG WEBSITE

Join Scott Murray at 8pm (BST) for minute-by-minute updates on Freiburg 1-3 Aston Villa in the Bigger Vase final.   

QUOTE OF THE DAY

“This Southampton story is one of the maddest I’ve seen. But why isn’t the play-offs starting again with the 4 other teams? Boro v Hull would have been the semi!! Confused” – Wrexham’s Josh Windass wants the Championship playoffs to start again with, yes, his own team involved, after Southampton were kicked out by the EFL for spying. Saints called the decision “manifestly disproportionate to every previous sanction in the history of the English game”.

FOOTBALL DAILY LETTERS

I did not know a stroopwafel could taste anywhere near that good. Bravo” – Thad Brown.

Using Josh Windass’s logic and running with it, can I be one of 1,057 to suggest that the whole Championship season should be replayed, which will also have the added benefit of forcing Noble Francis to relive that whole Wednesday attempt at the campaign all over again” – Jon Millard.

I can understand Hull being upset, having been focused on playing Southampton and now having limited time to prepare for Middlesbrough instead. Can’t they just ask Southampton if they just happen to have a detailed dossier on Middlesbrough lying around?” – James Vortkamp-Tong.

Since childhood, I have secretly hoped that the top flight of English football would one day finish in alphabetical order. Congratulations are due not only to Arsenal for doing their bit to make it happen, but also to Tottenham, West Ham and Wolves for playing along. Bournemouth fans will no doubt forgive the awkward AFC prefix, while their cousins, Brighton and Brentford, have done their utmost. Chelsea obligingly produced a poor run-in, and Aston Villa made a decent stab at fulfilling my dream. The real problem clubs remain Liverpool and the two Manchesters, although Burnley’s relegation significantly improves the prospects for next season. Everton, Fulham and Newcastle look capable of taking their places, but Crystal Palace need to buck up their ideas. I think 2026-27 will finally be my year” – Phil Hearn.

Noble Francis’s pointing out that Benfica only finished third, despite an unbeaten season (yesterday’s Football Daily letters), brings to mind my Hamilton AFC (NZ) team that, likewise, were unbeaten in a league season but finished runners-up, having drawn three matches. If only we’d had the notion to dub ourselves ‘The Invincibles’ I may have felt a whole lot better over the last 35 years” – Rod de Lisle.

Going back to the thread of suitable songs to play while VAR are deliberating (Football Daily letters passim), The Kinks’ ‘Tired of waiting’ would seem like a very obvious choice followed by Britney Spears’ ‘Oops I did it again’ when the incorrect conclusion is announced to the bewildered supporters in the stadium. There must be many others in the canon” – Nigel Sanders.

If you have any, please send letters to the.boss@theguardian.com. Today’s prizeless letter o’ the day winner is … Jon Millard. Terms and conditions for our competitions, when we run them, are here. 

RECOMMENDED LISTENING

Max Rushden, Barry Glendenning and the rest of the Football Weekly pod squad look back Arsenal’s title win and Spygate’s latest twist.

MILLER TIME

Steve McClaren has added late-career interest to his CV by taking the head of football role at Rotherham only months after quitting as Jamaica boss. The 64-year-old left his job with the Reggae Boyz after failing to secure automatic qualification for the GWC, despite still having a chance in the playoffs. But that defeatist attitude has not put the Millers off nabbing the well-travelled former England boss for a powerful role at the club. “We are thrilled to have Steve join us here and we are already looking forward to the value that his unrivalled experience in football circles will add,” cheered chief suit Tony Stewart. “Steve will provide the board with a new voice [hopefully not a Dutch-sounding one – Football Daily Ed] and a pair of eyes and ears that have seen how clubs ensure that they reach optimal performance at both the top club level and on the international stage.” His first task will be finding a manager who can take the recently-relegated club back up to League One. If he doesn’t get his preferred pick, we reckon we know who his second choice should be.

NEWS, BITS AND BOBS

Uefa has handed a lifetime ban from all football-related activity to Petr Vlachovsky, the Czech coach who used a hidden camera to secretly film his female players in their changing rooms.

Pep Guardiola refused to publicly confirm that his 10-year reign at Manchester City will come to an end despite reports – on Big Website and other outlets – that he has already informed his players that he plans to do one.

Roberto De Zerbi reckons there’s more at stake than mere relegation when Tottenham take on Everton in Sunday’s season finale – self-respect is on the line! “The pride, the history of the club, the dignity are more important,” he growled. “[Players should] go on holiday like this [with your head up] and not like this [with your head down].”

Sunderland captain Granit Xhaka, 78, will take part in his fourth successive World Cup after being included in the Switzerland squad for the GWC.

Norway midfielder Morten Thorsby has signed a petition calling for protection from extreme heat at the GWC. “There are dangers related to heat-related problems, but it’s also a huge problem for the spectators,” he roared. “The spectacle and the show and the sport loses its value if the players are not able to perform at their best.”

The first North Korean sports team to visit the South in eight years reached the Asian Women’s Champions League final on Wednesday as Naegohyang beat Suwon FC Women 2-1. “We believed in our team’s ability,” trilled Naegohyang’s Choe Kum Ok, who scored her team’s equaliser in the second half. “If all of us stay united, … the final will not be a problem for us.”

Uefa’s head of women’s football says rules stopping clubs with the same owner from playing together in Women’s Bigger Cup will be strictly enforced, dealing a blow to investors such as Michele Kang.

And referee Michael Salisbury will be free to watch all 10 Premier League games simultaneously if he wants to after being dropped for the final matchday following his decision to allow Matheus Cunha’s goal for Manchester United against Nottingham Forest despite a Bryan Mbeumo handball in the buildup.

STILL WANT MORE?

Ed Aarons details how the Gunners won the title and rates the players in the Premier League-winning squad.

Back on top: the season-by-season story of Arsenal’s return to title glory. By Rob Smyth.

Top, top snapper Tom Jenkins donned his beer-resistant jacket and photographed the giddy celebrations around the Emirates Stadium.

Manchester City’s succession plan sheds light on Enzo Maresca’s Chelsea departure, writes Jacob Steinberg.

“He’s one of us”: Liverpool fans say a teary ta-ra to Andy Robertson.

And who has won the most league titles without earning an international cap? The Knowledge knows.

MEMORY LANE

17 May 1998: Arsène Wenger holds both the Premier League and FA Cup trophies at a victory parade in Islington. Arsenal fans lined north London’s streets a day after the Gunners defeated Newcastle United 2-0 at Wembley. This year, Arsenal’s parade will be held on 31 May, a day after the Bigger Cup final. Will Arteta be holding two trophies?

‘BRING ON THE DANCING HORSES’