Twenty-two years. That is what made the night of May 20, 2026 different from every other night in a generation of Arsenal supporting. When Manchester City dropped points at Bournemouth and the title was mathematically Arsenal’s, something broke open – a weight, a wound, a very long wait. The players had gathered at the training ground to watch it confirmed. What followed lasted until the sun came up.
Details of the celebrations have now emerged, and they are exactly what you would want from a group of players who have carried the tag of bottlers for three painful near-misses. Champagne bottles. Social media receipts. And four Arsenal players standing outside the Emirates Stadium at five in the morning, not quite ready to go home.
Rice, Saka, Eze and Timber Were Still Going at 5am
Sky Sports reports that Declan Rice, Bukayo Saka, Eberechi Eze and Jurrien Timber were filmed outside the Emirates in the early hours – walking the perimeter, taking pictures with fans who had also refused to let the night end. It was 5am. Nobody looked like they were thinking about sleep.
The symbolism of returning to the stadium at that hour is not lost on anyone who has followed this club through the Arteta years. The Emirates is where the pressure lived, where the near-misses stung sharpest, where the crowd willed and willed and eventually got what they deserved. Going back there in the dead of night felt less like a detour and more like a statement.
Eze had already posted on Instagram at around 3am – a photo of captain Martin Odegaard drinking from an Arsenal water bottle. That image was a direct callback to a viral moment from April, when a City fan was filmed swigging from a similar bottle at Stamford Bridge as Pep Guardiola’s side beat Chelsea 3-0, the day after Arsenal had slipped up at Bournemouth. City had closed the gap to six points with a game in hand. The bottle belonged to them then. Not any more.
They Called Us Bottlers – So They Kept the Bottles
The social media thread running through the night’s celebrations kept returning to one word: bottle. Saka filmed Myles Lewis-Skelly mid-celebration, champagne in hand. The midfielder did not waste the moment. “They called us bottlers,” Lewis-Skelly said, “but now we’ve got the bottle in our hands.” Clean. Deserved. Filed away for posterity.
Rice’s contribution was equally pointed. He posted on Instagram – “I told you all… it’s done” – a line that landed harder with context. Back in April, after City beat Arsenal 2-1 in the Premier League, Rice was pictured in the dressing room telling his teammates “it’s not done.” He was right then, and he was right when he finally got to say it was.
Ian Wright was among those celebrating at the Emirates as the scenes unfolded – as was, improbably, Jeremy Corbyn. It was that kind of night. For the full story of the moments that built this title win, the journey from Arteta’s early rebuilding years to this night makes for essential reading.
What Twenty-Two Years Actually Means
Arsenal finished second in each of the three previous seasons. Each time the gap closed and then widened again. Each time the word bottlers came back around. Arteta spoke earlier in the season about the “scar tissue” of those near-misses – about learning to enjoy pressure instead of fearing it. This group absorbed that lesson and passed the exam.
The investment backing that mentality shift was real. Since Arteta’s arrival the club’s net spend has exceeded £500m, with Rice arriving for around £105m in 2023 and Eze joining from Crystal Palace in 2025 to add the creativity the squad needed. For how the title race itself unfolded and the fixture advantages that helped Arsenal hold their nerve through the run-in, our coverage of the title race dynamics sets the full context.
And this is not where the season ends. Arsenal face PSG in the Champions League final in Budapest on May 30. The domestic title is won. History is still being written.
Twenty-two years to get here. They have earned every bottle.






























