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Arsenal stumble at the Etihad as City seize the moment

Faz Ali by Faz Ali
20 April 2026
in Analysis, UK
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Arsenal’s meeting with Manchester City was framed as a season-defining test. Instead, it became a hard lesson in fine margins, a defeat that dulled Arsenal’s momentum and left supporters wrestling with the feeling of a chance slipping away.

Speaking after the match, Mikel Arteta told press:

Today was a big opportunity but we still have five to go and there are a lot of positives to take from the game.

There’s an element of luck. The ball gets deflected to [Erling] Haaland. There’s that moment to be so cool, precise and ruthless, and you have to be that…

Today was a big opportunity, but we still have five to go and there are a lot of positives to take from the game.

City’s control, Arsenal’s missed rewards

From the opening minutes, Manchester City imposed their familiar rhythm, possession with purpose, pressure applied in waves, and the quiet threat that one error would be enough. Arsenal did not shrink. They pressed in spells and fashioned openings that could have rewritten the story, but football offers no credit for promise without finish.

The result also sharpened the enduring comparison between Mikel Arteta and Pep Guardiola. It was not simply a tactical defeat; it read, to some, as another moment where Arteta’s project met the ceiling of its greatest reference point.

With a draw carrying real value in the context of the run-in, Arsenal’s approach felt bold, (perhaps too bold), when the table demanded restraint.

The Arsenal boss said:

We absolutely did that. Especially the way we ended the game. We could’ve been a bit more composed in certain moments. We took the game to certain areas we wanted.

Space, transitions, and the price of chasing

As Arsenal committed men forward, the game began to tilt into the terrain City relish: managed transitions, runners finding pockets, and opponents forced into rushed choices near the box. The bitter twist was that Arsenal still had enough moments to earn a different ending — one late pass, one cleaner strike, one earlier decision. Against City, waste rarely goes unpunished.

One hundred percent, we generated situations we believe we could generate. There’s even one where Kai [Havertz] is onside on the halfway…

We are on the level we are because this team has taken us there…When you have big chances, you need to put them away to come away with three points.

For supporters, the sting was not only the points; it was the doubt the night can plant. Title races are built on nerve as much as numbers. Losses like this can tighten a team in front of goal, turning instinct into hesitation. The stands feel that shift too, hope hardening into frustration unless the response is immediate.

Arsenal must refuse to become a pattern

Arsenal captain, Martin Odegaard, delivered a rallying call after the match, affirming that the title race remains ”all to play for” despite rivals Manchester City seizing control in the title race.

“We have to keep going,” Odegaard stated, reflecting on the intense battle.

It was always going to go all the way to the end so we have to keep going, keep working hard and sticking together. We just look forward to the next game now and bounce back.

There is still time to salvage the season, but this match will linger because it offered so much and delivered so little. Opportunities were there, the margins were thin, and the consequence felt heavy: a reminder that the biggest games do not forgive uncertainty.

Featured image via AP Photo/ Dave Thompson

Tags: footballUK
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