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Saka and Gyokeres Drive Gunners Closer to Glory



Arsenal seize control at Emirates Stadium
Arsenal took another significant step towards the Premier League title with a commanding 3-0 win over Fulham at Emirates Stadium, moving six points clear at the top and placing fresh pressure on Manchester City.
This was the kind of evening title challenges are built upon. Not dramatic, not frantic, not reliant on late rescue acts, but calm, controlled and ruthless. Arsenal sensed an opportunity and took it with the air of a side beginning to understand the weight of its own possibilities.
Bukayo Saka, restored to the starting line-up after his Achilles injury, needed only nine minutes to remind everyone of his importance. He eased past Raul Jimenez on the right and delivered a precise ball for Viktor Gyokeres, who tapped in his 20th goal of the season.
Saka returns with authority
There was something quietly emphatic about Saka’s performance. His first start since March could have carried rust, caution or hesitation. Instead, it brought fluency. Five minutes before half-time, Gyokeres returned the favour, slipping the ball into Saka, who curled a low finish beyond Bernd Leno at the near post.
That goal seemed to drain whatever resistance Fulham had left. In first-half stoppage time, Gyokeres rose to meet Leandro Trossard’s cross and headed home Arsenal’s third. By then, the contest had become less a match than a statement.
Riccardo Calafiori almost added another, heading against the crossbar after earlier seeing a strike ruled out for offside. Arsenal had the game won before the interval, allowing Mikel Arteta to withdraw Saka at half-time and protect other key players before Tuesday’s Champions League semi-final second leg against Atletico Madrid, finely balanced at 1-1.
Gyokeres answers familiar questions
Gyokeres has not escaped scrutiny since arriving from Sporting, yet 21 goals in all competitions represents a serious return. His double against Fulham, allied to his strong midweek display against Atletico, offered evidence of a striker growing into Arsenal’s rhythms.
The last Arsenal player to score 20 or more goals in his debut season was Alexis Sanchez in 2014-15. That is not a trivial comparison. For all the discussion around aesthetics, fit and adaptation, Gyokeres is doing the thing Arsenal bought him to do.
Arteta also deserves credit for trusting Myles Lewis-Skelly in midfield. The 19-year-old looked composed, while Arsenal’s attack, with Saka, Calafiori and Eberechi Eze involved, carried more invention than it has in recent weeks.
Fulham fall short in Europe chase
Fulham, meanwhile, produced a performance that will frustrate Marco Silva. They were pinned back for much of the first half and offered too little in response. An xG of 0.43 and only one shot on target told its own story.
Victory would have taken Fulham level with sixth-placed Brentford on 51 points. Instead, they remain 10th, with their European hopes damaged by a night when Arsenal looked sharper, stronger and far closer to history.
Arsenal are now three league games from a first title in 22 years. A Champions League final could yet follow. For Fulham, improvement must come quickly.



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The grass isn’t always greener



At one point this season, Arsenal were in contention to achieve something that no English club ever has. A quadruple. 
At the very least, they were coasting their way towards their first Premier League title in 22 years. A few weeks ago, Arsenal had the chance to move 12 points clear of title rivals Manchester City, as they head into the final straight of the season.
However, a shock home defeat to AFC Bournemouth, sandwiched by crushing domestic defeats to Southampton and Manchester City, has left them on thin ice.
Last week’s 1-0 win over Newcastle United has steadied the ship, but the title race is set to go right down to the wire with just four games remaining. Some Arsenal supporters have taken aim at head coach Mikel Arteta, who hasn’t won a trophy since the FA Cup triumph six years ago.
Former Arsenal star Jermaine Pennant, speaking exclusively to EPL Index, shared his thoughts on Arteta’s future and whether another trophyless season could be the end of his reign…
Pennant: Arsenal to back Arteta
“I think Arsenal will stick with Arteta,” began Pennant, “Because from where he has taken them from, it’s night and day.”
“At one point there was a conversation that they could win the quadruple!” said Pennant, “Even if it does go down to the wire in the Premier League, it’s still progress.”
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It’s hard to deny that Arsenal are getting closer to a major trophy. However, for some fans close isn’t good enough, especially with the players at Arteta’s disposal.
“It would be the right decision”
“I think that it would be the right decision [to stick with Arteta]. You have to give him another year and see if he can win it,” said Pennant.
“If not, then you have to have a look at who else is out there. But there’s no point in sacking him for someone not as good, or on par, with Arteta. The grass isn’t always greener.”
There’s a severe lack of elite managers in Europe at the moment, which could contribute to any decision regarding Arteta’s future. 
You just need to look at clubs like Chelsea and Manchester United, who will be scrambling around for a new manager this summer. 
Whilst the Premier League title is hanging by a thread, Arsenal’s performances in Europe have improved massively.
They reached the semi-finals of the Champions League last year and were beaten by the winners PSG.
Arsenal are now just one game away from reaching a Champions League final after securing a 1-1 away draw at Atletico Madrid this week. They would face either PSG or Bayern Munich in the final.
There’s a long way to go in this season yet…



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