The sheer euphoria of winning a Premier League title can make anyone lose their composure.
After a hyper-competitive season fighting tooth and nail against Manchester City, Mikel Arteta’s Arsenal squad finally claimed the ultimate crown.
The historic victory broke a painful 22-year curse, instantly sending their global fanbase into absolute paradise.
The title was officially wrapped up in dramatic fashion courtesy of a shocking Manchester City slip-up away from home.
Fans took over the streets of North London, setting off red flares outside the Emirates Stadium.

Current stars like Declan Rice,Myles Lewis-Skelly and Bukayo Saka immediately flooded social media with wild dressing-room celebrations.
For the club’s digital and media operations, a moment of this magnitude requires weeks of meticulous preparation.
Millions of eyes are instantly fixed on the official homepage, waiting for the club’s definitive reaction.
Yet, amidst the absolute chaos of the historic celebrations, a glaring historical oversight slipped through the cracks.
A major blunder turned a night of pure football perfection into a slightly awkward media nightmare.
Fans on X (formerly Twitter) quickly went into overdrive after spotting the massive error published directly on Arsenal’s official club website.
In their absolute rush to praise the current boss, the web team completely forgot their own history.
The article explicitly crowned Mikel Arteta as the first-ever person to win the English top-flight title with Arsenal as both a player and a manager.
However, older generations of the Arsenal faithful and stat-nerds instantly pointed out that this was completely false.
The legendary George Graham had already claimed that exact slice of history decades ago.
This is wrong on .com
— Darren (@DarrenArsenal1) May 19, 2026
George Graham did it first. pic.twitter.com/2HFci3weJF
🏆 The True Double-Winner: George Graham
• Won the league title as an Arsenal player in 1971
• Won the league title as Arsenal manager in 1989 and 1991
Graham famously won the First Division championship as an elegant midfielder for the Gunners back in 1971.
He then returned to the dugout to mastermind the iconic 1989 Anfield title triumph and another league win in 1991.
The digital mishap was live on the main landing page for several minutes before hawk-eyed web administrators realized the insult to Graham’s legacy.
They hastily took down and edited the article, but the damage in the social media age was already done.
Screenshots of the historical erasure spread like wildfire across football forums, with opposing fanbases relentlessly mocking the club.
While the administrative slip-up certainly provided plenty of ammunition for online banter, it will do nothing to dampen the spirits of the players.
The Arsenal squad is far too busy celebrating a historic piece of silverware to care about a website typo.



