Arsenal remain true to themselves — a side capable of looking dominant one week and vulnerable the next. Earlier in the season, complaints about their pragmatic style, time management and heavy reliance on set-pieces often sounded like frustration from rivals who simply could not stop them. For long stretches, Mikel Arteta’s team were efficient, ruthless and in complete control of the title race.
Yet once again, the biggest threat to Arsenal may be Arsenal themselves. Injuries have played a role, but it would be difficult to blame everything on squad depth. The club invested well in recent transfer windows, adding versatility and more options across the pitch. Not every replacement is of the same level, but this is no longer a squad with only one solution in every position.
That is why their recent wobble feels more psychological than structural. Arsenal earned their advantage over Manchester City FC on merit, but the closer they moved toward a major prize, the more tension seemed to creep into performances. Cup setbacks exposed that fragility — little attacking threat in one final, another disappointing domestic exit, and uncomfortable European progress where authority was expected.
In the league, dropped points have reopened familiar questions. A draw can happen, but defeat against beatable opposition has increased the pressure. Arsenal know they cannot allow rivals back into the race, because recent history suggests nerves can quickly become a factor in the final weeks.
The good news for the hosts is that the run-in looks manageable on paper. The bad news is that Newcastle United FC may be the toughest remaining obstacle. Eddie Howe’s side are physically intense, aggressive in the press and dangerous from set-pieces — exactly the kind of opponent Arsenal would rather avoid right now.
Recent meetings have been tight and combative, with little separating the sides. Newcastle have shown they can compete with Arsenal consistently, and several clashes have been decided by the finest margins.
My feeling is that this will be another tense and controlled contest rather than an open one. Arsenal may edge it, but confidence is not convincing enough to trust them heavily. Newcastle +1 on the handicap looks like the smarter angle, while another strong option is Arsenal under 2 team goals.

