The 43-year-old, along with his mogul dad Stan, faced a rocky road with Gunners supporters, with fans even taking to the streets in protest against their ownership after the botched European Super League fiasco. But it seems the tide has turned, with the father-son duo steering the ship towards calmer waters and under Mikel Arteta’s guidance, Arsenal are gunning for glory at the top of the league once again, reports. It’s morphed into what we have now Los Angeles Rams, Colorado Avalanche, Denver Nuggets, Colorado Mammoth, Colorado Rapids.
The really big one is over in London. We have Arsenal Football Club. *Is Mikel Arteta’s Arsenal future if they go another season without silverware?
We’re long-term holders in everything we do. My father’s philosophy, and it’s the same with me as well, whenever you invest in something, if you’re trying to short buck… that’s not our strategy. The Gunners are on the brink of making it to the semi-finals for the first time since 2009, with a crucial clash against Bayern Munich in Germany this Wednesday (April 17).
In the run-up to this pivotal game, Arteta said: “We have to change it. There’s a lot of things we can do there to write that story differently [against Bayern]. It’s about earning the right collectively and individually.”
“We want a performance that puts us in the Champions League semi-final. The prep has been to achieve that. We have earned it for 10 months and everything we did last season.
They’re super motivated. They’re prepared and they feel confident. We want to make it happen.
It would be unbelievable. If we make it happen and we’re in the semi-final, we’ll be in a really high emotional state with something that we haven’t achieved in 15 years and that’s the opportunity.”