Arsenal manager Mikel Arteta decided to make a barbecue rather than watch the match that clinched his team the Premier League title.
Arteta was due to watch the Bournemouth-Manchester City game with Arsenal's players and coaching staff at the club's London Colney training base on Tuesday evening, but he left before kickoff because “I couldn’t bring the energy that I wanted.”
Instead, he went home and started to grill in his yard, only “hearing some noises in the background” as second-place City could only draw 1-1 to leave Arsenal as English champion for the first time since 2004.
“My oldest son opened the garden door,” Arteta said, describing the moment he discovered Arsenal had won the title. "He started to run towards me, he started to cry, he gave me a hug and said, ‘We are champions, daddy.’
“And then my other two boys and my wife came over and it was beautiful, just to see that joy on them as well ... it was magical.”
“Everybody’s been just keeping emotions and living those emotions, but not being able to really express them,” he said Thursday. “So when we opened that bottle, I think everybody had so much release and it’s been incredible to witness.”
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Arteta said he had questioned himself about whether he was “good enough to lead this team, this club, these players to win a major trophy.”
“Until you do it, you cannot validate yourself,” Arteta said.
“What I’m the most proud,” he added, “is how we’ve won it. Because we showed very important values, not only in sport but in life as well, which is perseverance, to be resilient, to be composed in moments when people are doubting. To be vulnerable.”
Arsenal's players will lift the trophy after the game at Crystal Palace on Sunday in the Premier League's final round.
The Gunners will then play the Champions League final against Paris Saint-Germain in Budapest on May 30. A parade is set for the next day in north London — and it could be a double celebration.
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