4:02 pm | November 3, 2018 | Go to Source | Author:
6:11 PM ET
LONDON — They say you don’t notice something until it’s gone, and that is a good thing at Arsenal this season. Under Unai Emery, the team is hungry again, the Emirates is alive and noisy, and games at the stadium feel like an occasion the supporters actually want to be a part of.
So what’s missing? Apathy, for one. The sense of listlessness off the pitch, too. And with Emery owning the technical area and patrolling the touchline like an over-competitive parent, the sight of Arsene Wenger looking on with his hands in his pockets and out of ideas has also been consigned to history.
We all knew that things had turned sour under Wenger long before he was ushered off-stage at the end of last season, but it is has taken the sun to start shining again for everyone to realise how dark it became as the old regime staggered toward irrelevance. Arsenal feel like a club on the up again, and the question now is why it took the hierarchy so long to realise a change of direction was so desperately needed.
Saturday’s 1-1 draw at home to Liverpool was not enough to suggest that the old Arsenal — the formidable one built by Wenger — is back and ready to challenge for titles, but it certainly offered the signposts toward a brighter future under Emery and one that could yet become a glorious one.