Carlos Cuesta, Mikel Arteta’s trusted assistant and tactical confidant, has confirmed his departure from Arsenal. After five transformative years, he accepted a historic role as head coach of Serie A club Parma. At 29, Cuesta will become the youngest manager in Italy’s top flight this century. Moreover he will also be the youngest across Europe’s top five leagues. This marks a seismic shift in his career and Arteta’s backroom staff.
A Heartfelt Goodbye
Carlos Cuesta shared an emotional post on social media where he reflected upon his “beautiful” five years at Arsenal, being praised for the club’s culture, togetherness, and fans. He stated: “It is hard to put this into words, but I can only thank you for having lived my day-to-day with such special people,” emphasising his determination of “give everything I had inside of me every single day”. Cuesta gave specific thanks to Arteta where he labelled him as: “incredible coach, leader and human being,” who taught him what courage meant.
Arteta’s “Closest Confidant”
Carlos Cuesta joined Arsenal in 2020 after also working within the youth sort at Atlético Madrid and Juventus. It felt like Cuesta developed into one of Arteta’s most important substitutes pretty quickly. Moreover, he apparently entirely focused on player development and tactical focus. In fact, former Gunners captain Granit Xhaka predicted Cuesta would manager a “big, big, big club,” as he has a “clear ideas,” good communicative manner and could have a considerable impact on the players he works with. Over 261 games together, Cuesta helped steer Arsenal from mid-table uncertainty to three consecutive Premier League title challenges.
The Parma Challenge
Cuesta’s move to Parma, set to be finalized today, follows weeks of negotiations. He replaces Cristian Chivu, who left for Inter Milan, and inherits a squad that narrowly avoided relegation last season (finishing 16th, five points above the drop zone) . His appointment shatters Serie A age records: no sub-35 manager has been hired in the league since 1990, and he trails only Elio Loschi (1939) as the youngest ever.
Arteta’s Leadership Test
The timing strains Arsenal’s preseason plans. Cuesta is the first of Arteta’s core staff—which includes Albert Stuivenberg, Nico Jover, and Miguel Molina—to leave voluntarily since the group coalesced in 2021. Mikel Arteta had previously stated he “would not stand in the way” of staff seeking growth, acknowledging that “people don’t want to do the same thing for five years”. Still, losing a specialist in one-on-player development complicates Arsenal’s quest for silverware amid a brutal early-season fixture list.
Legacy and Future
Cuesta’s exit underscores Arsenal’s emergence as a coaching incubator. As he told Arteta: “You’ve taught me a lot, and I will carry it always with me”. For Parma, his appointment signals ambition; for Arsenal, it’s proof of their developmental ethos. While Arteta weighs a replacement, Gunners fans will watch Cuesta’s Serie A journey with pride. It might as well perhaps be a hope for a future reunion.
The exit of Carlos Cuesta at Arsenal signals the culmination of a transformative five-year relationship with Mikel Arteta. He has reshaped the tactical identity of the club and its player development. His emotional goodbye captures the bonds he forged at London Colney as he moved from a young coach into Arteta’s most trusted tactician, and in taking the Parma role, the 29-year-old will now become the youngest manager in Serie A this century. This is something that speaks to Arsenal’s role in developing young coaches. Cuesta leaves a huge hole in Arteta’s backroom staff. But it reflects the ethos of the club to move young and ambitious individuals on. Cuesta’s impact will remain in the culture of Arsenal FC. Nonetheless, from this moment now we will be watching how his journey in Serie A unfolds with great interest back in North London.
For more sports updates, make sure to follow us on:
Recommended for you