theanalyst.com

The 10 Defining Numbers Behind Arsenal’s Premier League Title Win

After years of near misses, Arsenal finally got over the line to win the Premier League title in 2025-26. We break down the key numbers behind a campaign built on defensive excellence, relentless consistency and very, very fine margins.

Arsenal have done it. Finally. After 22 years, they are champions of England once again.

Manchester City’s 1-1 draw at Bournemouth on Tuesday night means Arsenal now hold an unassailable lead at the top of the Premier League with one game remaining. It’s their 14th top-flight crown overall, their fourth Premier League title, and their first since the famous Invincibles campaign of 2003-04.

Back then, the defining number was zero. Zero defeats across an entire league season. But what numbers best define this Arsenal side?

Here are 10 that tell the story of their title-winning campaign.

18 – Goals from Corners

A defining characteristic of Arsenal under Mikel Arteta has been their dominance from set-pieces. It’s always been a focus of their play, but it has been particularly pronounced this campaign. They have scored 28 of their 68 league goals from dead-ball situations this season, three more than any other side.

But it’s at corners specifically where they’ve been the most dangerous, scoring 18 of them in 2025-26, which is a new Premier League seasonal record.

Perhaps it says a lot about the direction of the style of the Premier League that the record – overtaking the 16 scored by Oldham Athletic in 1992-93 – has been broken twice this season. First by Arsenal, who now have the outright record, and then by Tottenham, who have scored 17 goals from corners this season.

Arsenal’s effectiveness from corners has, at times, been used as a stick with which to beat them. Critics have argued their reliance on set-pieces makes their football predictable or overly functional.

There may be some truth in that perception, but elite sides have long understood the value of marginal gains. Set-pieces are not only the preserve of so-called pragmatic or defensive sides. Arsenal have simply become better than everyone else at exploiting them.

Goals from Corners - Premier League 2025-26 season

19 – David Raya’s Clean Sheets

With his clean sheet against Burnley on Monday night, David Raya moved onto 19 shutouts for the season. That drew him level with the most ever recorded by an Arsenal goalkeeper in a Premier League campaign, matching David Seaman’s totals from 1993-94 and 1998-99.

If he managers another clean sheet on the final day against Crystal Palace, Raya will set the outright record for the club.

The Spaniard was awarded the Premier League Golden Glove award for a third consecutive season after his 18th clean sheet against West Ham, and he’s now only the fourth ever goalkeeper to win the award in three successive seasons, after Pepe Reina (Liverpool), Joe Hart (Man City) and Ederson (Man City).

Raya is now one Golden Glove away from equalling the all-time record of four, jointly held by Petr Cech and Hart.

Most Clean Sheets - Arsenal Premier League GK

0.74 – Expected Goals Against Per Game

There’s no doubt that Arsenal’s title triumph has been built on their defensive strength.

They have conceded just 26 league goals this season, at least six fewer than any other side, and the second-fewest they’ve ever conceded in a Premier League campaign behind 1998-99 (17).

That rock solid rearguard has come to the fore in the run-in. Since losing 2-1 away to Manchester City, they’ve responded with four consecutive wins without conceding.

The underlying numbers are just as impressive. Arsenal have allowed chances worth only 0.74 expected goals per game this season. As far back as Opta have advanced expected goals data (2012-13), that is the fourth-best figure ever recorded in a Premier League campaign.

Lowest xG against per game - single Premier League season

Arsenal have conceded just 8.2 shots per game and 2.4 shots on target per game, both the best figures across Europe’s top five leagues this season.

Arsenal xG against 2025-26 season

17 – Wins with Gabriel and Saliba Starting Together

At the heart of Arsenal’s defensive excellence has been their centre-back pairing of William Saliba and Gabriel Magalhães.

The pair have started together in 26 Premier League games this season, with Arsenal winning 17 of those. That total is joint-highest in the division alongside Liverpool duo Ibrahima Konaté and Virgil van Dijk, despite the latter pair starting together a lot more frequently (35 matches).

Among centre-back pairings to start together more than five times this season, Saliba and Gabriel have comfortably the best clean sheet rate. The Gunners have kept 15 clean sheets in their 26 starts together, averaging one every 1.7 games.

53 – Points Against Bottom-Half Teams

For much of Arteta’s tenure, Arsenal did not really have a problem competing with the teams at the top of the table.

Since the start of the 2022-23 season, the first of Arsenal’s three consecutive second-placed finishes, they’ve taken more points (76) against fellow ‘big-six’ rivals than anyone else. They’ve lost just six of 40 such games.

But it’s been the teams they should have beaten that have been the real problem.

In 2023-24, when they last went toe-to-toe with Manchester City in a title race, there were back-to-back defeats against West Ham and Fulham over Christmas that derailed their chances. The season prior, there was a limp defeat away to Everton in February, and then two crazy draws in consecutive games against West Ham (2-2) and Southampton (3-3) in April.

This season, however, Arsenal have been ruthless against weaker opposition (at least in league table terms).

They’ve won 17 of their 19 matches against teams currently in the bottom half of the table, taking 53 points and conceding just six goals in those games. They’ve taken an average of 2.8 points per game against bottom-half sides this season, which is by far the best rate of any team, and comfortably exceeds Manchester City’s 2.3, who come next.

It was quite fitting that a tense but resolute 1-0 win over relegated Burnley ultimately sealed the title.

238 – Days Spent Top of the Table

Arsenal have been no strangers to leading across the last four seasons. The problem has been remaining there when the music stops.

Come the end of the season on Sunday, they will have led the league for 238 days this season, 204 more days than Liverpool and a huge 229 more days than City. Unlike in prior campaigns, this time they’ve made it count.

That hasn’t always been the case. In 2022-23, Arsenal spent 232 days top of the league, 206 more than eventual winners Manchester City (42), but could not get over the line. That is still the record for the most days spent top by a side who’ve failed to go on to win the title.

In fact, since the start of 2022-23, Arsenal will have spent 562 days top of the Premier League at the end of this season after winning the 2025-26 title on Tuesday night, 207 more than any other club. Until now, they had little reward to show for it.

Days top of Premier League since 2022-23

14 – Viktor Gyökeres’ League Goals

As these numbers lay bare, Arsenal’s title has been built on defensive dominance rather than free-flowing expansive attacking football.

Still, summer signing Viktor Gyökeres has enjoyed a productive debut season, scoring 21 goals in all competitions, and 14 in the Premier League.

He is the first player to score 20-plus goals in all competitions in his first Arsenal season since Alexis Sánchez (25 in 2014-15). Before that, only Thierry Henry had achieved it in the Premier League era (26 in 1999-00).

Yet, 14 league goals is an unusually modest tally for the top scorer of a title-winning side.

Viktor Gyokeres 14 Premier League goals

Only two Premier League champions have previously had a top goalscorer finish with fewer goals: Frank Lampard scored 13 for Chelsea in 2004-05, while İlkay Gündoğan scored 13 for Manchester City in 2020-21.

With one game to go, Gyökeres finds himself level with Eric Cantona, who scored 14 in Manchester United’s 1995-96 title-winning campaign.

8 – Arsenal’s 1-0 Wins

It felt fitting that Arsenal’s final game before the title was mathematically secured ended in a 1-0 victory.

They have won by that scoreline eight times in the Premier League this season, their highest total since 1998-99, when they recorded nine such wins.

Since defeat to Man City on Matchday 33, Arsenal responded with four straight victories. Three of those wins have come by a 1-0 scoreline, with no goals conceded.

Their defensive resilience has defined the season, but it has been especially crucial during the run-in.

2 – Games in Which Arsenal Were Outrun

Physicality has always been central to Arteta’s vision for Arsenal.

The club’s recruitment under him has consistently prioritised height, athleticism and physicality alongside technical quality. However, that is reflected not only in Arsenal’s set-piece dominance, but also in their running metrics.

Remarkably, Arsenal have covered more distance than their opponents in 35 of their 37 league games this season, more than any other side in the division. Leeds United rank second, having done so 32 times.

Arsenal running vs opponents - each Premier League game 2025-26

Usually, high running numbers are associated with teams that spend long periods without possession. That’s not quite the case here, though, as Arsenal average 56.1% possession, the fourth-highest figure in the Premier League. When the going has got tough, they’ve been able to ride the athleticism and work rate of figures like Declan Rice to get them over the line in tight matches.

44 Years, 54 Days – Mikel Arteta’s Age

Finally, a word for the man who made all of this possible.

Arteta’s transformation of Arsenal has been gradual, demanding and, ultimately, hugely impressive. Comparing the team he inherited to the side that won against Burnley highlights just how extensive his rebuild has been.

Arsenal starting lineup - Arteta first game in charge against Bournemouth

Arsenal starting lineup vs Burnley 25-26

At 44 years and 54 days old, Arteta becomes the second-youngest manager to win the Premier League. Only José Mourinho was younger when he guided Chelsea to the title in both 2004-05 (42 years and 94 days old) and again in 2005-06 (43 years and 94 days old).

With Pep Guardiola set to leave Manchester City at the end of the season, Arteta will become the longest-serving manager currently in the Premier League. Having already spent more than six years at Arsenal, it is easy to forget just how young he still is. That could be worrying for rivals – how many more campaigns does the Spaniard have in him?

Premier League Stats Opta

Enjoy this? Add Opta Analyst as a preferred source by clicking here.

Enjoy this? Subscribe to our football newsletter to receive exclusive weekly content. You should also follow our social accounts over onX, Instagram, TikTok and Facebook.

Read full news in source page