There are football clubs and then there is Arsenal.
Arsenal have an identity beyond football is often said loosely. However, stories like this give it real meaning.
Zohran Mamdani’s words do not feel manufactured. Instead, they feel lived in; honest; almost instinctive.
“My relationship with my club began… before I was old enough to understand what I was getting myself into.”
That is how it starts for most people. Not through analysis or expectation; but through feeling.
Arsenal has always had that effect.
It feels familiar before it is understood.
“My relationship with my club began the same way it does for most football fans: before I was old enough to understand what I was getting myself into. When I was nine, my uncle introduced me to a team with a cannon on its shirt, a grizzled captain named Tony Adams, and players… pic.twitter.com/PaZvtr7FdN
— The Athletic | Football (@TheAthleticFC) May 29, 2026
Arsenal identity beyond football is built on belonging
Mamdani does not just describe support; he describes recognition.
Seeing players like Nwankwo Kanu was not simply admiration. It was connection. It was identity reflected back at him.
That is what Arsenal has quietly offered for decades.
Different cultures; different journeys; one badge.
From Wenger’s sides that “sang” to Arteta’s modern structure, the club has consistently invited people in rather than closing ranks.
That matters.
Because while much of the conversation focuses on tactics and expectation; especially ahead of the Champions League final, there is a deeper layer that numbers cannot capture.
It is emotional. It is cultural. It is human.
And that human element might matter just as much as anything on the pitch.
"22-year title wait ended, Wenger did 22 years at Arsenal, Kroupi number 22, Arteta was 22 when Arsenal won title in 2004" 👀
David Ornstein gives a prediction for the Champions League final based on the significance of the number 22 for Arsenal 🔴 pic.twitter.com/kideeI1OPp
— Sky Sports News (@SkySportsNews) May 29, 2026
The Arsenal hatred and whether it is real
Not everyone embraces Arsenal.
They never have.
Criticism has followed success; mockery has followed failure. That part is natural. Big clubs attract strong reactions.
Yet some of it feels exaggerated.
Because when you look at stories like Mamdani’s, the narrative begins to crack.
This is not a club built on arrogance or exclusion. Instead, it thrives on connection; on identity; on people seeing themselves within it.
That reality does not align with the caricature.
It challenges it.
And as discussions continue around this Arsenal side before the biggest game of their season, that contrast becomes clearer.
Why Arsenal will always matter beyond football
This is why Arsenal endures.
Not just because of trophies. Not just because of history. But because of people.
Somewhere, there is always someone discovering this club for the first time and feeling something they cannot explain.
Somewhere, there is someone seeing their own story reflected back through it.
Mamdani’s story is powerful.
However, it is not unique.
That is the point.
It is one of many; all tied together by something that goes far beyond football.
And that is why Arsenal will never just be a team.
It will always be something more.