A day to celebrate reinvention and regeneration found the perfect way to mark those qualities. Arsenal are unrecognisable from the club that spent half a decade toiling beneath the elite and Granit Xhaka, in his final game for them, supplied a poetic reminder of his own redemption arc. Parallels can be drawn between the recovery of Xhaka’s credibility under Mikel Arteta and that of his flourishing team; here all parties played the hits and, as sign-offs go, it could hardly have been more appropriate.
Xhaka’s impending move to Bayer Leverkusen is an open secret but this was a clear, heartfelt farewell message played out in public. When he opened the scoring after 11 minutes it felt like a pleasant bow with which to wrap up; a second goal straight afterwards felt too good to be true and anyone requiring more should have been sated shortly after the half-hour. Presented with a glorious chance to complete his hat-trick, Xhaka completely fluffed a half-volley in front of goal. Once upon a time, that brand of mishap would have met boos: this time there were chuckles from an audience who have learned to accept their midfielder, warts and all.
More Stories
Generation TikTok: how sportswomen set the bar higher than the men
Jack Draper faces battle to be in top shape for Australian Open after injury
England name four potential Women’s Ashes debutants for Australia tour