Audio By Carbonatix
Mikel Arteta considered his future as Arsenal manager after last season's title disappointment until deep "reflection" persuaded him to stay put.
The Gunners led the Premier League by five points from Manchester City before consecutive draws with Liverpool, West Ham and Southampton proved costly.
Arsenal's next game was a heavy defeat at City, who went on to win the title by five points from the London side.
"The first few weeks, very tough," said Arteta, looking back at his summer.
"The first thing you have to do is look in the mirror and understand - is there something that you should have done better or differently? If that is the case then learn from it.
"Judge yourself - 'are you still the right person to drive the club, the team, forwards in the way that you want and do you have that energy and that belief that you want to do it?'.
"It took a big reflection, but the answer is yes and I feel with a lot of energy and positiveness."
During the title run-in, Arsenal led 2-0 at Liverpool and West Ham before being held to draws, with winger Bukayo Saka missing a penalty when his side were 2-1 up against the Hammers.
Arsenal then needed two late goals to salvage a 3-3 draw against a Southampton side who went on to be relegated, before sliding to a telling 4-1 defeat at City.
Asked what was the difference between City and his team, Arteta said: "Momentum. In the key moments when it should have gone one way - and in many situations in the season it went for us - it didn't go for us.
"It was one, two, three and then we lost momentum and they took momentum.
"You are talking about a team that if they need to win 25 games in a row, they have the capacity to do that, so the last thing that they need is momentum and belief and we gave them that.
"We had games that we didn't win, especially the three draws that we had when momentum shifted.
"We should have won those games and we had enough to win those games - it was in our hands.
"They were key moments when we just weren't ruthless enough, clinical enough, didn't have the luck or we made certain mistakes that allowed that to happen. We have to recognise that as well."
Arsenal will play City in the Community Shield on Sunday. Despite Pep Guardiola's side losing Ilkay Gundogan and Riyad Mahrez this summer, Arteta warned against thinking City are at the end of a cycle.
"I've heard that a few times in the last seven years and they have won five titles," said Arteta, who was a coach under Guardiola at City before taking over in December 2019 at Arsenal.
"Knowing the manager and the people at the club, I don't think that's going to be the case."
Latest Stories
-
Don’t scrap OSP – Anti-corruption CSO demands review
2 hours -
GIS, EU vow closer security cooperation to boost northern border control
3 hours -
IGP leads major show of force with new armoured fleet
4 hours -
Two female prison officers killed in ghastly crash
4 hours -
Abolish or Reform? Abu Jinapor counsels sober reflection on debate over future of Special Prosecutor’s Office
6 hours -
2026 World Cup: Can Ghana navigate England, Croatia, and Panama in Group L?
6 hours -
NAIMOS task force arrests 9 Chinese illegal miners, destroys equipment at Dadieso
7 hours -
NAIMOS advances into Atiwa Forest, uncovers child labour, river diversion and heavy machinery
7 hours -
NAIMOS Task Force storms Fanteakwa South, dismantles galamsey operations
7 hours -
The Kissi Agyebeng Removal Bid: A Look at the Numbers
8 hours -
DVLA to roll out digitised accident reports, new number plates and 24-hour services
8 hours -
DVLA Workers’ Union opens 2025 Annual Residential Delegates Congress with call for excellence, equity and solidarity
9 hours -
Scholarships Secretariat sets December 8–9 interviews for Commonwealth Scholarship applicants
9 hours -
WASSCE decline reveals deep gaps, there’s need to overhaul education system – Franklin Cudjoe
10 hours -
JOY FM Drive Time host Lexis Bill leads fans up Aburi Mountain in energetic ‘Walk With Lexis’ fitness experience
10 hours
