Arteta Named Premier League Manager of the Season After Ending Arsenal’s 22-Year Wait
Posted on May 27, 2026, updated on May 27, 2026
Mikel Arteta has been named Premier League Manager of the Season after guiding Arsenal to their first title in 22 years. The award caps a remarkable six-and-a-half-year transformation of the club and recognises the consistency, resilience and belief that took the Gunners from near-misses to champions.
Arteta beat Pep Guardiola, Andoni Iraola, Keith Andrews, Regis Le Bris and Michael Carrick to the prize. His side topped the table from October and secured the title with a game to spare, finally converting three straight runner-up finishes into the silverware Arsenal had been chasing for so long.
When Arteta took charge in December 2019, Arsenal were at a low ebb. The squad was imbalanced, standards had slipped and supporters had grown frustrated with years of drift. Since then, he has rebuilt the club’s identity, replacing softness with structure, steel and a fierce competitive edge.
The Spaniard’s own words after Arsenal lifted the trophy at Crystal Palace on Sunday reflected both relief and pride. He spoke about the supporters’ long wait, the difficult moments along the way and the importance of the connection between the team, the fans and the club. He also admitted there were times when he doubted himself, making the title feel even more meaningful.
What stands out most about Arteta’s award is not just the trophy, but the scale of the turnaround it represents. Arsenal are now a team defined by their mentality as much as their football. They have become difficult to beat, more disciplined under pressure and far more capable of sustaining a title challenge over an entire season. Pep Guardiola’s praise of them as one of the most competitive sides he has faced underlines how far they have come.
This season’s success also feels like the start of something larger rather than the end of a journey. Arsenal have already shown they can go from challengers to champions, and Arteta now has the platform to push them toward further domestic and European honours. Winning the league has changed the expectations around the club, and the manager’s next task is to prove this was the beginning of a lasting era rather than a one-off peak.
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