Nottingham Forest 1-0 Arsenal: Taiwo Awoniyi’s early goal confirms Man City as Champions

There was no sign of Win, Arsenal’s chocolate Labrador, at the City Ground. Maybe he was on a choke chain somewhere. There was no sign of win, the opposite of lose, either. Not for Mikel Arteta’s team anyway. They have only recorded two of those in their last eight games. It appears they have given their dog a bad name.

This 1-0 defeat to Nottingham Forest in front of an uproarious crowd deliriously happy at being delivered from relegation meant that a title race that once promised to go down to the wire ended with a whimper. Faced with the relentlessness of Manchester City, Arsenal simply could not keep up.

And so in the end, City and their manager Pep Guardiola were handed their third title in a row and their fifth in six years without kicking a ball. The title was lost on the banks of the River Trent and Arsenal slunk away to lick their wounds, their retreat from greatness complete.

City’s game against Chelsea tomorrow will not be laden with nerves or any sense of jeopardy, as it might once have been. It will be a coronation. It will be billed as the first instalment of the Treble completed.

With Arsenal’s defeat, City became only the fifth English club to lift three consecutive top-flight titles. Guardiola, widely recognised as the leading coach in the world, is the second manager, after Ferguson, to achieve that.

Nottingham Forest 1-0 Arsenal: Taiwo Awoniyi’s early goal confirms Man City as Champions

Taiwo Awoniyi’s goal made Manchester City the Premier League Champions this year, and kept Nottingham Forest safe

Mikel Arteta's side were unable to get past a resilient defensive performance by Steve Cooper's Nottingham Forest

Mikel Arteta’s side were unable to get past a resilient defensive performance by Steve Cooper’s Nottingham Forest

Manchester City unveiled a banner at the Etihad which read '3-in-a-row' after another Premier League title was secured

Manchester City unveiled a banner at the Etihad which read ‘3-in-a-row’ after another Premier League title was secured

There was a time when Arsenal threatened to dethrone the champions but, in the end, they flattered to deceive. They have had a wonderful season, a season that exceeded their expectations, a season when Bukayo Saka and Martin Odegaard, in particular, excelled. But it is ending with a cloying sense of anti-climax and what might have been.

MATCH RATINGS 

Nottingham Forest (3-4-2-1): Navas 8.5 (Hennessey 90min); Worrall 8.5, Felipe 8.5 (Boly 79, 6), Niakhate 8; Aurier 8.5, Mangala 8, Yates 9, Lodi 9; Gibbs-White 9, Danilo 7 (Kouyate 72, 6); Awoniyi 7.5 (Johnson 79, 6). 

Subs not used: Toffolo, Surridge, Freuler, Dennis, Ayew.

Scorers: Awoniyi 19

Booked: Niakhate, Awoniyi

Manager: Steve Cooper 9

Arsenal (4-3-3): Ramsdale 6; Partey 4.5, White 6, Gabriel 5, Kiwior 6 (Tierney 63, 6); Odegaard 5, Jorginho 6, Xhaka 5 (Nketiah 63, 6); Saka 4.5, G Jesus 4.5, Trossard 4.5 (Vieira 70, 6). 

Subs not used: Turner, Smith-Rowe, Holding, Bandeira, Cozier-Duberry, Walters.

Booked: Jesus, Gabriel

Manager: Mikel Arteta 4

Referee: Anthony Taylor (Cheshire) 7

Attendance: 29,514

The opposite was true for Forest. This triumph means they are safe and that the remaining relegation places will be contested by Leicester, Leeds United and Everton. That achievement is a triumph for their manager, Steve Cooper, who has done such a superb job this season and it is a triumph for their owner, Evangelos Marinakis, who stuck with Cooper when other clubs were panicked into sacking their bosses.

Marinakis went through tortures in the directors’ box here but when the final whistle went a great roar rose up from this stadium and rolled across the River Trent and far beyond to signal another season to be spent in the Premier League.

Forest and their fans celebrated wildly. The players did a lap of honour on the pitch to celebrate survival and danced and cavorted to Freed From Desire. Their desire in this match at least, was what separated them from Arsenal. Desire was something Arteta’s side appeared to have lost.

Somewhere in the north west, perhaps on the golf course at Mottram Hall in Cheshire where Ferguson was told Oldham had drawn with Aston Villa and so United had won the title 30 years ago, Guardiola would have learned of his latest triumph.

He and his team still have more lands to conquer. If this all came too early for Arteta’s young Arsenal team, City are in their pomp. They can rest players for their remaining three league games and keep them fresh for the FA Cup Final against United at Wembley on June 3 and the Champions League Final against Internazionale in Istanbul on June 10.

Arsenal will at least be able to look forward to playing in the Champions League next season. They must capitalise on what they have achieved and strengthen from a position of strength. When the disappointment of how it all ended fades, they must realise they have an opportunity here.

Odegaard tricked his marker with a beautiful feint near the Forest touchline and when the ball was worked to Leandro Trossard, he slipped a pass through to Gabriel Jesus. Jesus darted on to it but Keylor Navas rushed out to smother his shot.

Midway through the half, though, Arsenal gifted Forest the opener. Odegaard, usually so meticulous, played a loose pass straight to Morgan Gibbs-White and Gibbs-White advanced on the retreating Arsenal defence.

Taiwo Awoniyi peeled away to the right, Gibbs-White chose the perfect moment to play the ball to him and when Gabriel slid in to try to clear the ball, he played it against Awoniyi and the ball rebounded off his leg and past Aaron Ramsdale into the net.

Ryan Yates celebrating at the full-time whistle, with safety confirmed for the valiant hosts

Ryan Yates celebrating at the full-time whistle, with safety confirmed for the valiant hosts

Awoniyi broke quickly and tempted Aaron Ramsdale out of the goal, before putting the ball over him and into the net

Awoniyi broke quickly and tempted Aaron Ramsdale out of the goal, before putting the ball over him and into the net

Arsenal dominated possession in the quest for an equaliser but had precious little to show for it in the first half. But soon after the interval, Forest were lucky to escape when the visitors thought they had won a penalty.

Jesus ghosted on to a through ball and ran across Joe Worrall, who yanked him back by the shoulder. Jesus went theatrically to ground but referee Anthony Taylor waved play on. Jesus was so incensed by the decision that his protests earned him a yellow card.

A quarter of an hour later, Forest nearly went further ahead. A mistake from Ben White, fresh from his mauling by Kaoru Mitoma in Arsenal’s defeat to Brighton last week, let Gibbs-White in on goal but when he tried to beat Ramsdale at the near post from a tight angle, he dragged his shot into the side-netting.

Arsenal did everything they could to drag themselves back into the match but they never discomforted Forest. They were spent. Their season was done. Back in London, Win was getting used to losing. Up in Manchester, City were celebrating.

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