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The Monexus
Vol. I · No. 165
Sunday, 14 June 2026
Saturday Ed.
Updated 08:44 UTC
  • UTC08:44
  • EDT04:44
  • GMT09:44
  • CET10:44
  • JST17:44
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← The MonexusSports

Arsenal within one win of Premier League title after Havertz strike downs Burnley

Kai Havertz's second-half header proved the difference at the Emirates as Arsenal kept their nerve in a scrappy 1-0 victory that leaves them one result away from ending a 22-year wait for the Premier League crown.

@TheAthletic · Telegram

Arsenal moved within one victory of the Premier League title on Sunday after Kai Havertz's second-half goal sealed a 1-0 win over already-relegated Burnley at the Emirates Stadium. The German's looping header in the 62nd minute proved enough against a Burnley side that arrived with nothing to play for but left with a grievance, as interim manager Mike Jackson labelled Havertz's earlier challenge on Charlie Taylor a red-card offence that the officials missed.

The result leaves Arsenal on 86 points with one fixture remaining. They will be crowned champions if they win at home to Southampton on Wednesday, or if Manchester City fail to beat Fulham at Craven Cottage later that same evening. Pep Guardiola's side sit three points behind but with a game in hand — a scenario that keeps the race mathematically alive but puts the outcome firmly in Arsenal's hands for the first time since the campaign's early months.

A result shaped by VAR ambiguity

The defining episode of the match arrived in the 52nd minute when Havertz caught Taylor with a high boot as the pair challenged for a headed ball. The Emirates crowd groaned audibly when referee Peter Bankes reached for his pocket but produced only a yellow card. Burnley's bench remonstrated immediately; Jackson was unsparing in his assessment afterward.

"It's a dangerous challenge. I've seen it back and I think he should have been sent off," Jackson told BBC Sport on 18 May 2026. Burnley's interim manager framed the decision as pivotal. "If that's a red card then the game changes completely. We were in it — we were organised, we were fighting. The officials have to get that right."

The incident joins a growing catalogue of borderline VAR moments that have coloured this title race. Arsenal have benefited from at least one overturned call this season; Manchester City have their own grievances from earlier in the term. Neither side will want the championship decided by officiating controversy, but that prospect now exists.

The narrow margin Arsenal have learned to live with

This was not a performance that will feature in any season-end highlight reel. Arsenal dominated possession as expected but created little of genuine quality against a Burnley side playing their fourth match in eleven days. The decisive moment came from a set piece — Jurrien Timber's outswinging corner met Havertz arriving at pace, and the finish was coolly taken.

Unconvincing has been a recurring critique of this Arsenal side in tight games, and Sunday did nothing to dispel it. What has changed from previous seasons is the capacity to grind out results regardless of performance quality. The 2023-24 side drew five matches from winning positions; this version has lost only once since February. That resilience, not fluency, has carried them to the precipice of something historic.

The City equation and what comes next

The arithmetic is straightforward. Arsenal's final match is at home to Southampton, who are certain to finish bottom. Manchester City must beat Fulham and then overcome Everton on the final day to overtake Arsenal on goal difference — a sequence that requires City to take maximum points while Arsenal falter against the league's worst defence.

Guardiola has been here before. His City side have produced remarkable winning runs under pressure and know that anything less than two victories hands the title to Arsenal. The ambiguity surrounding Kevin De Bruyne's fitness — the Belgian midfielder was absent from City's last match through illness — adds an uncertainty Guardiola will not want to carry into such a consequential fortnight.

For Arsenal, the wait for a first league crown since 2004 is down to days rather than months. They have navigated four rounds of this title race in second gear, never quite convincing but never quite failing. The final step may require them to be more convincing still — against a Southampton side with nothing to lose and everything to play for in terms of pride.

Sunday's victory was not a statement. It was a survival. Whether that proves sufficient will be known by Thursday morning.

Arsenal drew 1-1 at the Emirates against City in April — a result that handed them the initiative in this race. Monexus covered that match as a tactical stalemate; the wire framing pushed by the BBC on Sunday was resolutely outcome-focused, treating the title as Arsenal's to lose rather than City's to retake.

© 2026 Monexus Media · reported from the wire