Sports

Arsenal bids farewell to 'bottler' label and Pep Guardiola with Premier League title forged in response to both

Not only have soccer fans heard the word surrounding Arsenal by now, they’ve surely heard it hundreds of times.

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“Bottle.” As in, to fumble away a golden opportunity through your own incompetence. “Choke” being the closest analog in American sports parlance.

The Gunners finished second the past three seasons in a row, allowing Manchester City to hunt them down the first two and then floundering as Liverpool took the crown many expected to be theirs last season. It almost became intrinsic to Arsenal, in the minds of soccer fans and media and maybe even players themselves, this idea that what bottlecapped Mikel Arteta’s project was not down to talent or resources, but to mentality and weakness in the most pressure-packed of moments.

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It sure seemed headed that way again in late April when Arsenal lost at City, failing to win for a fifth time in six games across all competitions. City erased a nine-point gap in the table on Arsenal in just over a month. The Gunners were bottling it again.

Midfielder Declan Rice, arguably Arsenal’s best player, was glimpsed moments after the loss telling teammates “it’s not done.” At the time, it seemed like he was trying to convince himself the inevitable wouldn’t happen.

As of Tuesday, it proved prophetic.

City drew 1-1 at Bournemouth to render Arsenal mathematically uncatchable atop the Premier League table heading into the final weekend, andgiving Arsenal its long-awaited first league title in 22 years.

Arsenal’s evolution spurred by Pep Guardiola’s Manchester City

Since that loss to City, Arsenal has won four in a row in the league and advanced to the Champions League final for the first time in 20 years, dispatching Atlético Madrid over two legs. Moreover, the Gunners conceded just once over those six games, a penalty at the cauldron-like Wanda Metropolitano in Madrid.

That’s a distinct element of the Arsenal that Arteta yearned to build ever since his appointment as manager in December 2019 — and one that was in direct response toCity’s outgoing manager, Pep Guardiola.

Guardiola spent a decade changing the face of the Premier League through expansive, innovative tactics and expensive, intense team-building. He was constantly evolving City, with players popping up in different spots and serving different roles and driving the rest of the league up the wall trying to defend it. Arteta saw it firsthand, spending over three years as Guardiola’s chief assistant before taking the top job at Arsenal, where he played the final five seasons of his career.

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City won the league six times in seven seasons under Guardiola with unconscionable point totals (three for a win, one for a draw, none for a loss). Its 100 points to win the title in 2017-18 remain a record to this day, while Liverpool’s 97 a year later (City had 98) is by far the most ever by a league runner-up. For reference, the maximum number of points a Premier League team can earn is 114.

There was unconscionable financial backing, too, that comes with a caveat.City isstillfacing an unprecedented 115 chargesof breaching FIFA’s financial fair play (FFP) rules from 2009-2018, and while the details are somewhat convoluted, the simple allegations accuse City of false accounting and improper disclosure of financial figures that helped it spend much more money on players than other clubs. Scores of clubs have been punished with point deductions and such for related but far lesser offenses, while City’s case has been stuck in limbo for over three years.

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That won’t be re-litigated in this space, because as it directly relates to Arsenal’s Premier League title this season, the task of unseating Guardiola’s City was simple. And staggering, even for a super-rich club like Arsenal.

How Mikel Arteta’s Arsenal endeavored to return to the top of the Premier League

Instead of trying to beat City at its own game, Arteta sought toconstrictthe game. It would be both wrong and unfair to characterize Arteta’s tactics over the years as negative soccer, or dark arts-y in totality. But they certainly desired to control possession, build chances through intricate passing sequences, and master rest defense (i.e. when you’re out of possession).

Look at three of Arsenal’s last four Premier League victories, all 1-0s that perhaps belied how much the Gunners were really in control each time. It wouldn’t always be pretty and free-flowing exclusively attack-minded, but it would be effective.

It’s a far cry from the mess Arteta inherited, with Arsenal trending toward mid-table finishes on an annual basis and wholly unfit to challenge for the two biggest trophies on offer to English clubs, the Premier League and Champions League. A former Arsenal captain himself, Arteta made the most out of his limited abilities through work rate and smarts, and he sought to imprint such qualities on his sides.

Kai Havertz (29) scored the decisive goal as Arsenal beat Burnley on Monday, points that proved critical to winning the Premier League. (Photo by Stuart MacFarlane/Arsenal FC via Getty Images)

First, he needed the squad to do it, and Arsenal underwent a series of key changes in that regard. Together with club sporting directors Edu and Andrea Berta — the latter the first ever in the club’s history — as well as academy director Per Mertesacker, a longtime Arsenal defender who joined the club on the same day as Arteta in late August 2011, Arteta identified the players needed to contend, and Arsenal’s ownership opened up the checkbook.

Nobody can realistically outspend City, but Stan Kroenke, who owns the Gunners in addition to the NFL’s Los Angeles Rams, NBA’s Denver Nuggets and NHL’s Colorado Avalanche, has smashed club transfer records the past few years.Twelve of Arsenal’s 20 most expensive signings ever play for the 2025-26 team,including seven of the top 10 and four of the top five. So through player development and shrewd transfer market spending, Arsenal built a squad capable of restoring glory.

Arsenal doesn’t win the Premier League this season without failure

That took time, probably more time than is typically allotted to projects nowadays in major club soccer, and didn’t begin yielding true dividends until the 2022-23 campaign, when a number of promising youngsters came of age. Arsenal’s youth showed late, winning just three times in its final nine league matches and ceding the title to City despite having spent 30 of 38 matchweeks in first place.

The following campaign, Arsenal finished on an absolute tear, winning 16 times in its last 18 games, picking up 49 of a possible 54 points from late January on. They finished second again, as City didn’t lose any of its final 23 matches.

Last season, injuries piled up at a ridiculous clip, and Liverpool’s veteran stars turned back the clock to cruise relatively unencumbered to a second Premier League title in five years. Arsenal finished second once again.

Call all that “bottling” if you’d like. More accurately, it’s just the scars you have to earn before the trophies come.

Winning the Premier League takes a mixture of talent, planning, timing and good fortune. It’s not about beating all the other best teams — indeed, Arsenal’s record against the other clubs at the top of the table this season isn’t as sterling as it’s been in recent years — or catching fire over a single postseason.

It’s about 38 battles played out over nearly 10 months, home and away at every club in the league, the same points available to everyone else, with their attendant ups and downs and triumphs and setbacks and navigation of both the outside noise and the inside nerves.

After their meeting in April, Arsenal negotiated it all better than City, which suffered two critical draws to help the Gunners get over the finish line.

Arsenal may not have done it in a style that appeases neutrals, and certainly not with City’s flair. But it has done it nonetheless, the culmination of a yearslong project, the “bottler” label now bottled up forever.

Arsenal bids farewell to 'bottler' label and Pep Guardiola with Premier League title forged in response to both

Not only have soccer fans heard the word surrounding Arsenal by now, they’ve surely heard it hundreds of times. “Bottle.” As in, t...
US Rep. Thomas Massie's GOP primary in Kentucky is the latest test of Trump's power over the party

CRESTWOOD, Ky. (AP) — Republican voters in northern Kentucky will choose between U.S. Rep. Thomas Massie and challenger Ed Gallrein in Tuesday's House primary, another test of President Donald Trump's power over his party after he handpicked Gallrein to take on the incumbent.

Associated Press Rep. Thomas Massie, R-KY, speaks to reporters after a Kentucky Educational Television (KET) debate, Monday, May 4, 2026, in Lexington, Ky. (AP Photo/Jon Cherry) Republican congressional candidate for Kentucky, Ed Gallrein, speaks on stage during the Kenton County Republican Party Lincoln Day Dinner, Thursday, April 30, 2026, in Covington, Ky. (AP Photo/Jon Cherry) Republican Kentucky candidates for U.S. Senate Daniel Cameron and Andy Barr shake hands during the Kenton County Republican Party Lincoln Day Dinner, Thursday, April 30, 2026, in Covington, Ky. (AP Photo/Jon Cherry) Rep. Andy Barr, R-KY, a Trump-endorsed candidate for the U.S. Senate, speaks to guests of the Kenton County Republican Party Lincoln Day Dinner, Thursday, April 30, 2026, in Covington, Ky. (AP Photo/Jon Cherry) Former Kentucky Attorney General and candidate for U.S. Senate Daniel Cameron speaks on stage during the Kenton County Republican Party Lincoln Day Dinner, Thursday, April 30, 2026, in Covington, Ky. (AP Photo/Jon Cherry)

Election 2026 Kentucky

The primary race turned white hot in the final stretch. Massie brought in a phalanx of other Republicans, including Rep. Lauren Boebert, in an attempt to show voters that they could support both him and Trump. Trump ratcheted up his social media attacks on Massie, calling him “an obstructionist and a fool,” and Gallrein shared a stage withDefense Secretary Pete Hegsethon Monday.

Trump has tightened his grip on the Republican Party in his second term, successfully purging those who deviate from his agenda, but Massie is one of the last and most outspoken holdouts. A Massie defeat on Tuesday would serve as one of the most powerful demonstrations yet of Trump’s influence over Republican voters.

The matchup between the congressman, who has been in office since 2012, and a first time candidate running on his loyalty to Trump has become the most expensive U.S. House primary in history.

Massie challenged the president last year to release the Jeffrey Epstein files, which became a political drag for the White House. He has also criticized the war in Iran and refused to vote for Trump's signature tax legislation over concerns that it would increase the national debt.

Trump visitedKentucky to boost Gallrein in March. The president has had a string of successdefeating dissentersin his party, pushing to oustSen. Bill Cassidyin Louisiana and severalIndiana state senatorswho defied him on redistricting.

The winner of Tuesday's primary is expected to take the general election in the deeply red 4th Congressional District, which stretches along the state's northernmost border.

Republicans statewide will also choose their nominee toreplace Mitch McConnell, the longtime U.S. Senate leader, in a contest that represents a generational changing of the guard for the party. Rep. Andy Barr, endorsed by Trump, faces Daniel Cameron, a former state attorney general.

Can Republican voters support both Trump and Massie?

Massie's challenge is to win over voters who generally think favorably of Trump, the same man telling them to vote for Gallrein. It's not the first Republican primary Trump has tried to sway, but Massie's overt rebelliousness has been a particular challenge to the president.

Gallrein, a retired U.S. Navy SEAL, embraced the role Trump gave him, focusing his pitch to voters on his personal history and unwavering loyalty to the president. Massie, he argued, betrayed Trump and the party.

Hegseth made a visit to the district Monday to boost Gallrein and lambast Massie, a break from tradition that came while the nation is at war. Hegseth said he was speaking “as a private citizen.”

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Some voters were already fed up with Massie bucking the party.

George Scherzer, who lives in the small town of Crestwood, Kentucky, supported Massie in past elections but didn’t like the congressman’s lack of support on some of the president’s agenda, including last year’s tax and spending bill, known as the One Big Beautiful Bill.

“Some of his votes just did not make sense to me,” he said.

Massie has argued that voters do not have to choose between Trump and him, noting that he voted with his party the vast majority of the time. As for the remainder, he said those were on proposals that violated his America First principles such as adding to the national debt and getting into military entanglements, such as the war with Iran.

Massie has voted against U.S. aid to Israel and has faced accusations of antisemitism. He has denied the charges, arguing he's generally against all foreign aid. But the race has drawn in millions of dollars against him from pro-Israel interest groups, including from the Republican Jewish Coalition Victory Fund.

That's become a stump topic for Massie, who says the attempt to oust him is to send a warning to other lawmakers who oppose the president or aid to Israel.

In a pitch to Kentucky Republicans, Boebert posted photos both of her with Massie and with Trump on X, and wrote, “I support both of these men.” Replying to Boebert's message on X, Massie said, “she likes both Trump and me! Yes it’s possible!!”

Trump lashed out at Boebert on Truth Social, asking for a Republican to challenge her even though the filing deadline in her home state of Colorado has already passed. “Anybody that dumb deserves a good Primary fight!” he wrote.

McConnell goes largely unmentioned in primary for his seat

Barr and Cameron have tiptoed around their relationship with McConnell, who they previously worked under.

McConnell criticized Trump over the Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the U.S. Capitol and more recently voted against some of his Cabinet picks. He is stepping down after he becoming the longest serving Senate leader in American history, coinciding with a transformation of the party under Trump.

Many Republicans, while admiring McConnell's achievements, see him as out of step with the Make America Great Again and America First movements spawned by Trump. Both Barr and Cameron have taken note, and while ingratiating themselves to the president have put some distance between themselves and McConnell.

US Rep. Thomas Massie's GOP primary in Kentucky is the latest test of Trump's power over the party

CRESTWOOD, Ky. (AP) — Republican voters in northern Kentucky will choose between U.S. Rep. Thomas Massie and challenger Ed Gallrein in ...
NFL approves increase to 10 international games

NFL owners approved on Tuesday a maximum of 10 league-run international regular-season games per season, an increase from eight annually, starting as soon as 2027.

Field Level Media

"There's a path to 10 (international games) in 2027," executive vice president of club business, international and league events Peter O'Reilly said from the NFL's spring league meeting in Orlando, Fla.

The owners also voted to take away a team's ability to protect two home games from international play. That should make it less complicated to construct the schedule.

NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell has said the goal is 16 international games, which could lead to at least one such game per team in a given season. The league can play as many as 10 games outside the United States, according to the collective bargaining agreement with the NFL Players Association.

The 2026 schedule has a record nine international games -- eight run by the league and one in London after an agreement between the Jacksonville Jaguars and Wembley Stadium. The Jaguars have consecutive games in London, including one as the home team, while EverBank Stadium in Jacksonville is undergoing renovations.

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O'Reilly said that the exception made for nine games this season "shows the momentum and I think the support for the model we have" and he could see a future with 16 international games in one season.

The 2026 slate features games across four continents, including first-time host countries France (Paris) and Australia (Melbourne). Rio de Janeiro is a host city for the first time, while other games will be in London (three), Munich (one), Madrid (one) and Mexico City (one).

O'Reilly said that Asian markets such as Japan could be future sites, but probably not as soon as 2027.

"Our strategy is not one and done," O'Reilly said. "Our goal is to go back to those markets that we're establishing."

A Super Bowl at an international site is not a priority at this time, he said.

--Field Level Media

NFL approves increase to 10 international games

NFL owners approved on Tuesday a maximum of 10 league-run international regular-season games per season, an increase from eight annuall...
Why Gina Carano tapped out so fast vs. Ronda Rousey

Gina Carano lasted 17 seconds against Ronda Rousey, and reconciling the lightning-quick loss has lasted much longer.

USA TODAY

“My heart is heavy, I wanted to throw, battle, win, but I kicked when I should have moved and was down and done,’’Carano wrote on Instagramon Monday, May 18, two days after the highly promoted MMA fight. “If I hadn’t tapped she would’ve broken my arm, as it had begun to crackle.

“The disappointment of losing like that is very humbling.”

After the fight, Carano said, she was approached by UFC legend Jon Jones.

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Wrote Carano, “Jon said, ‘You haven’t fought in 17 years? Do you know how (courageous you) have to be to get back in there after that long? Did you set some sort of record or something? Respect!’

“That’s exactly what I needed to hear from the best to ever to do it.”

Carano, 44,noted she lost 100 poundsto get prepared to fight the 39-year-old Rousey at a maximum weight of 145 pounds. Carano weighed in at 141.1, and there were no audible boos when she tapped out almost as soon as the fight began.

“Thank you ALL for showing your support,’’ Carano wrote. “It’s because of you we get to face our fears and live our dreams.”

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Gina Carano explains why she tapped out vs. Ronda Rousey so fast

Why Gina Carano tapped out so fast vs. Ronda Rousey

Gina Carano lasted 17 seconds against Ronda Rousey, and reconciling the lightning-quick loss has lasted much longer. “My heart is ...
Starbucks Korea head fired after promotion sparks public uproar

SEOUL, May 19 (Reuters) - South Korea's food conglomerate Shinsegae Group has fired the head of ‌Starbucks Korea after a promotion campaign sparked public ‌uproar on the anniversary of pro-democracy protests.

Reuters

• Shinsegae, the South Korean ​licensee of the U.S. coffee chain, said in statement on Monday that Chairman Chung Yong-jin sacked Sohn Jeong-hyun, the head of Starbucks Korea, for carrying out "inappropriate ‌marketing."

• Hours earlier the ⁠South Korean coffee chain launched a "Tank Day" promotion, which South Koreans saw as a ⁠reminder of military tanks ramming protesters who fought against dictatorship in 1980s. The promotion offered discounts to ​customers who ​bought tumblers. The campaign ​used wording that recalled ‌a former South Korean official's explanation for the death of a student protester in 1987, who was found to have been tortured.

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• South Korea marked Democratisation Movement Day on Monday, the anniversary of the student-led ‌Gwangju uprising. Hundreds, and possibly ​thousands, are believed to have ​been killed when citizens ​rose up against military dictator Chun ‌Doo-hwan on May 18, 1980.

• ​Starbucks Korea posted ​a statement on website apologising for the promotion.

• President Lee Jae Myung said on X that ​he was "enraged" ‌and demanded the company apologise to families of ​people killed during the uprising.

(Reporting by Heejin ​Kim; Editing by Sam Holmes)

Starbucks Korea head fired after promotion sparks public uproar

SEOUL, May 19 (Reuters) - South Korea's food conglomerate Shinsegae Group has fired the head of ‌Starbucks Korea after a promotion ...

 

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