INSIDE THE TACTICAL BRILLIANCE THAT UNLEASHED MAX DOWMAN AGAINST VETERAN EVERTON DEFENDERS
Max Dowman makes history at 16 years, 73 days, becoming the youngest scorer in Premier League and Arsenal history.
Max Dowman just made Premier League history. At 16 years and 73 days old, he scored for Arsenal in a 2-0 win over Everton, making him the youngest ever to find the net in the league.
The game dragged on, feeling like it might sputter out into a dull draw, until Mikel Arteta brought Dowman on in the 75th minute. Suddenly, everything changed. Dowman whipped in a cross from the right, and after a bit of chaos in the box, the ball bounced to Viktor Gyökeres, another sub, who hammered it home in the 89th minute.
Everton weren’t finished, though. They pushed for a last-gasp equaliser and even sent Jordan Pickford up for a corner in stoppage time. But Arsenal cleared the danger. Dowman picked up the loose ball on the edge of his own area and just took off.
He breezed past Vitalii Mykolenko. Then, with a cheeky move right on the halfway line, he sent Kieran Dewsbury-Hall sprawling. Suddenly, it was wide open. Dowman kept his nerve, carried the ball all the way to the Everton box, and calmly slotted it into the empty net. The home crowd absolutely exploded.
Let’s talk about records. Dowman’s goal broke James Vaughan’s nearly 20-year-old record as the youngest Premier League scorer. Vaughan scored at 16 years and 270 days back in 2005. Dowman is now also Arsenal’s youngest-ever goalscorer, taking the record from Cesc Fabregas, who set it in 2003 during a League Cup match at 16 years and 212 days.
This wasn’t just a big day for Dowman. Arsenal’s substitutes have now scored 22 goals this season, a club record. Until now, they’d never used their bench this effectively.
The win put Arsenal ten points clear of Manchester City. And if you’re counting, they’ve racked up 70 points this season, more than Spurs managed in the last two seasons combined. There was a downer, though Jurrien Timber limped off injured in the first half, with the Carabao Cup final looming.
After the match, Arteta could hardly hide his delight. He told Sky Sports, “It’s natural for him. He doesn’t feel the pressure; that’s the best thing. He does what he feels, and when you have such a talent, I’m sure good things are going to happen."
For the title race, Arteta summed it up: “Job done from our side. The performance on every level was very good. We are playing every three days, and the players deserve a lot of credit. We want to create memories and moments. I’m sure for many years, people who were in the stadium today will say, ‘I was at the Emirates when that kid at 16 scored that goal in such an important moment of the season.’”
WHY GYOKERES BELIEVES SALIBA AND GABRIEL ARE FOOTBALL'S BEST CENTER-BACK DUO
Viktor Gyokeres praises Arsenal's Saliba and Gabriel as the best defensive duo before the Champions League semi-final vs Atletico.
Viktor Gyokeres doesn’t hide how lucky he feels training with Gabriel and William Saliba. For him, this is as good as it gets for a centre-back pairing. “Honestly, I don’t think you can find better centre-backs than what we have,” he said. “Training against them, playing with them, I'm blessed, really.”
David Raya’s about to snatch another Golden Glove, thanks in no small part to the guys right in front of him. Seventeen clean sheets in the Premier League don’t come easy, and it’s Gabriel and Saliba who keep things solid at the back. They’ve become one of the best partnerships you’ll see anywhere, and Arsenal’s banking on them to help push for just their second Champions League final ever.
Next up, Arsenal face Atletico Madrid at home on Tuesday night, the second leg of the semi-final, after drawing 1-1 in Spain last week.
Gyokeres is hitting his stride, too. After his two goals against Fulham on Saturday, he’s up to 21 for the season. The Swede’s different since the new year rolled in. 14 of those goals came in 2026, and you can tell he’s getting more comfortable in an Arsenal shirt with every match. “You get to know everyone, you settle into life, and the routines – just everything – about changing clubs,” he said. “The more you play together, game after game, the easier it gets.”
There’s something else: Gyokeres has scored his last 27 penalties, including the one that buried Fulham. That coolness from the spot might come in handy if things are still locked after 120 minutes on Tuesday. So, what goes through his head when lining up for a penalty? “Don’t try to think too much. Just put it in the back of the net,” Gyokeres said. That’s pretty much it.
When someone asked if Arsenal had spent extra time practising penalties ahead of the big game, Gyokeres just smiled and said, “No comment.”
TITLE RACE MATH: WHY ARSENAL’S SIX-POINT LEAD CHANGES THE PRESSURE ON MAN CITY
Mikel Arteta’s Arsenal rediscovered their flowing football in a dominant win over Fulham, putting immense pressure on Manchester City.
Arsenal finally looked like themselves again, brushing past Fulham with the kind of confident, flowing football they showed earlier in the season, not the sluggish stuff fans have sat through lately.
Right from kickoff, they flew at Fulham and pretty much had the game wrapped up in the first half. That win nudges them six points ahead of Man City, though City has two games in hand. With just three matches left, every point feels golden. City heads to Everton on Monday for the first of those crucial fixtures.
This wasn’t just a win; it was a real confidence boost. Perfect timing, too, with the Champions League semi-final against Atletico Madrid just around the corner. You could see Arsenal were sharp right from the start. No signs of tired legs after that trip to Madrid. Myles Lewis-Skelly looked thrilled to finally get a start, and Trossard wasted no time getting involved, nearly scoring early on.
It didn’t take long for Arsenal to get the opener. Less than 10 minutes in, Saka, who wore the armband, danced past Jimenez (who slipped) and squared the ball for Gyokeres. An easy tap-in, his twentieth goal of the season. Not a bad haul for his debut year, especially considering how much criticism he’s taken.
Funny enough, the goal came at almost the same time as last week’s against Newcastle. But this time, Arsenal wanted to avoid the nerve-shredding finish they had then. They looked determined to put Fulham away early.
Fulham hardly touched the ball in that first half. Lukic picked up a yellow for hacking down Eze; it summed up Fulham’s frustration. They’ve never found much luck at Arsenal, and today continued that streak. Their fans barely had moments to cheer.
Leno spilt a cross at one point but managed to block Gyokeres’ follow-up. Saka blasted the rebound wide with the goal gaping, then Trossard floated a beauty to Calafiori at the back post, but the header was ruled out for offside.
Arsenal’s attacking play finally paid off again. Eze slipped a perfect ball through to Gyokeres, who held it up and teed up Saka, bursting into the box and finishing low into the corner.
Their confidence kept growing. Calafiori, charging forward again, set up Eze for a shot that bent just wide. Arsenal didn’t want the half to end, and with good reason. Just before the whistle, Trossard whipped in a great cross, and Gyokeres headed home for his second. Arsenal went into halftime cruising.
Arteta could actually afford to give Saka a rest, taking him off at the break to save his legs for Tuesday. Rice also got a breather soon after.
Fulham did show a little more bite after halftime. Jimenez hit one just over, and Castagne twice came close from a corner and then with a quick shot after the ball dropped to him at the edge of the box.
Arsenal could’ve pushed for more goals to boost their goal difference, but they opted to see the game out sensibly. Still, they nearly made it four when Calafiori’s header bounced off Leno’s head and onto the bar.
And then there was Max Dowman, who went on a mazy run from halfway; weaving through defenders, if that shot had found the net, people would be talking about it for years.
In the end, it was just the performance Arsenal needed: sharp, confident, and a reminder of what they’re capable of.