Eddie Nketiah: The Young Arsenal ‘Goalscoring Machine’ Who Chelsea Let Go

 Eddie Nketiah celebrates scoring the first Arsenal goal during the side’s 2-1 Carabao Cup fourth round win over Norwich. Photograph: Shaun Botterill/Getty Images
Eddie Nketiah celebrates scoring the first Arsenal goal during the side’s 2-1 Carabao Cup fourth round win over Norwich. Photograph: Shaun Botterill/Getty Images
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Eddie Nketiah: The Young Arsenal ‘Goalscoring Machine’ Who Chelsea Let Go

 Eddie Nketiah celebrates scoring the first Arsenal goal during the side’s 2-1 Carabao Cup fourth round win over Norwich. Photograph: Shaun Botterill/Getty Images
Eddie Nketiah celebrates scoring the first Arsenal goal during the side’s 2-1 Carabao Cup fourth round win over Norwich. Photograph: Shaun Botterill/Getty Images

The world of elite youth football in London is, according to David Court, one of Arsenal’s senior figures in youth development over recent years, like a village. Everyone knows everyone. Young players, coaches, families, scouts – all come across each other in schoolboy football, district matches and academy games. So when Eddie Nketiah was released by Chelsea at under-14 level, word travelled fast.

Bob Arber, the head of Arsenal’s academy recruitment at the time, called in the youth midfielder Joe Willock to check on the surname of the Chelsea striker called Eddie who was being let go. “He’s being released?” came the reply. “He’s sick! Every time he plays against us he scores.” Arsenal invited Nketiah for a trial and included him in a match against West Ham. Naturally, he helped himself to a goal. The staff watching on looked at each other and nodded. Willock was not exaggerating.

Liam Brady was the head of youth development at the time and Nketiah’s characteristics soon won everybody over. “It is a Premier League rule – and a good rule – that when you take a boy on loan it is for a six-week period,” Brady says. “That gives ample time for the boy and the club to make a judgment. He just grew on everybody. It is not easy when you are told you have to leave a club but he has guts and seized a new opportunity. We signed him and he hasn’t stopped scoring since.”

It was quite the moment on Tuesday when Willock and Nketiah were among the eight graduates of Arsenal’s Hale End academy celebrating on the pitch at the end of one of those sudden footballing explosions that occur when a young talent announces himself as if casting a magic spell.

At midday this Monday the young group of Arsenal’s next generation, including Nketiah, Willock, Reiss Nelson and Josh Dasilva, went to Tottenham’s training ground to watch their under-23 team-mates play. Ordinarily they would be in that team, that environment, but within 36 hours Nketiah’s world was transformed. He made his home debut in the Carabao Cup against Norwich, equalised within seconds, scored a brilliant and brave winner, and showcased to a crowd of 60,000 the finishing qualities that are his speciality. Out of nowhere he was trending on Twitter, his name sung to the rafters, receiving messages from Thierry Henry, complimented by Arsène Wenger, and mischievously renamed on Wikipedia as “Edward Keddar Pelé Maradona Ronaldinho Kaka Nketiah”.

It could go to a young player’s head but Court is hopeful Nketiah is grounded enough, and surrounded by a loving, supportive family, to resist the temptation to get carried away. “I don’t think I have seen a debut like that where the crowd have warmed to a player so much,” Court says.

“But he has not made it yet. He needs people around him to look after him. He is a great kid and his family go everywhere to watch him. Hopefully he can stay level-headed.”

A few months ago Nketiah’s father saw Court at a youth game at Borehamwood, and went up to say he had never had a proper chance to thank the Arsenal staff for giving his son another opportunity after the release by Chelsea. The general feeling in the game was that Nketiah was too small, and there were doubts he would develop enough physically. Also Chelsea had Tammy Abraham impressing as a forward in the same group. Abraham, an excellent talent, has grown up to be a good seven inches taller than the 1.75m (5ft 7in)Nketiah.

Brady remembers sizing up this pocket rocket. “You could tell straight away he is a very clever player but physically he was behind boys of his age,” he says. “But the other thing that stood out was that he nearly always scored.”

Although by no means a giant he is big enough now and it was notable that Wenger was impressed to observe Nketiah outjumping two hulking Norwich defenders to glance in with power and accuracy to send Arsenal into the next round of the Carabao Cup. Although Nketiah has a reputation as a natural finisher (his record is 48 goals from 63 games between under-18 and under-23 at Arsenal, with seven goals from four England under-18 and under-19 caps) there is more to Nketiah than pure finishing. “He is a goalscoring machine,” says Court, “and the beauty is he can score with both feet and his head, but he also has great movement. You see other things in his game.”

Obviously delighted by the impact he made against Norwich, Court sent Nketiah a text the morning after his match-winning heroics: “You did us proud,” it read. “Now keep listening and learning.”

His phone soon buzzed with a reply: “Thanks for believing in me.”

Fans’ group oppose Keswick and Kroenke Jr re-election

The Arsenal Supporters’ Trust will vote against the re-appointment of the club’s chairman Sir Chips Keswick and Josh Kroenke to the board of directors at Thursday’s annual general meeting in a bid to show “significant corporate governance change is needed”.

As part of each AGM, one third of the directors must retire on rotation from their position and seek re-election. Despite opposition from the AST, Keswick and Josh Kroenke, son of the American owner, are highly unlikely not to be re-appointed to the board.

Nevertheless, the AST believes their opposition will provide an opportunity to air their grievances. “All of the non-executive directors have been in office for far too long and are not regarded as independent under the corporate governance code. There is therefore no independence from the controlling shareholder, no-one free of conflict of interest, and not enough diversity on the board or people with relevant professional skills, such as football expertise,” said the AST in a statement.

The Guardian Sport



Slot Calls for 'Magic' as Liverpool Seek to Bridge Gap to Title Contenders

Arne Slot manager of Liverpooll reacts after the English Premier League match between Liverpool FC and Leeds United, in Liverpool, Britain, 01 January 2026.  EPA/PETER POWELL
Arne Slot manager of Liverpooll reacts after the English Premier League match between Liverpool FC and Leeds United, in Liverpool, Britain, 01 January 2026. EPA/PETER POWELL
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Slot Calls for 'Magic' as Liverpool Seek to Bridge Gap to Title Contenders

Arne Slot manager of Liverpooll reacts after the English Premier League match between Liverpool FC and Leeds United, in Liverpool, Britain, 01 January 2026.  EPA/PETER POWELL
Arne Slot manager of Liverpooll reacts after the English Premier League match between Liverpool FC and Leeds United, in Liverpool, Britain, 01 January 2026. EPA/PETER POWELL

Liverpool manager Arne Slot admitted his side needs "a bit of magic" to unlock tight games as the reigning Premier League champions sit fourth at the season's halfway point, 12 points behind leaders Arsenal.

Despite a seven-game unbeaten run in the league which steadied the ship after six losses in seven games prior, Slot painted a picture of grinding results rather than free-flowing football ahead of Sunday's trip to Fulham.

"Every single game we play, it is hard work. It is two teams quite close to each other," Slot told reporters.

"We are mainly the team that are probably better than the other team but not enough. We are constantly within this 20% difference and if you are inside this 20% difference then going to the floor or not means a lot for ⁠the result.

"I will keep pushing and the players will keep pushing to get to a situation where we are more than that 20%, we can make the difference bigger and then hopefully we are finding a moment when we can fly through the season."

Slot also said Liverpool cannot be considered title contenders at the moment with Arsenal and Manchester City -- separated by four points -- too far ahead ⁠while Aston Villa have also fallen by the wayside after their defeat against the league leaders.

"Realistically, I think there are two teams... with Villa being really close to them but because Arsenal won against Villa they created a bit of a gap (six points) towards Villa as well," Reuters quoted Slot as saying.

"Realistically, those two teams are quite far away from us and we should not look at those two at this moment in time."

While Liverpool have tightened up defensively, Slot highlighted ongoing struggles in attack despite dominating possession.

"It is clear and obvious we find it quite hard to generate enough chances for all the ball possession we have and that's not new for us this ⁠season," he said.

"Sometimes you need a bit of magic to unlock a game or a set-piece. If that happens, then all of a sudden everything looks much nicer, but that is not our season until now."

Slot expects a more open encounter against Marco Silva's Fulham, who drew with Crystal Palace on Thursday and sit 11th in the table.

"I expect a different game against Fulham... When we've played them and what I've seen from them, and they play a home game, so I think they will try to attack a lot and want to have the ball a lot," he said.

"At least that is how I know their manager, so it probably will be a much more open game. So we have to show in games like that we don't concede a lot as well."


Bournemouth's Semenyo to Play against Arsenal amid Transfer Interest from Man City

Antoine Semenyo of Bournemouth in action during the English Premier League match between Chelsea FC and AFC Bournemouth, in London, Britain, 30 December 2025.  EPA/DAVID CLIFF
Antoine Semenyo of Bournemouth in action during the English Premier League match between Chelsea FC and AFC Bournemouth, in London, Britain, 30 December 2025. EPA/DAVID CLIFF
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Bournemouth's Semenyo to Play against Arsenal amid Transfer Interest from Man City

Antoine Semenyo of Bournemouth in action during the English Premier League match between Chelsea FC and AFC Bournemouth, in London, Britain, 30 December 2025.  EPA/DAVID CLIFF
Antoine Semenyo of Bournemouth in action during the English Premier League match between Chelsea FC and AFC Bournemouth, in London, Britain, 30 December 2025. EPA/DAVID CLIFF

Bournemouth winger Antoine Semenyo is expected to play against Arsenal on Saturday despite reports linking him to an imminent transfer to Manchester City.

“Antoine is going to play, yes,” Bournemouth manager Andoni Iraola said Friday at a press conference.

The Ghana international is third on the Premier League's scoring chart this season — his nine goals trailing only Erling Haaland (19) and Brentford's Igor Thiago (11).

The Cherries host Arsenal and then Tottenham in midweek.

“The idea at least (is) that he is going to be available in these two home games,” The Associated Press quoted Iraola as saying. “I hope he can be here more time but I don't know what's going to happen.”

Iraola didn't dispute the reports that a move is close.

“There is nothing signed," he said. "For sure there are conversations. I understand a lot of the noise around, but there is nothing signed. Antoine is our player.”


Arteta Urges Arsenal to Break New Year Premier League Curse

30 December 2025, United Kingdom, London: Arsenal manager Mikel Arteta celebrates after the English Premier League soccer match between Arsenal and Aston Villa at the Emirates Stadium. Photo: John Walton/PA Wire/dpa
30 December 2025, United Kingdom, London: Arsenal manager Mikel Arteta celebrates after the English Premier League soccer match between Arsenal and Aston Villa at the Emirates Stadium. Photo: John Walton/PA Wire/dpa
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Arteta Urges Arsenal to Break New Year Premier League Curse

30 December 2025, United Kingdom, London: Arsenal manager Mikel Arteta celebrates after the English Premier League soccer match between Arsenal and Aston Villa at the Emirates Stadium. Photo: John Walton/PA Wire/dpa
30 December 2025, United Kingdom, London: Arsenal manager Mikel Arteta celebrates after the English Premier League soccer match between Arsenal and Aston Villa at the Emirates Stadium. Photo: John Walton/PA Wire/dpa

Mikel Arteta has urged Arsenal to break their New Year jinx as the Gunners battle for their first Premier League title in more than two decades.

Arsenal are four points clear of second-placed Manchester City at the halfway point of the season and remain favorites to claim a 14th English league crown.

However, on the previous five occasions across the past 23 years when they have ended the calendar year on top of the table, they have failed to win the title.

The most recent occasion was three seasons ago when Arteta's men finished the campaign five points behind Pep Guardiola's City.

The Arsenal boss, speaking Friday, on the eve of the Gunners' trip to Bournemouth, said he was not aware of the dispiriting statistic but added: "Let's break it."

Arteta said his players were desperate to be crowned English champions for the first time since 2004 after finishing as runners-up three times in a row.

"That's what they transmit every single day when they're with us, training or in every match," AFP quoted him as saying.

"You can see the desire, you can see the energy they put in, how much they want it, and that's what we need.

"It's still five months to go, take it day by day, enjoy that process of being where we are and go for it."

Arteta said his players were in buoyant mood after thumping third-placed Villa 4-1 at the Emirates on Tuesday, with City held to a goalless draw by Sunderland two days later.

"It was very good obviously after the game against a really top opposition, again to perform and to win in the manner that we did, great," added the Arsenal boss.

"(Now) focus on Bournemouth. We know how tough it's going to be, tomorrow's game, and everybody is going to be at it."

The Spaniard said he was happy with his team's position at the half-way point of the campaign but insisted: "It can always be better.

"There are things to improve obviously and the only thing we know is that it's always the next game and we know how tough it is for every opponent to beat them."

Arsenal have battled a lengthy injury list this season.

Defender Gabriel Magalhaes and forward Gabriel Jesus are back in action but Arteta could again be without Declan Rice for Saturday's trip to Bournemouth.

The England midfielder missed the win against Villa with a knee problem.

"We have another session today," said Arteta. "Let's see how he comes today and how that's feeling, but that game was too early for him."