Arsenal vs. Man City: Why Arteta Can’t Beat His Own Teacher
Premier League Analysis • 2025/26

The Teacher and the Student: Four Years of Arsenal vs. Pep — and Why It Always Ends the Same

Arteta learned everything Guardiola could teach him. Yet for four seasons he keeps losing in the spring. The data explains why.

⚽ Premier League 📊 5 Interactive Charts April 2026
Arsenal last 10 games (25/26)
20
Points — 4 dropped from winning positions
City last 10 games (25/26)
24
Points — 3 gained from losing positions
Arsenal: leads dropped
4
Consecutive seasons with this pattern
City: comeback points
3
Identical across 3 consecutive seasons

Do you know that feeling when you can see exactly what’s about to happen — and it happens anyway? Arsenal fans know it. Every single year. A little hope in autumn, a little more in winter. Then spring arrives. And with it, always the same story: a few points dropped, a game that turns, a headline that cuts like a knife.

From July 2016 to December 2019, Mikel Arteta was Pep’s assistant manager. Three and a half years in Manchester. Two Premier League titles, side by side. Pep wanted to groom him as his successor. Arteta wasn’t just any assistant — he was the man standing next to Guardiola while City dismantled every other team in the league. And since then, the student has been trying to beat the teacher. Four seasons. Same result.

The data from the final ten matchdays each season tells this story more clearly than any headline. Two lines. One swings wildly. The other stays flat. That is the structural truth of this rivalry.

↓ Data Analysis — 5 Charts
Chart 01 • Premier League — Arsenal
Arsenal’s Final Run: Cumulative Points — Last 10 Matchdays
How many points Arsenal collected in the decisive weeks each season — and how many were dropped from winning positions.

What these curves show: 2022/23 — the collapse. Arsenal finish on 15 points after 10 games, 4 dropped from winning positions. 2023/24 — the counter-argument: 25 points, zero dropped leads. And still not enough. Because on the other side stands the same machine.

Chart 02 • Premier League — Manchester City
City’s Final Run: Cumulative Points — Last 10 Matchdays
Manchester City show remarkable consistency in the season run-in — four seasons, always within the same corridor.

Three comeback points per season — from Liverpool, Crystal Palace, Crystal Palace (23/24), Liverpool (25/26). In these weeks City collects exactly the same number of points every year that others would leave behind. Not spectacular. Just reliable.

Chart 03 • Premier League — All Teams
Final Run Table: Points in the Last 10 Matchdays
How the entire Premier League shaped up in the final stretch — City and Arsenal in direct comparison.

Comparing all teams shows this clearly: Arsenal are by no means a mid-table finisher in the run-in. In 23/24 they were the second-best team in the entire league over those final ten games. But City were better in three of four seasons — and the one time it was close (25 vs. 28 in 23/24), it still wasn’t enough for the title.

Chart 04 • Premier League — Title Race
Standings on Matchday 29 — Arsenal & City Compared
The starting position before the run-in began. In 22/23: Arsenal 5 points clear. In 23/24: tied at the top. In 24/25: Arsenal behind.

22/23 was the year that shaped everything. Arsenal led by five points — and lost by five in the end. Not because City caught up. But because Arsenal fell apart. Liverpool 2:2, West Ham 2:2, Southampton 3:3. Four points dropped from winning positions in three games. That’s not bad luck. That’s a collapse.

Chart 05 • Premier League — Key Statistic
Dropped vs. Gained Points: The Two Lines of This Rivalry
Arsenal: points dropped from winning positions in the run-in. City: points gained from losing positions. Four seasons head to head.

This is the harder version of the story nobody else tells. Arteta didn’t bottle it. Arsenal didn’t mess it up every year. They did what they could in four consecutive title races — sometimes more, sometimes less, but never so little it would disappoint a champion in a normal era.

The problem is that they’re not playing in a normal era. They’re playing against the manager Arteta learned to win from. And the teacher has a higher ceiling than his best student. City collect the same points every year in these weeks that Arsenal leave behind. Not spectacularly. Just reliably. And in a title race, that is the most brutal thing that can happen to you.

Arsenal never had enough. Not because they were weak — but because on the other side stood someone Arteta knows better than anyone else in the world. And still can’t beat.

The league is mathematically open. One City slip-up is enough. But hoping for that means waiting for something that hasn’t happened in four seasons. Two lines. One swings. The other stays flat. That is this rivalry in numbers.

Tags: Arsenal Manchester City Premier League Mikel Arteta Pep Guardiola Title Race 2025/26 Data Analysis

Frequently Asked Questions

It’s not a simple weakness — it’s a structural asymmetry. In the decisive final 10 games each year, Arsenal consistently drops points from winning positions while City reliably gains points from losing ones. Across four seasons, that difference has been constant: Arsenal’s dropped leads swing between 0 and 9 points, City’s comeback points stay fixed at exactly 3.
The 2022/23 season remains the defining collapse. Arsenal led the table on matchday 29 by five points. Then came three games in which they held the lead and couldn’t close it out: Liverpool 2:2, West Ham 2:2, Southampton 3:3. Four points dropped from winning positions in three games. By the end they were five points behind City — a swing from +5 to -5 in just a few weeks.
In 2023/24 Arsenal came closest: 25 points from their final 10 games, zero dropped leads. That was Arsenal’s best run-in of this era. City collected 28 points that season — 2.8 per game at the hottest stage of a title race. Arsenal still lost the title by two points. The bitter lesson: even a near-flawless Arsenal run-in wasn’t enough to overtake that version of City.
From 2016 to 2019, Arteta was assistant manager at City and won two Premier League titles at Guardiola’s side. He understands the mechanics of that squad better than any other opponent. That’s what makes the failure so complex: Arteta knows exactly how City train and set up tactically in the final stretch — he helped build it. And he still can’t stop it. It’s the student who fully understands the teacher, but can’t replicate the ceiling.
Mathematically the 2025/26 title race is still open. Arsenal would need a City slip — something that hasn’t happened in four seasons. At the same time Arsenal would need to hold the points they’ve again been dropping (Brentford, Wolves). The scenario is possible. But it requires City to deviate from their structural pattern. And that deviation hasn’t been seen since 2022.

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