Soccer-Arsenal edge closer to league title with narrow win over Burnley


Soccer Football - Premier League - Arsenal v Burnley - Emirates Stadium, London, Britain - May 18, 2026 Arsenal's Kai Havertz scores their first goal past Burnley's Max Weiss Action Images via Reuters/Andrew Couldridge

LONDON, May 18 (Reuters) - Arsenal cleared ⁠the penultimate obstacle in their quest to win the Premier League title with Kai Havertz securing ⁠an anxious 1-0 win over Burnley to move them five points clear on Monday.

Havertz broke stubborn ‌Burnley's resistance when he headed in a Bukayo Saka corner shortly before halftime and while Arsenal were nowhere near their best, they are now agonisingly close to a first league title in 22 years.

Arsenal have 82 from 37 games with Manchester City on 77 from 36 ​and Mikel Arteta's side will be confirmed as champions if City fail ⁠to win at Bournemouth on Tuesday.

Should City ⁠take the race to the wire, Arsenal would be guaranteed the title by beating Crystal Palace away on ⁠Sunday.

There ‌was a mood of celebration long before kick off in the streets of north London and outside the stadium with the Arsenal team coach greeted by thousands of fans and a fog of red flares.

Expectation ⁠hung in the air as the game began, but the reality was ​Arsenal still had a job ‌to do and while Burnley are long since down, they were not about to roll over.

The visitors ⁠earned two corners inside ​the opening two minutes and had Hannibal Mejbri shown a little more composure Burnley could have taken a shock lead from one counter-attack.

The apprehension that has been present at many Arsenal home games in the run-in as they try and keep Man ⁠City at bay was present again but eventually the hosts ​exerted some pressure.

Eberechi Eze volleyed one effort at Burnley keeper Max Weiss and Arsenal were howling for a penalty when Saka went down under challenge from Lucas Pires.

Captain Martin Odegaard had a shot deflected wide and from the resulting corner ⁠Arsenal made the breakthrough in tried and trusted fashion. Saka flighted the ball in and Havertz rose to glance home a header from close range.

The tension was lifted but it descended again after the interval as Arsenal missed several chances to secure the points safely, while Burnley remained a threat.

Havertz was fortunate when a poor tackle on ​Burnley midfielder Lesley Ugochukwu that earned him a yellow card was viewed by ⁠VAR for a possible red, but the relieved German escaped more serious punishment.

Any notion of Arsenal piling up some goals ​to give themselves a goal difference advantage over City were forgotten ‌as the minutes ticked down.

A huge roar heralded the final ​whistle before Arsenal's players took a lap of honour and they will now hope Bournemouth can spark an even bigger north London knees-up on Tuesday.

(Additional reporting by Christian Radnedge, editing by Pritha Sarkar)

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