Soccer-From near-misses to glory, Arsenal fan says title and scenes of celebration feel surreal


Arsenal fans celebrate outside the Emirates stadium as Arsenal win the Premier League. Action Images via Reuters/Andrew Boyers

LONDON, May 20 (Reuters) - Isaiah Browne, a ⁠20-year-old Arsenal supporter who has known only recent near-misses, finally witnessed the club's first Premier ⁠League title in 22 years - a triumph and wave of celebration that he said felt ‌like a dream.

Arsenal, dominant for most of the season, were crowned champions on Tuesday without kicking a ball after second-placed Manchester City drew 1-1 at Bournemouth.

While the players gathered at their training ground to watch the match - later celebrating wildly in a ​video shared on social media - thousands of fans poured into ⁠the streets of north London.

Browne was among ⁠them, sprinting to the Emirates Stadium as jubilant scenes unfolded outside.

"They've been through a rough period in ⁠my ‌lifetime, so to be here now and finally see them win - yesterday felt like a dream," Browne, who is also a youth football coach, told Reuters.

"As soon as the final whistle ⁠went, I got dressed and headed straight here. I didn't even ​take a vehicle - I live 10 ‌minutes away, so I just ran.

"It was surreal to see how many people were here. ⁠As time went ​on, more and more just kept coming. It was a great night."

Under manager Mikel Arteta, Arsenal had earned a reputation as nearly men, finishing runners-up in each of the previous three seasons.

This time, they got over the line, ⁠sealing a 14th English title - behind only Manchester United and ​Liverpool, who have 20 each.

The triumph ends a wait stretching back to the club's unbeaten 2003-04 campaign under Arsene Wenger and marks their first major trophy since the 2020 FA Cup.

"I'm only 20, so I didn't ⁠get to see the last title," Browne said. "I heard about it from family and watched old clips online. I wanted to experience this myself - to celebrate my team and talk kindly about them."

Arsenal's season is not over yet. They travel to Crystal Palace on Sunday before facing Paris St Germain in the ​Champions League final in Budapest on May 30, bidding for a first ⁠European crown.

"I want it to be bigger and better - more celebration, fireworks and flares," Browne added.

"It's got to ​be good, and my voice that I have now, it needs ‌to be completely gone after that game. I don't ​want to be able to talk because that's going be a big achievement for the club."

(Reporting by Reuters TV; Writing by Pearl Josephine Nazare in Bengaluru; editing by Pritha Sarkar)

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