Connect with us

Sports

And The EPL Ended… Only To Return in 90 Days

Published

on

Share

 

By Chris Osa Nehikhare

 

The curtain has fallen.

Another English Premier League season has ended and, as always, it leaves behind memories, arguments, heartbreaks, celebrations and unfinished conversations.

And then comes the strange silence.

That brief football vacuum where weekends suddenly feel less noisy and supporters momentarily lose their ritual of hope, anxiety and banter.

But the EPL never truly leaves. It merely disappears long enough to make us miss it before returning again in about ninety days.

This season belonged, in many ways, to North London. Seeing Arsenal finally lift the Premier League trophy after twenty-two long years was more than a football achievement. It felt like an emotional release. The roar that followed was not merely celebration. It was North London exhaling.

For years Arsenal have lived in football’s waiting room.

Close enough to touch glory. Good enough to threaten. Yet somehow unable to complete the final journey.

Near misses became habit. Promise became burden. But football rewards persistence.

And whether you support them or not, congratulations are deserved.

Arsenal have remained present, relevant and ambitious. They never truly disappeared from the conversation. They simply kept knocking until the door finally opened.

Now comes the bigger question.

With Pep Guardiola’s era at Manchester City seemingly drawing to a close, are we witnessing the birth of a new Premier League superpower?

Or perhaps something even more romantic?

Could English football be preparing for the rebirth of one of its greatest rivalries?

For many of us who grew up watching the Premier League in its fiercest years, Arsenal versus Manchester United was never just football.

See also  SUNDERLAND PROMOTED TO PREMIER LEAGUE WITH DRAMATIC WIN OVER SHEFFIELD UNITED

It was theatre.

It was power versus power.

It was Ferguson against Wenger. Keane against Vieira. Old Trafford against Highbury and later the Emirates.

That rivalry shaped English football long before Guardiola arrived and redefined excellence through Manchester City.

As a Manchester United supporter, I admit there is something nostalgic about the possibility of that competitive tension returning.

Not necessarily dominance.

But rivalry.

Because football needs meaningful rivalries to breathe properly.

Elsewhere, survival carried its own drama.

Many had written Tottenham Hotspur off when the season looked darkest. But football seasons are marathons, not social media verdicts. I called their survival when many had already buried them.

Chelsea, however, remain the surprise story I did not see coming.

Their sharp decline and uncertainty caught many observers off guard. A club with such resources and pedigree cannot remain disconnected from its identity for too long without consequences. Stamford Bridge now faces questions deeper than tactics or transfers.

And then there are the European travellers.

Those who earned the right to carry England’s flag onto continental stages.

The clubs that made Europe deserve their places.

Consistency deserves reward.

Ambition deserves opportunity.

Perhaps Bournemouth surprised many, myself included. They were not on my personal list when predictions were made. Yet that is precisely why football remains irresistible.

It refuses complete obedience to prediction.

Every season writes its own script. And this, perhaps, is the Premier League’s greatest strength.

No league in Europe currently combines depth, competitiveness, financial power, tactical sophistication and emotional unpredictability quite like the EPL.

England does not merely have elite clubs. It has many elite clubs.

See also  REMO STARS MAKE HISTORY AS NPFL CHAMPIONS

That difference matters.

On any given weekend, giants can stumble and outsiders can rise. The standard is relentlessly high and the competition rarely allows comfort.

It is why European football increasingly carries an English accent. And while we admire this spectacle, one cannot help but dream.

My prayer remains that the Nigeria Premier Football League will continue its own journey toward greater professionalism, stronger infrastructure, better officiating, improved marketing and deeper fan engagement.

Because football passion is not lacking in Nigeria.

Potential is not lacking either.

What we require is consistency, structure and belief.

The EPL was not built overnight.

Neither will ours be.

And so the season ends.

The banter pauses.

The jerseys rest.

The debates continue.

And somewhere already, supporters are preparing fresh optimism for the season ahead.

Because football supporters never truly learn.

And perhaps that is our greatest beauty.

 

World Cup: The Drumbeat Begins

But do not pack football away just yet.

In barely two weeks, another global carnival approaches.

The World Cup.

Where club loyalties pause and national pride takes centre stage.

And yes…

From my window, one flag already flies proudly.

England.

The Three Lions march again — carrying hope, expectation and that familiar question football keeps asking them:

Is football finally coming home?

The world is about to find out.

Continue Reading
Click to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *