How Great Were Arsenal 1997–1999? | Wenger’s Revolution Begins
How does a famously old-school English powerhouse become modern overnight — and, in the process, help change football forever?
In this episode of By Far The Greatest Team, Graham Dunn and Jamie Rooney are joined by Arsenal fan Andrew Walker to dive into Arsenal 1997–1999 — the era where Arsène Wenger takes a title-winning back four, injects new ideas, new habits, and new attacking rhythm, and turns Arsenal into the team that drags English football into a different age.
We trace Wenger’s arrival at Highbury, the scepticism that greeted him, and the speed with which he reshaped the club’s identity: not just tactically, but culturally. From training ground methods and nutrition to squad management, recovery, sports science, and recruitment, this is the moment football begins to look and feel different in England.
But this isn’t just about innovation. It’s about the football — the chemistry between Bergkamp, Overmars, Vieira, Petit, Adams, and the old guard; the rise of Nicolas Anelka; the run-in of 1997–98; the tension of the rivalry with Manchester United; and the season that ends with Arsenal lifting the Double.
We also dig into the wider context: why Arsenal felt like a hybrid side — old steel and new elegance — and how Wenger’s first great team laid the foundations for everything that followed, from Highbury’s tactical reinvention to the Invincibles.
This is where Arsenal stop being just a big club and become a football idea.
Takeaways
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