Arsenal Fire Warning Shot with Leeds Rout as Chelsea & Liverpool Fight Back in Wild Premier League Day

Arsenal Fire Warning Shot with Leeds Rout as Chelsea & Liverpool Fight Back in Wild Premier League Day
Arsenal are looking seriously unstoppable in their chase for that long-awaited Premier League crown, the first since way back in 2004. On Saturday, they smashed Leeds 4-0 at Elland Road, blowing away any doubts after a shaky run that had fans biting their nails. Just last weekend, they suffered their first home loss of the season to Manchester United, scraping only two points from their previous three league outings. After three straight seasons as runners-up, people were starting to whisper about whether Mikel Arteta's squad had the mental steel to finally cross the finish line. Then came another gut punch: Bukayo Saka picked up an injury during the warm-up. Ouch. But enter Noni Madueke, the guy who stepped up like he'd been waiting for this moment all his life. The former Chelsea man (yeah, the irony isn't lost on anyone) was electric. His pinpoint cross found Martin Zubimendi, who nodded home the opener around the 26th minute. Not done yet, Madueke whipped in another dangerous ball that Leeds keeper Karl Darlow could only push into his own net just before halftime. Talk about turning a crisis into a masterclass. Leeds had been solid at home—only one defeat there since November—but Arsenal just kept coming. In the second half, Viktor Gyokeres, who's been silencing his critics big time since arriving from Sporting Lisbon, latched onto a cross from Gabriel Martinelli and rifled in his 11th goal for the club. Then, with time running down, sub Gabriel Jesus unleashed a rocket to make it 4-0. Statement win? Absolutely. Arteta was buzzing afterward: "A very impressive performance, especially in this context." Arsenal now sit seven points clear at the top, ahead of Manchester City and Aston Villa. Fingers crossed for a Tottenham upset when City head to north London, or maybe Villa slip up against Brentford on Sunday. Over at Stamford Bridge, Chelsea showed why Liam Rosenior's got everyone talking. They were staring down the barrel after a dire first half against struggling West Ham—Jarrod Bowen and Crysencio Summerville put the Hammers 2-0 up, and the home fans weren't happy, booing them off at the break. But Rosenior rang the changes at halftime, throwing on fresh legs like Joao Pedro and Marc Cucurella. The Blues came roaring back. Those two new faces helped level things before Enzo Fernandez grabbed a dramatic stoppage-time winner. Chelsea climb into the top four, and Rosenior summed it up perfectly: "The reaction in the second half tells me we've got something really special here if I use the squad right." Gritty stuff from a side that's finding its groove. Then there's Liverpool, who desperately needed a spark after a rough start to 2026—no league wins until now. At Anfield, Newcastle took the lead through Anthony Gordon, piling on the pressure for Arne Slot. But summer signings Hugo Ekitike and Florian Wirtz flipped the script in style. Ekitike bagged a brilliant brace—the first brilliantly teed up by Wirtz—and Wirtz added his sixth in 10 games, set up by Mohamed Salah. Ibrahima Konate capped it with the fourth, a emotional moment in his first game back after losing his father. The big man was in tears—football can hit hard like that. Final score: 4-1 to the Reds, climbing them into fifth and easing some of the tension. Elsewhere, Everton grabbed a late 1-1 draw at Brighton thanks to Beto's 97th-minute heroics—probably not enough for European dreams, though. And Bournemouth? They're safe now after a comfy 2-0 win at bottom club Wolves, with Eli Kroupi and Alex Scott on the scoresheet. What a Saturday in the Premier League—drama, comebacks, and Arsenal reminding everyone why they're the team to beat right now. The title race is heating up, and it's anyone's guess what happens next.