MUCH has and will continue to be written about Bukayo Saka and his exploits in the famous Arsenal shirt.
A shirt, lest we forget, that he has worn since he was seven years old.
Bukayo Saka can be the heir to Thierry Henry
Henry is a legend at Arsenal
He has a statue dedicated to him outside of the Emirates Stadium
Two seasons ago, he got over his disappointment at being dropped for the 2020 FA Cup win to virtually single-handedly carry his ‘more illustrious’ colleagues all year, aged just 19.
His form in a disappointing season for his club brought him England recognition, where he again showed up senior stars in the Euro finals of 2021.
And his form last season, bouncing back from the penalty miss disappointment – and the cowardly racist abuse he faced afterwards – is a testament not just to Bukayo Saka the footballer, but to Bukayo Saka the man.
Fast forward to the present day and Saka is now surrounded by new team-mates, in a squad carefully assembled over recent transfer windows, all offering the same enthusiasm, work ethic, talent and a collective commitment to the Arsenal cause.
This has enabled this humble young man to raise hisown bar and that of the team once more, and one feels there is undoubtedly more to come.
The elevated confidence and belief in the past few months has been vital in a time when the team has been deprived of its early season level raiser, Gabriel Jesus.
Saka and Odegaard, along with senior colleagues such as Granit Xkaka, Thomas Partey and Oleksandr Zinchenko, have collectively picked up the Brazilian’s baton and sprinted on with it when they might have dropped it, as many expected they would.
Due to the threat Saka shows every game he has been increasingly targeted by opposition managers in their tactics and defenders.
This has varied from the complimentary tactic of doubling up on the effervescent winger, to the far more cynical physical and illegal measures we are witnessing more regularly.
I do not have the stats at my fingertips, but I am sure the fouls on Saka are now at the levels we have seen on Jack Grealish in recent years.
Like his England peer, Saka is learning to cope with the constant fouling and perhaps this is where the recent advice from Arsenal legend Thierry Henry has and will pay dividends for the player and our team.
It was in December that Henry was quoted as saying perhaps Saka was ‘too nice’ and he needed to add more aggression his game. For Henry, for the player he admired so much to turn into, what he described as ‘a killer threat’ he cannot be so nice.
Saka has scored ten goals in the Premier League this season
He concluded by saying after the West Ham match on Boxing Day: “That standard can’t be nice. When you pass the line, it has to be you or the guy. It better be you and he (Saka) understands that now.”
In recent weeks it seems that Saka has taken the constructive criticism on board, is not placidly accepting the continuous fouling, and is retaliating in the best ways he can.
This has been evidenced by him becoming more physical with the defenders, being less subtle in letting the referee know what is occurring and, of course, being even more lethal in his role.
The rapidly rising goals and assists tally will confirm that. And, in my mind, has earned him the right to his recently adopted goal celebration.
It might seem slightly out of character for a man, whose humility and modesty have endeared him to a far wider appreciation society than simply Gooners, to adopt Thierry Henry’s trademark corner flag salute.
However, even in doing so, for the first time at Villa Park, he took to social media to say he was ‘Honouring the King’.
I, for one, agree with Arsenal’s former No 14, that to go with talent, and a work ethic, you probably do need a nasty streak and a touch of arrogance. Thierry’s striking partner, Dennis Bergkamp also had the whole package.
If the extra grit and resilience are indeed the final ingredients to cement Saka’s place among the elite, then perhaps gratitude is owed to Monsieur Henry – ‘merci legend’.
However, we must remember that while Henry was certainly the last King of Highbury, he was not the first. In my time supporting Arsenal, there has been George, Brady and Rocky, all three, like Bukayo were homegrown.
We all hoped that Jack Wilshere, would be the next Hale End graduate to grow from prince to king, but sadly that dream was never realised.
Saka though, may humbly suggest his proud corner flag salute is a tribute to a former king, but are we actually witnessing the first ascension to a new Emirates throne?
Arise King Bukayo?