So today I really wanted to know who’s playing for Arsenal right before kickoff. Woke up late, grabbed coffee, checked my phone – match starts in like 90 minutes. I’m thinking “Alright, need the confirmed lineup, positions too, no guesses.”

The Annoying Guesswork Phase
First thing I did? Searched “Arsenal lineup today” on my phone. Sports sites popped up instantly. But man, they all said “PREDICTED lineup” in big letters. One site showed 4 different possible formations with question marks everywhere. Total waste of time.
Scrolled Twitter next. Saw random fan accounts posting lineups with flags like “🔥⚽️ MY TEAM!!” Yeah… no. Even big football pages just shared rumored squads. Wasted 20 minutes seeing random guesses and ads.
Getting Desperate
Thought about Arsenal’s official site. Clicked around… team news section? Nope, just match previews. Press conference quotes? Manager said “we’ll see” about injuries. Useful… not. Even their app made me tap through three menus to find yesterday’s lineup. Why’s this so hard?
Checked Google News again. Same recycled “expected” junk. Almost settled for some YouTuber’s “inside sources” video. Then remembered last time – dude was completely wrong about Saka playing striker.
The Lightbulb Moment
Suddenly recalled: teams tweet the actual lineup an hour before kickoff! Opened Twitter, searched “Arsenal team news” filter: latest. Scrolled past fan art and memes…bam. Official Arsenal account had tweeted it 53 minutes ago:

- Raya in goal
- Defence: White – Saliba – Gabriel – Zinchenko
- Midfield: Ødegaard – Rice – Havertz
- Attack: Saka – Jesus – Trossard
Clear as day, formations marked. Took screenshots immediately. Match tracker bots even confirmed it minutes later. No more refreshing sites or reading fan fiction.
Why This Works
Club accounts always post the exact starting eleven directly. That simple. Search their handle + “team news” right before the match. Verified blue checkmark? Done. Positions listed? Done. Even shows subs in the replies later.
Would’ve saved me an hour earlier if I stopped chasing unreliable sources. Lesson learned.