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29th June 2023
02:56pm BST

Declan Rice and Kai Havertz will replace Granit Xhaka and Thomas Partey in a seismic midfield shake-up at the Emirates Stadium. (Credit: Getty Images)[/caption]
To have spent north of £200 million just two weeks into the window is a far cry from the summer's of austerity endured by Arsenal fans in the aftermath of their move to the Emirates Stadium.
But now, with American owners KSE having recently won both the Super Bowl and NBA crowns with their LA Rams and Denver Nuggets franchises, they have now clearly set their sights on Premier League glory.
Stumping up £110 million last summer on the likes of Gabriel Jesus and Oleksandr Zinchenko and an additional £50 million in the January window, the Kroenke family are backing the ambition of manager Mikel Arteta to the highest possible degree.
This summer's triple signing of Rice, Havertz and Timber now leaves the Gunners with one of the strongest squads on paper in all of Europe, but how will Arteta organise this embarrassment of riches into an XI capable of challenging treble-winning Man City?
[caption id="attachment_289633" align="alignnone" width="640"]
Arsenal's likely starting XI next season, with a host options including new signing Jurrien Timber from the bench.[/caption]
Granit Xhaka and Thomas Party look set to depart for Germany and Saudi Arabia respectively. (Credit: Getty Images)[/caption]
With the most runs into the box of any player in the Premier League last season, Arteta sees Havertz as the perfect foil to false-nine Gabriel Jesus, who routinely drops deep to influence build up.
Despite how influential Jesus is in developing attacking opportunities, this role often leaves Arsenal short of players in the box. This has borne the thought that the deploying Havertz in an advanced midfield role just off Martin Odegaard is the ideal solution as Arsenal look to replace the 7 goals scored by Granit Xhaka last season.
And last but by no means least, Arteta now has the welcome problem of trying to find a place in his starting back-four for Dutch international Jurrien Timber.
Timber, who can play at either right-back or centre-back, will likely find himself behind two of Arsenal's star performers from the last campaign in Ben White and William Saliba.
However, the man long courted by Manchester United will not be coming to North London content with warming the bench, and those who have witnessed his jaw-dropping array of passing will be sure in the fact that he will find plenty of game time under Arteta this season.
Seen as the right-hand sided version of Zinchenko, being able to drop into midfield and overload lesser opposition, Timber's reported £40 million fee may well look a steal come next May.
Is this emphatic summer revamp enough though for Mikel Arteta's men to conquer the Everest that is treble-winning Manchester City?
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