Zohran Mamdani’s Arsenal connection was not forged in victory. It began with childhood, migration, and the quiet way a football club can feel like home before there is any logic behind it.
Mamdani is introduced as Mayor of New York City and a long-time Arsenal supporter, but his story has more weight when it moves away from status and back towards memory.
He was nine when his uncle first introduced him to Arsenal. What lingered was not just the cannon, Tony Adams, or Arsene Wenger, but the feeling that the club already held something familiar.
Mamdani’s Arsenal story began with recognition
Mamdani writes that Nwankwo Kanu had been “born in Africa but now lived somewhere else, just like me”. That line explains the attachment better than any trophy ever could.
Arsenal were not just a team to follow. For a young boy trying to make sense of distance, identity, and belonging, they offered something recognisable.
His phrase “Arsenal felt familiar before I even understood why” gives the piece its emotional anchor. It turns support into something that feels less like a choice and more like part of who he is.
That is also why Wenger stands out in Mamdani’s memory. He recalls first thinking Wenger had been named after the club, then later wondering if the club had somehow been named after him.
The PSG final comes with the memory of 2006
There is a scar running through the story too. Mamdani remembers being stuck at school during the 2006 Champions League final and getting home after Jens Lehmann had already been sent off.
Arsenal were 20 minutes away from history before Barcelona changed everything. Two decades later, Mamdani still says Henrik Larsson’s name hurts to hear.
That is why his hopes for the Champions League final against Paris Saint-Germain do not sound hollow. They feel heavy with history.
For Mamdani, Arsenal are not just a recent success story. They are memory, identity, pain, and persistence, all coming together before one more night that could reshape how the old story is told.
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