Arsenal Women: Trailblazers

  • 2. Season Review: 51 Points, One Heartbreak and a Transfer Window That Could Change Everything

    38:17||Ep. 2
    Arsenal Women finished the season four points behind Man City, reached the Champions League semi-finals, and lost Katie McCabe to Chelsea on a free. Roberto Revilla gets into all of it.This is the first proper episode of Arsenal Women: Trailblazers, and Roberto does not ease you in gently. This is a full-length season debrief covering everything: Renee Slegers’s first complete season in charge, the squad depth problems that injuries brutally exposed, a transfer window that is already producing results and a few open wounds, the tactical picture and where it needs to evolve, standout performers, the moments that defined the campaign - and what a realistic ambition looks like going into next season.Roberto calls it as he sees it. No spin. No hedging. No corporate podcast clichés. Just an honest account of a season that had real highs, a few painful lows, and a summer that feels absolutely pivotal.Man City won the WSL with 55 points. Arsenal finished second on 51. Chelsea were third on 49. The gap at the top is small. The window to close it is open. But it will not stay open by itself.In this episode:Season in one breathRenee Slegers: her first full season, the Arteta parallel, why patience is earned not assumedSquad depth: what the injuries to Reid, Kelly and Williamson actually revealedTransfer window: McCabe to Chelsea, Mead to City, and the incoming names to knowTactical identity: the high press, the set piece problem, and the counter-transition riskStandout players: Russo’s 24 goals, McCabe’s farewell season, Fox, Wubben-Moy and Olivia SmithDefining moments: London City, West Ham, and what Lyon showed usLooking ahead: the WSL title, the Champions League, and why Arsenal should be the most attractive club in the world for players right nowTakeaways:• Renee Slegers is the right person for this job. She inherited chaos, won a Champions League, and spent last season learning at pace. The Arteta comparisons are legitimate — back her, give her time, do not panic.• The squad depth issue is structural, not accidental. Two or three injuries and the options ran out. That has to change this summer. Laia Codina and Victoria Pelova deserved more than they got.• Losing Katie McCabe and Beth Mead to Chelsea and Man City respectively, both on frees, is a recruitment failure, plain and simple. The club’s contract renewal process was too slow and it cost them two world-class players who went directly to title rivals.• The incoming business looks promising. Ona Batlle (Spain international, free from Barcelona), Géraldine Reuteler (Swiss Player of the Year 2024, free from Frankfurt) and Selina Cerci (26, Germany international, striker) represent genuine upgrades if confirmed. Georgia Stanway links would address the midfield steel problem directly.• Alessia Russo scored 24 goals in all competitions, 13 in the WSL. If you only watch the ball, you miss half of what she does. The Champions League goal against Chelsea was one of the finishes of the season anywhere in European football.• The Lyon semi-final was a reality check, not a disaster. Arsenal were technically excellent and tactically coherent. They were physically outmuscled. That is a solvable problem and the transfer window is the place to solve it.• The WSL title is the target. Chelsea are rebuilding. Man City have so far added only Beth Mead (aged 31) to a title-winning squad. Arsenal, if they get this window right, should go into next season as favourites.Subscribe to Trailblazers for twice-weekly episodes — match reaction, transfer news, player profiles and more. New episodes every week throughout the summer and into the season.
  • 1. Why I Started a Podcast About Arsenal Women (And Why Right Now)

    09:22||Ep. 1
    Roberto Revilla has watched Arsenal Women for years. Now he’s talking about them - and he’s not pulling any punches.Arsenal Women: Trailblazers is a fan-first podcast hosted by Roberto Revilla, a bespoke tailor from London and double WSL season ticket holder who has spent years watching the women’s game grow into something extraordinary. This short intro episode is exactly what it says on the tin: Roberto introducing himself, explaining what this show is, and telling you why he believes the timing matters.This is not a news outlet. It is not PR-managed. It is not trying to be authoritative in the way a broadcaster might be. It is what happens when someone who has sat in those stands, watched every game they could get to, and has genuine opinions built up over years of following the club finally decides to say them out loud.Roberto already co-hosts Tailoring Talk Magazine, a podcast about lifestyle and tech - but this is something entirely separate. This is his football passion project, and Arsenal Women have given him plenty of material to work with. He believes, without much hesitation, that Arsenal Women are the biggest club in women’s football in terms of fanbase and global attendance. In this episode, Roberto sets out what you can expect from Trailblazers: twice-weekly episodes covering match reaction, transfer analysis, player profiles, off-pitch culture and the fan experience. The show is launching deliberately as the summer transfer window opens, so from episode one you are getting immediate, relevant content - not a slow build. No filler.The tone, Roberto says, is simple: like talking to a knowledgeable mate in the pub who actually watched the game.What’s covered in this episode:• Who Roberto is and why he’s qualified to host this show• Why Arsenal Women, and why now• The difference between this show and everything else out there• What Trailblazers will cover and how often it comes out• His belief that Arsenal Women are the biggest club in world women’s football• Why a fan-first perspective matters more than ever• A personal note on what the women’s game means to himA word on the name: Arsenal Women have been breaking ground and setting standards in English women’s football for decades. Trailblazers felt right. Not as a piece of branding - as a description.Pull up a seat. This is going to be good.Subscribe now so you don’t miss Episode 1, dropping very soon - a full season review with transfer window analysis, player grades and honest takes on what needs to change.
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