![]() The boys who leave their phones in my house every day are in their early to mid-teens. My own phone had started to buzz, too by this stage, it was hard to imagine what else could have happened, apart from the resignation of Arsene Wenger. Even news of a North Korean nuclear strike would probably drip through over several days. There is only one subject - Arsenal Football Club - that can provoke that kind of simultaneous activity. They surrendered them as normal on Friday morning, and I sat down to read the paper in the suddenly peaceful house, but then the phones all started to buzz and ping at the same time. ![]() Every morning, my boys and the friends that walk to school with them leave theirs in our kitchen, where they lie still and silent until the end of the educational day. LONDON - The school that my sons attend, a stone's throw from Highbury Stadium, a slingshot from the Emirates, does not allow mobile phones on the premises. (Editors' note: We asked Nick Hornby - novelist and screenwriter who wrote about his obsessive fandom of Arsenal in "Fever Pitch" - to assess the news that Arsene Wenger was leaving Arsenal Football Club after 22 years as manager.) ![]() ![]() Nick Hornby: Arsenal free to dream of better future after Arsene Wenger exit You have reached a degraded version of because you're using an unsupported version of Internet Explorer.įor a complete experience, please upgrade or use a supported browser ![]()
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