Arsenal’s Black connection continued to develop below Arsene Wenger, one other milestone coming in September 2002, after they turned the primary English membership to subject 9 Black gamers in a recreation.
An Arsenal staff containing Lauren, Ashley Cole, Kolo Toure, Sol Campbell, Gilberto Silva, Patrick Vieira, Sylvain Wiltord, Nwankwo Kanu and Henry, in addition to David Seaman and Pascal Cygan, subjected Leeds to a 4-1 thrashing that day at Elland Street.
Nwonka factors out that, as with the expansion of Black Arsenal extra broadly, the make-up of the aspect that day felt fully natural.
“Arsene Wenger didn’t pick nine Black players to make a statement,” he says. “These had been simply one of the best gamers at his disposal.
“Folks usually ask me if I feel Arsenal, as a membership, domesticate this type of Black identification and I all the time say not likely. After all, they recognise it now they usually do issues to harness it…”
Nwonka uses the example of this season’s black, red and green away kit, made by adidas and designed by Foday Dumbuya, the founder of menswear brand Labrum, which is intended as a tribute to African icons such as Kanu who helped cultivate the club’s large African fanbase.
“However Black Arsenal has all the time been about how Black folks transfer to Arsenal, quite than Arsenal shifting to Black folks,” continues Nwonka. “I feel we regularly flip and confuse it.
“If anything, I would like them to not package it so much. That is probably oxymoronic given I’ve done the book, but the point I make is that it doesn’t need to be hyper-marketed or celebrated because it is going to happen anyway, regardless of whether you make Jamaica away shirts or Arsenal Africa shirts.
“I feel the Black connection is one thing it’s good to acknowledge and admire, however it’s additionally one thing you can provide area to as a result of it is all the time going to be there, to the purpose the place you do not even actually discover it.
“When you go to the Emirates Stadium as a Black person, you’re not consciously aware that you’re in a stadium with a lot of Black people who you wouldn’t normally see at games or sporting events elsewhere.
“It is simply what it’s now and that’s the great thing about it.”
Black Arsenal makes no claim that Arsenal are uniquely responsible for driving social integration in English football, or that they are a perfect institution when it comes to the issues of race and representation.
The club’s women’s team have a history of fielding Black players, including Alex Scott, Anita Asante and Rachel Yankey, but there was outcry last year following the publication of a squad photo which showed a lack of Black or ethnic minority players or staff, an issue Arsenal acknowledged at the time.
“I don’t suppose that was a consequence of any malpractice or wrongdoing on Arsenal’s half, when it comes to the enjoying employees,” says Nwonka.
“However I feel the explanation it stood out is as a result of, as a society, and given the membership’s historical past, we anticipate extra from Arsenal.
“I think that is something that should be embraced, and I think Paul Davis makes an excellent point when he talks about the next phase of Black Arsenal, in his mind, which refers to the things we can’t see, so the infrastructure, the boardroom, those in stakeholder positions.”
It’s a reminder of the work nonetheless to do, at Arsenal and past.
For now, although, it’s value celebrating the progress already pushed by the membership, and by the lengthy line of gamers who’ve helped to forge its distinctive Black connection, from Batson, Davis, Rocastle and Thomas, to Campbell, Wright, Henry and Saka.
Black Arsenal, edited by Clive Nwonka and Matthew Harle, is out now from W&N