Arsenal's most iconic shirt numbers

  • Arsenal were one of the earliest adopters of shirt numbers
  • Thierry Henry's number 14 has become the club's most iconic digit
Thierry Henry made Arsenal's number 14 shirt iconic
Thierry Henry made Arsenal's number 14 shirt iconic / CARL DE SOUZA/GettyImages
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Almost a century after he first took over the club, Arsenal are still framed in the image of the inimitable Herbert Chapman.

The visionary tactician revolutionised every aspect of Arsenal football club. Alongside the implementation of the W-M formation, Chapman introduced white sleeves to Arsenal's red kit and was a strong advocate of distinct digits on the back of shirts.

More than 10 years before the stuffy powers that be at the Football Association sanctioned squad numbers, Arsenal lined up from one to 11 against Sheffield Wednesday in 1928.

Across the subsequent decades, some digits have become embedded into the fabric of the club's history, indelibly linked with the most iconic individuals to have ever worn the red and white of Arsenal.


Arsenal's number 14

Thierry Henry, Arsene Wenger
Thierry Henry (left) worked with Arsene Wenger at Monaco but wore the number 12 in France / SINEAD LYNCH/GettyImages

Player

Years in the shirt

Martin Keown

1993 - 1999

Thierry Henry

1999 - 2007

Theo Walcott

2008 - 2018

Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang

2018 - 2022

Prior to Thierry Henry's arrival - Arsenal's last signing of the 1990s - the number 14 was most closely linked with Martin Keown and aptly summed up his role as the understudy to the club's famed back four. Incidentally, it was the presence of another substitute which foisted 14 upon Henry.

Reuniting with his former Monaco manager Arsene Wenger, Henry had initially wanted the number 12 he wore in the Principality only to find it was worn by backup striker Christopher Wreh. A record-breaking 228 Arsenal goals later, Henry had made 14 arguably the most iconic number in the club's history.

Both Theo Walcott and Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang were reticent to fill the bulging sleeves of Henry's 14, only donning the famous digits once their first-choice preferences had been taken. Neither could match the output of the shirt's first reluctant owner.


Arsenal's number 11

Arsenal's Robin Van Persie heads the bal
Robin van Persie spent six seasons in Arsenal's number 11 shirt / CARL DE SOUZA/GettyImages

Player

Years in the shirt

Charlie George

1969 - 1974

Liam Brady

1973 - 1977

Graham Rix

1977- 1984

Marc Overmars

1997 - 2000

Sylvain Wiltord

2000 - 2004

Robin van Persie

2004 - 2010

Mesut Ozil

2013 - 2018

As a striker prepared to drop deep and link with his midfielders, Robin van Persie preferred to call himself: "a nine and a half". However, he wore the number 11 at Arsenal during his first six seasons at the club.

Van Persie was following in the footsteps of two of Arsenal's most subtly decisive players of the modern era. Four years apart, Arsenal headed to Old Trafford in a direct title race with Manchester United. In both 1998 and 2002, the team's number 11 scored the only goal of the game to effectively win the title as Marc Overmars laid the path which his fleet-footed successor Sylvain Wiltord skipped along.

Charlie George wore a raft of numbers during his time at Highbury but was decked out in 11 for the greatest moment of his career. However, it is impossible to tell what is on his back from the defining image of the 1971 FA Cup final, as George celebrated his winning goal against Liverpool by lying spread-eagle out of sheer exhaustion.


Arsenal's number ten

Dennis Bergkamp
Dennis Bergkamp was the club's record signing when he inherited the number ten shirt in 1995 / Getty Images/GettyImages

Player

Years in the shirt

Paul Merson

1988 - 1995

Dennis Bergkamp

1995 - 2006

William Gallas

2006 - 2010

Robin van Persie

2010 - 2012

Jack Wilshere

2012 - 2018

Paul Merson was lauded as a "Rolls Royce" by his infamously stern manager George Graham (who also wore the number ten shirt during his days as a far more free-spirited player). Yet, Merson himself is quick to hail the man that took Arsenal's ten off him as "the greatest player ever".

The Dutch press had to invent a new term for the role which Dennis Bergkamp played at Ajax just behind the centre-forward, dubbing the technically masterful number ten a "schaduwspits"; a shadow striker.

At Arsenal, Bergkamp's appreciation of space between the lines was similarly revolutionary. Arguably none of Bergkamp's successors in the number ten shirt at Arsenal have been able to step out of his shadow, with Robin van Persie perhaps coming closest after he switched from 11 during his final two seasons at the club.

Centre-back William Gallas' possession of the shirt was certainly memorable - if not always for the right reasons.


Arsenal's number seven

Robert Pires
Robert Pires was one of Arsenal's most successful number sevens / Quality Sport Images/GettyImages

Player

Years in shirt

Joe Hulme

1928 - 1938

George Armstrong

1964 - 1976

Liam Brady

1976 - 1980

David Rocastle

1985 - 1992

Robert Pires

2000 - 2006

Tomas Rosicky

2006 - 2016

Alexis Sanchez

2016 - 2018

Arsenal's seven has perhaps been draped across the back of more quality players than any other number on the roster; from the shirt's very first owner, Joe Hulme - who remains one of the top ten goalscorers in the club's history - to its current inhabitant Bukayo Saka.

The number has inspired many different styles of players. Robert Pires represented the prolific wide man, George Armstrong never shirked his defensive duties while David Rocastle could do it all; the seven has been home to goal scorers, grafters and all the geniuses in between.


Arsenal's number four

Patrick Vieira, Francesc Fabregas
Patrick Vieira (left) and Cesc Fabregas were two of Arsenal's greatest number fours / Ben Radford/GettyImages

Players

Years in the shirt

Frank McLintock

1964 - 1972

Patrick Vieira

1996 - 2005

Cesc Fabregas

2006 - 2011

Per Mertesacker

2011- 2018

Across his near decade in Arsenal's colours - which he tried to change to all red in the mid-60s - before the age of settled squad numbers, Frank McLintock was no stranger to wearing five or six. However, the commanding Scottish centre-back, captain of the double-winning side in 1971, wore number four more often than anything else, setting a precedent of team leaders in the famous digit.

Arsenal have spent the best part of two decades looking for Patrick Vieira's replacement as an all-action midfielder and are yet to come up with an alternative that comes close to the Invincibles skipper.

Cesc Fabregas wore number four in honour of his Barcelona idol Pep Guardiola and became the second-youngest captain in Arsenal's history after two years in the shirt. Per Mertesacker inherited the four from Fabregas and - eventually - the armband.


On this week's edition of The Chronicles of a Gooner, part of the 90min podcast network, Harry Symeou discusses Arsenal's first friendly of the summer against Watford. We discuss when we can expect announcements for Declan Rice and Jurrien Timber, Kai Havertz making himself at home and take some of your questions from the live chat!

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