
Daily Cannon
·21 July 2025
When will Gabriel Jesus return to lead Arsenal’s attack?

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Yahoo sportsDaily Cannon
·21 July 2025
Photo by Alex Pantling/Getty Images
For all the progress Arsenal have made under Mikel Arteta, the question of who leads the line continues to hang over the Emirates.
In theory, Gabriel Jesus was meant to be the answer. Dynamic, intelligent, and experienced at the highest level, he brought more than just goals. But as the 2025–26 season looms, Arsenal are once again preparing for life without him.
The Brazilian has not played since suffering an anterior cruciate ligament injury to his left knee in mid-January, during an FA Cup third-round clash against Manchester United. The damage required surgery and ruled him out of a campaign that ultimately ended in frustration, with Arsenal again falling short in both the Premier League and Champions League.
Crucially, they did so without a recognised centre-forward fit for the final months of the season.
Photo by Alex Pantling/Getty Images
Six months on, the club remains tight-lipped about Jesus’s exact return date. Publicly, the player has offered cautious optimism. In recent weeks, he has posted videos of gym work, light running and agility drills, including one clip captioned, “One more week,” which showed him lacing up before a workout.
The implication was clear, but as of now, there is no confirmation that Jesus has rejoined full training, let alone that he is close to match fitness and he has not travelled to Singapore.
Behind the scenes, Arsenal’s medical staff are believed to be pleased with his progress, but there is no appetite to rush his return. The nature of ACL recovery demands patience.
Andrea Berta, in his first summer as sporting director, has already taken steps to reinforce the attack. The signing of Noni Madueke from Chelsea and the pursuit of Viktor Gyökeres from Sporting CP underline the shift. There is no guarantee Jesus will walk back into the starting XI.
Photo via Arsenal.com
Even before his latest setback, Jesus’s role in the side had begun to evolve. He was used increasingly in a hybrid role, drifting into deeper areas, often vacating the traditional number nine position altogether. It suited Arsenal’s fluid build-up play, but the absence of a central focal point became glaring at key moments last season.
When it mattered most, Arsenal had craft but not cutting edge.
Now 28, Jesus must confront an uncomfortable reality. He remains a valued member of the squad, but with younger, fitter, and more direct options emerging, he will have to earn his way back into Arteta’s plans amid rumours that the club planned to sell him this summer, before injury struck.
Photo by Alex Pantling/Getty Images
The most reliable estimates suggest a return to competitive action in November, meaning Jesus will miss the start of the Premier League season and at least the opening phase of the Champions League group stage.
That projection could still shift, depending on how his body responds to the demands of increased training over the next month.
Until then, Arsenal wait. So too does Jesus. His return will not just be a fitness test, but a litmus test of his place in a side that may have moved on without him.