Arsenal will lift the Premier League title when they take on Crystal Palace at Selhurst Park on Sunday, May 24 at 4pm (UK time), the club confirmed, and Nicole Holliday will be on site to witness the moment an hour before kick-off.
Arsenal.com has laid out a full-day build-up. The club told supporters: "We'll be lifting the Premier League title when we take on Crystal Palace at Selhurst Park on Sunday, May 24 at 4pm (UK time)." A special celebratory show begins at 2pm on Arsenal.com and The Arsenal app, Nicole Holliday and Joseph Charm will go live from N5 an hour before kick-off, and Dan Roebuck and Adrian Clarke will provide live commentary of the 90 minutes.
The match will be shown to UK subscribers by Sky Sports, while Arsenal.com and The Arsenal app stage their own live build-up and match coverage. At 2pm the club’s digital platforms will relive content from the past week, then shift to live reporting as the team travels south; supporters watching at home or following online will have a range of ways to see the final game of a campaign Arsenal describe as memorable.
For fans and for the club the timestamp is simple and immovable: Sunday, May 24 at 4pm UK time. The schedule around that moment is precise, too — a two-hour special on the club’s channels beginning at 2pm, the on‑site live presence of Nicole Holliday and Joseph Charm an hour before kick-off, and a 90‑minute live commentary window provided by Dan Roebuck and Adrian Clarke for the match itself.
The context for the occasion is set by events earlier in the week: the club says the title will be secured in this fixture after Bournemouth drew with Manchester City midweek, a result that handed Arsenal the championship ahead of this final match. That arithmetic frames the Selhurst Park visit not as a must-win but as the moment the club will formally receive the trophy and celebrate the season’s achievement.
The contrast between the polished digital build-up and the reality of an away stadium celebration introduces the story’s friction. Arsenal will be lifting the trophy at Crystal Palace’s ground, while the club’s own channels stage a formal, fan-facing production online; supporters will be split between the stadium, the club’s live show and the Sky Sports broadcast. Whichever platform fans choose, the hour-by-hour schedule leaves little ambiguity about where to tune in.
This is a day the club has mapped down to the minute: a 2pm digital special, live reporters from N5 an hour before kick-off, and a 4pm match that will culminate in the presentation Arsenal have scheduled. Nicole Holliday, Joseph Charm, Dan Roebuck and Adrian Clarke are the named faces tasked with carrying that moment to supporters who cannot be at Selhurst Park, and Arsenal.com will be the club’s central conduit for the build-up and celebration.
When the final whistle falls, Arsenal will have closed a memorable Premier League campaign and will lift the title at Selhurst Park; for those not in the ground, Arsenal.com and The Arsenal app begin their special coverage at 2pm on Sunday to make sure the moment is available to the club’s wider audience.


