Wednesday, November 26, 2025

Balogun's First Arsenal Goal

On This Day in 2020, the Brooklyn-Born Striker Announced His Arrival in Norway

When Folarin Balogun stepped onto the artificial turf at the Aker Stadium in Molde, Norway, on November 26, 2020, he carried the weight of uncertainty on his young shoulders. Just months earlier, the 19-year-old striker had been on the verge of leaving Arsenal entirely, with contract negotiations stalled and an £8 million move to Brentford reportedly on the table. The club he'd joined at age eight—the club he'd chosen over North London rivals Tottenham—suddenly seemed ready to let him walk away.

But football has a way of rewriting narratives quickly. After making his senior debut as a substitute against Dundalk in late October, Balogun earned his chance to prove he belonged. Arsenal manager Mikel Arteta had already seen enough in training to keep faith, and technical director Edu was watching closely. The New York-born forward, eligible to represent both the United States and England at the international level, was about to make the most emphatic statement possible about his future.

The circumstances that evening in Norway were complicated. Arsenal arrived for their Group B fixture already assured of progression to the knockout rounds, their perfect record in the competition intact. Yet the match carried significance—particularly for players like Balogun fighting to establish themselves in Arteta's plans. The young striker was handed his second appearance, this time entering as a substitute in the 82nd minute with Arsenal already comfortably ahead through goals from Nicolas Pépé and Reiss Nelson.

Most teenage substitutes in such situations would be content simply to see out the match, to bank the experience and wait for the next opportunity. Balogun had other ideas. Within minutes of his introduction, the striker found himself at the center of Arsenal's attack. As the Gunners broke forward with clinical precision, Balogun positioned himself perfectly in the penalty area. When the ball arrived, he didn't hesitate. With a composed touch to control and a swift turn to create space, the 19-year-old wrapped up the victory with a clinical finish that belied his inexperience.

"I knew this was the moment I'd been waiting for," Balogun would later reflect on his first senior Arsenal goal.

The significance extended beyond the scoresheet. Here was a product of Arsenal's academy system—a player they'd nurtured since he was nine years old, who'd helped Trevor Bumstead's U16 side claim the prestigious Liam Brady Cup in 2017 by defeating Bayern Munich, Manchester United, and Juventus—finally delivering on that promise at the highest level.

"We have been extremely impressed with Flo this season," Arteta said. "He has continually shown his natural ability in many training sessions with us, and we have been equally impressed with his early integration into the first-team squad on matchdays."

For a club that prides itself on developing young talent, Balogun's emergence represented both validation and opportunity. The Brooklyn-born forward possessed a rare blend of attributes—the technical ability to play with his back to goal and link play, the pace to threaten defenses in behind, and a clinical finishing instinct that suggested a natural goalscorer. His eight goals in 18 appearances for the academy that season demonstrated he was ready for more.

The goal in Molde proved to be the catalyst Arsenal's hierarchy needed. While Balogun would add another goal and an assist in his next Europa League appearance against Dundalk, finishing the group stage with two goals, the real breakthrough came off the pitch. The contract impasse that had threatened to send him to Brentford suddenly dissolved. In April 2021, Arsenal announced that Balogun had committed his future to the club with a new long-term deal running through 2025.

When Arsenal traveled to face Premier League newcomers Brentford for their 2021-22 season opener on August 13, 2021, Balogun was named in the starting XI—his first Premier League appearance and first league start for the club. The circumstances were less than ideal, with Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang and Alexandre Lacazette both unavailable and Eddie Nketiah sidelined by injury. But the opportunity had arrived nonetheless, and Arteta showed his faith in the striker who'd announced himself on that artificial pitch in Norway nine months earlier.

Though Arsenal would fall 2-0 to Brentford that evening, with Balogun substituted after 59 minutes, the trajectory was set. The kid from Brooklyn who'd moved to London as a one-month-old infant, who'd risen through every level of Arsenal's academy, who'd nearly walked away over contract disputes, had established himself as a genuine first-team option for one of England's biggest clubs.

It all traced back to that moment at the Aker Stadium—a substitute appearance in a match already won, a chance seized with both hands, and a future secured with one decisive finish. The hard work, as Arteta noted, was only just beginning. But for Folarin Balogun, the moment he'd been waiting for had finally arrived.

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