Their defining moment came not in a win, but in a draw. On April 25, 2004, at White Hart Lane—the home of their fiercest rivals, Tottenham—Arsenal needed to avoid defeat to seal the title. They went 2-0 down. The tension was suffocating. But the Invincibles don't panic. They clawed back to 2-2, securing the trophy in the enemy’s backyard. They finished the season with "The Golden Premier League Trophy," a unique award made specifically for their achievement.
In American football, the term belongs to Don Shula’s Miami Dolphins. In 1972, they finished the season 14-0, won the AFC Championship, and then crushed the Washington Redskins 14-7 in Super Bowl VII. To this day, every NFL season, when the last undefeated team loses its first game, the surviving Dolphins players open a bottle of champagne. They remain the only team in NFL history to finish a perfect season. Invincibles
AC Milan's 1991–92 Serie A team under Fabio Capello also went the entire league season unbeaten, frequently noted as a precursor to the Arsenal feat. 3. The "Invincibles" Beyond Rugby and Football Their defining moment came not in a win, but in a draw
While often cited as the premier modern example, this squad belongs to a lineage of "unbeaten" teams that define elite standards. The tension was suffocating
Under the stewardship of Arsène Wenger, Arsenal did not just win the Premier League; they rewrote the parameters of English football. They finished the season with 26 wins and 12 draws. Zero losses. It was the first time an English top-flight team had gone unbeaten over a 38-game season since Preston North End in the 1880s—a gap of over a century.
Actually, the Roman "Invincibles" is a modern nickname for the comitatenses field armies under emperors like Aurelian (the "Restorer of the World"), who defeated the Gallic and Palmyrene Empires.