TH: Nah, but it certainly opens things up a little bit. Rodri is arguably the hardest player in world football to replace. There is no one quite like him - a No. 6, goalscorer and master of the dark arts rolled into one 6-3 baller. It has been pretty clear, for some time, that City aren't the same team without him. Still, you'd back Pep Guardiola to figure out how to turn Haaland into a World-Class defensive mid by March, or something silly. Everyone seems to think that Mateo Kovacic is a replacement, but he's never been a holding midfielder.
As for Arsenal, not sure this changes much. Mikel Arteta's side do a whole lot of beating themselves - and far too often try not to lose. They haven't shown that they have the killer instinct to smell blood here. Sure, they can perhaps drop a point or two more, but it would be a surprise to see them build on their points total from last year. More than anything, this might be an opportunity for a third team - say, Liverpool - to put the pressure on a bit. Please give us a three-way title race.
RT: Nope. No team in the world is better equipped to handle injuries than Manchester City and no manager is better at breezing past them than Guardiola. Losing Rodri hurts, yes, as he's the hardest player in the team to replace, but Guardiola will figure this out. And, even if he doesn't, Arsenal hasn't fully proven that they're ready to win a league title. Sunday's draw further enforced that there's some maturing to do and, until they show they've done that, Manchester City remain favorites.
JS: Luckily for Guardiola, he's able to bring a UEFA Champions League winner off the bench to replace him in Kovacic, but it's definitely a brutal blow. The heart and soul of their midfield, plus a frontrunner for the 2024 Ballon d'Or, Rodri is crucial to their success. With that said, Arsenal need to take advantage, but so do the likes of Liverpool, Aston Villa, Chelsea and Manchester United. It's open season still, and anything can happen. As it stands, there's zero reason to think City aren't title favorites, even without Rodri, but his injury definitely opens things up.
AL: First off, best wishes and a speedy recovery to Rodri - clearly the most underrated Ballon d'Or candidate since Luka Modric. It almost feels like the soccer gods intervened to make the Premier League interesting again by robbing Man City of their best player. It's been largely one-way traffic since Guardiola arrived. The Premier League, which was once known for its competitiveness, has been rinse and repeat for the past four years.
However, for Arsenal, a seismic blow to Man City doesn't necessarily mean they will win. The Gunners are a club that could cough up a nine-point lead with two games remaining - yes, the math doesn’t make sense; that’s the point of the joke. Here's betting on a potential Leicester-like season from Aston Villa or maybe redemption for a team in West London that has been particularly baffling in recent years.