Freddie Ljungberg has denied he set to return to Arsenal this summer despite David Ornstein saying otherwise.

When it comes to Arsenal transfers, David ‘Ornacle’ Ornstein is rated second only to official Arsenal channels in terms of his reliability, but it seems like something somewhere has got crossed with this rumour.

Over the weekend, Ornstein tweeted:

Speaking to Swedish TV, however, Freddie said, “It’s clear that it’s fun when people talk and think you’re good at something, but there is no such discussion.”

In fact, Ljungberg told the reporter that his question about the move to Arsenal was the first time he had heard anything about it.

The reporter pushed him asking ‘have you not heard of the report?’. Ljungberg replied, “No, you told me.”

The reporter then tried again, asking, “The deal is not available?” to which Freddie simply answered “No.”

How reliable is Ornstein really?

If you’re an Arsenal fan, there is no more reliable journalist around than the BBC’s David ‘Ornacle’ Ornstein.

During a time when a lot of misinformation and outright rubbish is presented as fact, Ornstein appears with precise timing to share the truth of Arsenal’s transfer window.

He’s often the bringer of good news, but he also imparts the bad.

All he tends to bring are cold, hard facts.

But even he must have gotten some things wrong, surely?

After all, so many things happen during a transfer that even the most concrete information can turn to dust in just a few hours.

There are a few occasions where what he reported didn’t happen. It’s true.

But that’s not the same as being ‘wrong’ (or guessing like many others do).

For example, in August 2012, he reported that Nuri Sahin was close to joining Arsenal on loan.

Weeks later, the midfielder joined Liverpool. The deal to Arsenal collapsed in the days following his tweet.

A couple of months prior, he reported that Robin van Persie was keen to stay at Arsenal.

That ended up being false, as van Perise released a statement announcing his unhappiness with Arsenal.

He eventually joined Manchester United.

Sudden changes during deals can make information look old very quickly.

This proved to be case in August 2011, when Ornstein announced that the deal for Mikel Arteta was off.

Hours later, the deal was back on, and Arteta completed a move to Arsenal.

Ornstein hasn’t been wrong on any of these occasions. Rather, he is victim to the volatile nature of the transfer market just like everyone else.

Yet, few have proven to be as reliable as him. It’s almost as if dealing in facts and confirmed information from reliable sources makes you, yourself, more reliable by default.

Shocking, huh?

Football journalists have a terrible reputation and most of it is rightly earned by the many.

A few, however, like Ornstein, stand head and shoulders above the rest, and rightly so even if, on this occasion, something seems to have gone wrong again.