Arsenal players celebrate their 4-0 win over Atletico Madrid in October 2025. One players holds a t-shirt with the Arsenal emblem printed on it

Arsenal arrive in Madrid with a clear line of sight, two matches stand between them and a first Champions League final since 2006.

Manager Mikel Arteta, and captain Martin Ødegaard, have framed the tie as an opportunity rather than a threat. They insist the squad is ready to take the next step after two seasons of steady progress.

This is a team built on a plan, recruitment, coaching and a style that has matured into genuine European competitiveness.

Arteta’s side have earned their place in the last four through a mixture of tactical discipline and moments of attacking quality. The narrative now is simple: convert potential into a result over two legs.

Arsenal face Atlético Madrid tonight

There are practical reasons for measured optimism. Arsenal is in back-to-back Champions League semi-finals, a sign of consistency at the highest level that the club lacked for years.

Arsenal has also shown defensive resilience in the knockout rounds, conceding just once across ties with Bayer Leverkusen and Sporting. That defensive backbone gives them a platform to play with confidence away from home.

But optimism must be balanced with realism. Arsenal’s form in recent weeks has been patchy. They have struggled for goals, managing only five in their last seven matches across all competitions.

That lack of cutting edge is the clearest vulnerability heading into a tie with Diego Simeone’s Atlético Madrid, a team built on organisation, experience and the ability to make big matches ugly for opponents.

Tactically, Arteta faces a familiar test: how to impose Arsenal’s possession-based game on a team that will happily cede the ball and strike on the counter.

The Gunners’ October meeting with Atlético was a 4-0 league phase win, which showed what they can do when they find rhythm and finish chances. But one result from the league phase does not erase the tactical discipline Atletico bring to European nights.

Gunners must be clinical and patient in equal measure

The psychological side matters as much as the tactical. Players and staff have spoken openly about the weight of expectation that comes with chasing major trophies. The pressure has shaped previous campaigns and will shape this one.

The difference now though is experience. Many of the squad have been through deep runs and know how to manage the noise.

The job for Arteta and his coaching team is to keep the focus narrow — one game, one step, one moment at a time — to reach another final.

Game management will be decisive. Arsenal’s recent reliance on defensive solidity suggests Arteta values control, but the manager has also been clear he wants to attack and decide ties rather than sit back.

That balance between protecting a lead and hunting a decisive goal will define the first leg at the Metropolitano.

Expect Arsenal to try to take the initiative early, but also to be ready for Atletico’s set-piece threat and counter-attacks.

We’ll be on the edge of our seats

For supporters, the stakes are both immediate and historic. A place in the final would be a landmark for a club that has rebuilt its identity and ambitions over several seasons. For the players, it is a chance to turn progress into legacy.

For the manager, it is a test of tactical flexibility and mental management. Win or lose, the way Arsenal approach this tie will tell us a lot about where the project stands.

Arsenal has the structure, the personnel and the belief to make history, but they must solve a recent scoring slump and navigate a tactically astute opponent. The first leg will be a measuring stick, not just of quality on the pitch but of temperament off it.

If Arteta’s team can marry discipline with the attacking intent they’ve shown at their best, they will give themselves a real chance to reach a final that has eluded the club for decades.

Featured image via Arsenal

By Faz Ali


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