arsenal

Arsenal have reached a Champions League final, and the mood around the Gunners has been transformed.

Arsenal have spent much of this season wrestling with tension, tight games, tight margins, tight shoulders in the stands. But on a night when the Emirates finally exhaled, Mikel Arteta’s side booked their place in the Champions League final, only the second in the club’s history, and did so with a sense of timing that feels significant rather than sentimental.

The 1-0 win over Atletico Madrid, sealing a 2-1 aggregate victory, was not glamorous, but it did not need to be. What mattered was the win, in energy, in belief, in the way Arsenal carried themselves through a high‑stakes semi-final without the nervous tremors that have stalked them in recent months.

Arteta spoke afterwards about “a shift in energy and belief.” You did not need the quote to know it was true. You could see it in the players, hear it in the crowd, feel it in the way the stadium reacted to every duel. The Emirates has rediscovered its voice and its nerve at exactly the right time.

Arsenal: the fun boat finally sets sail

Back in January, after a damaging defeat to Manchester United, Arteta urged supporters to “jump on the fun boat.” At the time, it felt like a manager trying to coax positivity out of a fanbase bracing for turbulence.

On Tuesday night, the metaphor came alive, with a giant tifo of a fleet of boats greeting the players as they emerged from the tunnel. Pyrotechnics lit the air, the crowd roared with a conviction that had been missing during the season’s more anxious stretches.

Mikel Arteta & Arsenal have been building towards this moment slowly, sometimes painfully, and now the pieces are aligning. They are now on the verge of making history.

Momentum, is the most valuable currency in May

The last 24 hours have changed the temperature around the club, Manchester City’s slip in the Premier League title race handed Arsenal the initiative, then came the Champions League final berth. Suddenly, a season that looked like it might buckle under pressure has opened up into possibility.

Key players are returning at the right time is always a blessing, Bukayo Saka, sharper and more decisive after his recent layoff, has delivered three goal contributions in just over 100 minutes across two games, Riccardo Calafiori has added bite and balance to the back line, Myles Lewis‑Skelly is injecting youthful energy into a midfield that had begun to look heavy-legged, Martin Odegaard is back and Kai Havertz is close.

This isn’t just a squad getting healthier, the experience from previous seasons and also this season, seem to have made them braver as we reach the end of this season.

A team built on work

This match required a lot from this group of players asked and they responded in the right way, Declan Rice with a goal-saving challenge early on, Gabriel with two crucial second-half interventions, Leandro Trossard making 10 ball recoveries, double anyone else on the pitch, while tracking Antoine Griezmann and David Raya commanding his box with authority.

Huge credit must go to the tone-setter who was Viktor Gyökeres. His pressing, his hold-up play, his relentlessness, it all fed the crowd, who fed the team, who fed the momentum. It was his burst down the right which created the decisive goal for Saka, His missed sitter was forgiven instantly, which tells you everything about how supporters are reading this team right now.

Gyökeres isn’t flashy, he does not need to be, he gives Arsenal something they have lacked for years: a centre-forward who makes the game easier for everyone else.

A defence built for Europe

This was Arsenal’s 30th clean sheet of the season in all competitions. They have conceded just seven goals in 14 Champions League matches, that’s not form or luck, that’s a defence that cannot be shifted

Atletico never truly stretched them. The back line, anchored by Gabriel and Saliba, looked composed throughout, the midfield protected, the wide players worked, it was a complete European performance, disciplined, controlled, mature.

For all the talk of Arsenal lacking the glamour of Bayern, PSG or City, they now possess something just as valuable, a steeliness that travels well.

A defining three weeks

Arsenal now stand on the brink of something era-defining, a Premier League title race they control, and a Champions League final on May 30. A squad which seems to be peaking at the right time, and a fanbase reconnected with its team.

Arteta said his players have “the ability and conviction” to make this a special season, for a while after the carabao cup final defeat the players did not appear to be up for the fight and now they look like a team who are locked in and ready for whoever wins the other semi final.

This is not overconfidence, it is overdue confidence, as the numbers do not lie. Arsenal have conceded just seven goals in the champions league campaign this far, the other semi-finalists have both conceded 20 plus goals, so they can feel quietly confident in their own ability to win.

Featured image via the Canary

By Faz Ali


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