AccaMate logo

Football News

Latest Sports Stories

Filtered by tag:ArsenalClear filter
Declan Rice vows Arsenal will ‘go even stronger’ and ‘are coming back for more’

Football News

Declan Rice vows Arsenal will ‘go even stronger’ and ‘are coming back for more’

Arteta ‘told us he loves us all, to keep our heads up’Declan Rice has promised that Arsenal “are coming back for more” next season after putting aside their disappointment at losing on penalties in the Champions League final by parading the Premier League trophy in north London.Paris Saint-Germain retained their European crown after a nail-biting shootout in Budapest, which ended with Gabriel Magalhães missing the decisive spot kick. Arsenal – who have played more games in the competition without winning it than any other club – reached the Champions League final for the first time since 2006 having made steady progress under Mikel Arteta in recent seasons.Rice scored in the shootout and chanted “Set-piece FC” on a microphone as Arsenal showed off the Premier League trophy they won for the first time since 2004. He believes the best is still to come from a squad that includes the exciting 16-year-old Max Dowman.“Speaking to the players, obviously the manager, there is no reason why we are stopping here,” he said. “Next season we are going to go even stronger and we are going to be ready again so it is exciting times for this club. To see the joy we can give people is crazy. Next year, we’re coming back for more.”Asked what Arteta had said to the players after the defeat by PSG, he added: “He told us he loves us all, to keep our heads up, to be proud of what we have achieved this season. It is hard to find the words straight after a final for a manager but he is someone we have all looked up to, someone who all of us 100% every single day look to for guidance and strength and in tough moments this year he has been there for all of us and that is why we were so happy to deliver the Premier League because he deserves it.”Rice is set to miss England’s first warm-up game for the World Cup against New Zealand on Saturday as he has a few day off before linking up with Tuchel’s training squad in Miami. The 27-year-old has played more minutes for Arsenal than any other outfield player this season in all competitions.Myles Lewis-Skelly missed out on a place in England’s squad despite some impressive performances in his preferred midfield position in recent weeks. The 19-year-old, who was not even born the last time Arsenal won the title, admitted their celebrations were tinged with frustration at not being able to become the fourth English club to win a domestic and European titles in the same season.“It’s disappointing because when you’re so close to a dream, a goal, you feel slightly short,” he said. “But as Mikel said, it’s added fuel to the fire, so we’ll use that. It means everything, just to share this moment with our people. It’s incredible because it’s a chance to pay them back for all the sacrifices they’ve helped us through. I feel like it’s the start of a new era and I feel like we’re ready to go and achieve our dreams.”Arteta briefly addressed the crowd before four open-top buses also carrying the women’s team – who paraded the Fifa Champions Cup they won in February – started the five-mile loop around the streets of north London, with hundreds of thousands of supporters estimated to have turned out.“On behalf of the team, this is just amazing to witness,” said Arteta, who had his arm around the captain, Martin Ødegaard, and was wearing sunglasses. “You have created this. This is your moment to make sure that we all enjoy it together. Have a beautiful day. Let’s go Arsenal!”Along with Rice and the goalkeeper David Raya, Gabriel was one of three Arsenal men named in Uefa’s Champions League team of the season as PSG’s Khvicha Kvaratskhelia picked up the player of the competition award. The Brazil defender put in an immense performance to help keep Luis Enrique’s side at bay but admitted missing the penalty had been “painful”. “I’m proud of this team and everything we achieved together this season,” Gabriel wrote on Instagram. “Thank you to our incredible fans for your support every step of the way. You deserve to celebrate this journey with us and enjoy the parade today! See you next season!”

Ed AaronsSun, 31 May 2026
Source: The Guardian
Read story
Arsenal put Champions League anguish to one side with open-top bus parade

Football News

Arsenal put Champions League anguish to one side with open-top bus parade

Hundreds of thousands of fans line streets in LondonGabriel pays tribute to supporters after final agonyThe Arsenal defender Gabriel Magalhães admitted their Champions League penalty shootout defeat was “painful”, but the Gunners quickly put the disappointment to one side as fans descended on north London to attend an open-top bus parade.Gabriel missed the crucial spot-kick against Paris Saint-Germain as the French champions retained their crown following a 1-1 draw in Budapest. Yet Arsenal still had plenty to celebrate as they embarked on a parade through their local streets to celebrate the Premier League title success they secured earlier this month.“It’s painful, but I’m proud of this team and everything we achieved together this season,” Gabriel wrote on Instagram. “Thank you to our incredible fans for your support every step of the way. You deserve to celebrate this journey with us and enjoy the parade today! See you next season!”Mikel Arteta’s squad left the Emirates Stadium at 2.15pm to begin their 5.6-mile journey around the parade route. Team captain Martin Ødegaard was the first player to board the bus, adorned with “Champions 25/26”, holding the Premier League trophy.Gabriel and Eberechi Eze, who both missed in the Budapest shootout, appeared in good spirits on the bus despite the disappointment of the night before, while Arteta smiled broadly as he waved to the crowds. Members of the Arsenal staff followed on a second bus, while the women’s team were on a third bus parading the Fifa Champions Cup they won in February.Fans began arriving along the route in the early hours of Sunday morning, with hundreds of thousands expected in total.The owners of a cafe on Holloway Road said it was “almost surreal” to have the bus parade coming past. Seb Olid, a part owner of Coffee Zee, said he was in the area when Arsenal last won the league in 2004 and that it could not compare to this bus parade. He said: “It’s the most insane I have ever seen it. I was here in 2004 and it was nothing like this.”Arteta’s players had departed their hotel in Budapest a few hours earlier in defeat, with the Arsenal manager vowing to use the setback as “fuel” to carry them to glory next season.Myles Lewis-Skelly was not even born the last time Arsenal won the title in 2004. The 19-year-old, who started the Champions League final in midfield, told Sky Sports: “First of all, I’m so proud of the boys. I’m proud of the organisation in helping us get here because it hasn’t been an easy season. But obviously we’ve come to the end of the season and we’re champions of England.“It’s disappointing because when you’re so close to a dream, a goal, you feel slightly short but as Mikel said, it’s added fuel to the fire, so we’ll use that. It means everything, just to share this moment with our people. It’s incredible because it’s a chance to pay them back for all the sacrifices they’ve helped us through.“Just sharing this moment together will be special. I’m going to see my family here as well. It’s going to be emotional, so I’m so excited. The last two weeks have been incredible. Just sharing those moments with the team, the people that you love dearly, that you go to war with. It’s amazing. For me, [the future] is bright. I feel like it’s the start of a new era and I feel like we’re ready to go and achieve our dreams.“[Arteta] has been so supportive of me over my whole journey, so I’m just so grateful for him and the trust he’s given me.” Asked for a message for the fans, Lewis-Skelly added: “Thank you, and we’re not done!”

PA MediaSun, 31 May 2026
Source: The Guardian
Read story
Arsenal progress under Arteta is clear but flaws still remain for the ultimate glory

Football News

Arsenal progress under Arteta is clear but flaws still remain for the ultimate glory

Penalty misses from pre-season were repeated in Budapest while summer signings could help Gunners exert more control in biggest gamesWhen it was finally over – on the night and for the club season, devastation the overriding emotion for everyone connected to Arsenal – Declan Rice wanted to go back to make the point. To last July and his club’s first pre-season game, against Milan in Singapore.Arsenal won 1-0 before the teams agreed to stage a penalty shootout. The idea was clear: to practise in front of a crowd because you just cannot replicate this particular aspect of the game on the training ground. Arsenal lost.So at least there was a kind of symmetry to how it all ended on Saturday night in the Champions League final, Arsenal losing on penalties to Paris Saint-Germain, Gabriel Magalhães missing the decisive kick in round five. As an aside, Arsenal had two other shootouts in pre-season, against Villarreal and Athletic Club. They lost the former, Gabriel missing the fifth, again. They won the latter.What Rice wanted to stress was the marathon nature of a season that has brought the club’s first Premier League title since 2004 and defeats in two finals: the Carabao Cup and now the Champions League.“This season from start to finish … we started in July in Singapore and we’re now coming up to July again,” Rice said. “We’ve just played our 63rd game in all competitions. It’s been really tough, mentally draining. Since October, it has been three games a week.”Nobody had the heart to mention what is up next for Rice: the World Cup with England in North America. It will be the biggest, most congested one of them all, the heat and travel demands incredible. Rice will approach it having played in 55 of Arsenal’s matches (not including pre-season). Plus, six more for England. And battled through the pain of a persistent injury problem for months.When Rice was forced to withdraw from England’s friendly against Japan at the end of March, Thomas Tuchel revealed he had been at “70%” for “quite a while”. When he returned for Arsenal, Mikel Arteta came to play him as more of a midfield No 6 than a No 8. Was it to manage his running?“We know what we’ve been through internally this season,” Arteta said as he tried to digest the PSG defeat, and it was easy to imagine he had Rice’s internal battle in mind. Yet all the way through the final, Rice resisted. Up until his very last action – his successful conversion in round three of the shootout. He was not the barnstorming presence of so many Arsenal games. But as a symbol of their character, their sheer bloody-mindedness, he was there.There were many others and what had to please Arteta the most was how his players executed the gameplan. After Kai Havertz’s early goal, Arsenal were watertight against Europe’s most feared attack until Cristhian Mosquera conceded the penalty for Ousmane Dembélé’s 65th-minute equaliser.Thereafter, Arsenal pushed again, they asked questions and, were it not for a clutch of poor final passes, they may have nicked a winner, most notably before the end of regulation time. You didn’t like the approach? You haven’t liked Arsenal this season? They don’t care. Neither do their fans.“You can’t play the game against PSG like others have done where you are following them all around the pitch because that’s what they want,” Rice said. “We really nullified them.”There was a moment after PSG had got past Bayern Munich in the semi-final and were looking ahead to the final when Luis Enrique referred to Arteta as “Mikelito”. The PSG manager was an established Barcelona player when Arteta was a young hopeful at the club, trying (and failing) to break into the first team. Luis Enrique’s use of the old nickname was affectionate and yet it felt slightly patronising, too. He has to see Arteta as more of an equal now.The bad bits of the final for Arsenal took in that lack of care with their final ball. Their pass-completion rate was an extremely low 69%. PSG’s was 91%. They simply did not enjoy enough possession; they made 196 successful passes to PSG’s 806. Or create enough in front of goal. Some of the individual attacking statistics were startling. Bukayo Saka completed only four passes and was nought out of four on his dribbles. Martin Ødegaard touched the ball 12 times.Gabriel’s miss from the spot made the headlines but what about Eberechi Eze’s in round two? He took a penalty for Crystal Palace in their Community Shield shootout win against Liverpool at the start of the season. He made a stuttering run, paused and shot weakly for the bottom left-hand corner, with Alisson getting down to save.In a video captured on the Wembley pitch, as Eze’s miss was replayed on the big screen, the Palace defender, Tyrick Mitchell, can be heard saying to him: “You’d better stop taking it like that, I’m telling you.”“Yeah, I think it’s done,” Eze replies. But he went with exactly the same technique against PSG, the only difference being that he dragged the ball past the post.We also really have to talk about the referee, Daniel Siebert, and the sense that Arsenal antagonised him with their time management. It was an extraordinary episode when he blew for the end of the first half of normal time as Saka prepared to take a corner, feeling the Arsenal winger had dillydallied too long.PSG were back out early after the interval but where were Arsenal, Siebert seemed to wonder? He walked over towards the tunnel and stood on the sideline waiting for them. He looked exasperated. Two minutes after the restart, he booked Mosquera for time-wasting on a throw. Then, at the last, as Gabriel prepared to take his penalty, did Siebert absolutely need to have a chat with him and fuss over his placement of the ball? Gabriel respotted it before blazing high.Moving forward, it will be interesting to see if Arteta can turn the dial more towards attack in the pressure games. He talked about having to “make some very important decisions if we want to reach another level.” The Atlético Madrid striker, Julián Alvarez, will be a prime summer transfer target. Arteta will reflect on whether the club can make improvements on the medical and conditioning side to better withstand the demands of the schedule.For the moment, though, it will be the snapshots and emotions from after the final that dominate. The PSG celebrations as they retained their Champions League title. Even the image that was projected on to the magnificent facade of the main train station in Budapest. It featured Dembélé, his teammate Khvicha Kvaratskhelia, and the caption: “Back to Back”.“We’re gutted but we move on,” Rice said. “There’s been so many top players who have taken so many years to win their first Champions League. We’re going to use these feelings … seeing them lift that trophy … to go on and win this competition. We’ll be back, for sure.”

David Hytner in BudapestSun, 31 May 2026
Source: The Guardian
Read story
Lewis-Skelly dazzles but Arsenal endure cruel ending to thrillingly intense final | Barney Ronay

Football News

Lewis-Skelly dazzles but Arsenal endure cruel ending to thrillingly intense final | Barney Ronay

Some struggle to love Mikel Arteta’s side but they went toe-to-toe with PSG in a gruelling, high-grade contestIt always seemed likely, somehow, that Arsenal’s season was going to come down to Gabriel Magalhães and a set piece. Just not, ideally, like this.After half an hour it was already the kind of day where it becomes impossible to remember a time when this game wasn’t happening, where the Puskas Arena is just the universe now, when there is just always this single humid moment, the same rolling bowl of noise, the red, white and blue shapes, the constantly shifting patterns.Even as the game edged into penalties at 1-1 close to 9pm the night still felt like a series of weirdly vivid moments. Here is David Raya being simultaneously triple-maintained by the Arsenal pit crew, pounded on both thighs, brain fed with data by a pair of crouching men, another flooding his mouth with fresh fluids.In the stands the same Arsenal fan had been leaping up all night, stringy arms beating the air, chain bouncing, king of the stairwell, a man completely lost in this time and this place. Down on the pitch Mikel Arteta had come to Budapest in his summer wardrobe, the light grey slacks jettisoned in favour of some very dark grey slacks and a silky polo shirt, poised on his chalk line like an unusually trim and energetic darts player.By now Arteta was into his sixth dance-battle rondo-huddle of the night, crouching and clenching and barking every word. He loves to talk about suffering. Across his three hours here Arsenal’s manager must have done 20,000 star jumps and 650 shuttle sprints, never letting his intensity drop. How will this man ever sleep again? They’re going to need some kind of elephant tranquilliser gun to put him down for the night.And so PSG have retained their title, completing the much-trumpeted two-peat. They are a hugely deserving champion team. All the more so at the end of a game that was made beautiful by Arsenal making sure anyone who wanted to win this thing had to be good enough to beat them, insisting that every trick and feint and moment of grace was gouged out of something hard and real.By the end this was a reminder too that some things are long, difficult and nuanced, that the world’s most popular form of entertainment is still like this at its best: a saga, grudging in its rewards, despite what you might hear about instant content, reel culture and the allegedly junk attention spans of young people.For Arsenal’s supporters there will be genuine pleasure in the performance of a young team with five English players in it; in Arteta successfully asserting his tactical plan at this rarefied level; and most specifically, perhaps, in the performance of Myles Lewis-Skelly, who was given the hardest job in football, taking on Vitinha in a Champions League final, and was sensationally good.The Puskas Arena is a huge grey metal bowl, steeply tiered on all sides, its white mesh tubing roof leaning in over the pitch. Budapest had been clammy all day, with a landlocked central European summer stillness in the air. The noise at kick-off captured the fan culture of these two clubs. The Paris sound is always dominated by the endlessly drumming ultras end, who basically just sing whatever is happening, a wall of people making noise near a football match; the Arsenal half of the stadium was less choreographed, more reactive, the familiarly English sense of a crowd having a conversation with itself.The Killers came out and did a really fast, sweaty medley of their songs and nobody really asked why and it was fine. And from the start there were some intriguing notes in the team Arteta picked.Right-back had to be Cristhian Mosquera, who is not a right-back, who seems too upright, too square, too long in the limbs to turn and twist like a right-back, and who was up against the frankly terrifying Khvicha Kvaratskhelia. But he played really well in his time on the pitch.Then there was Lewis-Skelly, who completed the most extraordinary bends-inducing redemption arc, from ghost player, filler in a vest, to facing off against the best midfield in Europe. He played 90 minutes and was fearlessly good in every one of them. Not on the bare numbers perhaps, but in his energy and covering and game intelligence, the ability to plug every gap and always offer an angle. There were some lovely moments. A surge through midfield in the first half, and a thigh-shredding charge back to dispossess Désiré Doué on 78 minutes. Lewis-Skelly and Declan Rice would have looked a very good option as England’s starting midfield pivot at the World Cup.Arsenal scored with the first proper piece of football in the game. It was made by a Leandro Trossard block-assist, the ball deflected into the path of Kai Havertz, suddenly all alone and spidering his way in on goal, and finishing brilliantly into the roof of the net. Matvey Safonov can often look like he’s just wandered into a pub in Maidstone and is trying to sell you a bag of kidneys. He had a good game here, although Arsenal will regret that he didn’t actually have to get a hand on any of their penalties in the shootout. He did though make the choice easy for Havertz, basically squatting down and saying, go on, put it up there.For the first quarter of the game Arsenal’s plan worked. They gave up the ball, but in the process de-fanged PSG. On his touchline Luis Enrique already looked like he’d just run a desert marathon in swimming trunks, eyes boggling, T-shirt darkened with sweat. Arsenal’s defensive interventions were superbly timed, always calm and high-craft. The best part of the Premier League is its utter focus, its extreme levels of intensity in every moment. And there was something fascinating in seeing PSG asked to rise to that level, after a season playing in a domestic league that has basically been turned into the County Championship. Doué and Kvaratskhelia will be fidgeting their way up the steps when they get home, waiting for William Saliba to jump out of the bushes, wondering if when they flick on the lights Lewis-Skelly is already going to be there occupying the chaise longue.On 61 minutes, Paris finally found their moment, Mosquera drawn into a foul in the box by Kvaratskhelia. Ousmane Dembélé rolled the kick into the corner. Arsenal might have folded. They didn’t. PSG also kept coming, finding their own more bloody-minded gear.And so we went to penalties. A word about Gabriel and the final miss. He was made to wait by the referee, who insisted on speaking to kicker and keeper. This really was a moment of random chance, the day suddenly veering into something else, losing its edge at the very last.Gabriel had played superbly well. His kick ballooned mockingly into the crowd. The fireworks erupted. Arsenal’s players didn’t crumple, but walked slowly around the pitch as it was invaded by scampering wonks, applauding the fans and drinking in a moment that they will be hungry to taste again.A season and a champion team that some have struggled to love, or at least to watch as a TV production, dished up a thrillingly intense, high-quality end note here. The game may be cruel, gruelling and hostage to details, but the lesson of Budapest was that it is undeniably still good.

Barney Ronay at the Puskas ArenaSat, 30 May 2026
Source: The Guardian
Read story
Arteta urges Arsenal to use Champions League final pain against PSG and ‘turn it into fuel’

Football News

Arteta urges Arsenal to use Champions League final pain against PSG and ‘turn it into fuel’

‘We will have to improve to try to get a different outcome’Manager unhappy Arsenal not given extra-time penaltyMikel Arteta spoke of his heartache after a skied penalty from Gabriel Magalhães in the shootout against Paris Saint-Germain ended Arsenal’s hopes of being crowned European champions for the first time, but emphasised the need to take that pain “and turn it into fuel”.Kai Havertz’s early strike and a defensive masterclass in the first half of the Champions League final that frustrated the holders had Arsenal supporters dreaming of a double after their first Premier League title for 22 years. But PSG hit back in the second half through Ousmane Dembélé from the spot before Arsenal thought they should have had a penalty of their own at the end of the first half of extra time.Arteta was booked for his protests after Noni Madueke tangled with Nuno Mendes. He then watched David Raya pull off a brilliant save from Mendes in the shootout after Eberechi Eze had put his spot-kick wide. It came down to Arsenal’s fifth penalty from Gabriel and the Brazilian was inconsolable after sending his effort over the bar.“Pain, that’s it,” said Arteta when asked to sum up his emotions. “When you are so close in the competition, and you are a few penalties away from winning the biggest club competition, that’s the way we should feel.”He added: “First of all you have to go through that pain, digest it, and turn it into fuel. To improve and to reach a different level, because it would demand a different level with the quality around Europe. I want to congratulate PSG because they are in my opinion the best team in the world.”Luis Enrique’s side have become only the ninth club in the competition’s history to retain their title and only the second in the Champions League era. But Arteta was disappointed that the German referee, Daniel Siebert, decided against awarding a penalty when Madueke went down in the area under pressure from Mendes.“I watched all the penalties in the competition in the last 72 hours, but that easily can be a penalty,” he said. “It is not what happened and that’s it. We will have to improve to try and get a different outcome. I will take a few days with my family and then we will start the process to review what we’ve done and decide to make some very important decisions if we want to reach another level.”Declan Rice admitted coming so close was a difficult pill to swallow but backed Arsenal to bounce back. “We will try to take some perspective from how far we have come as a group,” the England midfielder said. “Some of the best teams ever have lost on penalties in finals. It’s cruel, but that’s football. The manager has told us how much he loves us as a group. This is only the start for us.”Luis Enrique, who started with the same outfield players who defeated Inter 5-0 in last year’s final and has now won the Champions League three times, paid tribute to Arsenal’s defensive efforts.“Maybe today both teams deserved to win, but the way we played the whole season, I think we deserve it,” he said. “We are used to attacking [against a low block] but they are strong physically, they know how to defend and it was very tough. We’ll try to do it again next year. Why not?”

Ed Aarons at the Puskas ArenaSat, 30 May 2026
Source: The Guardian
Read story
Paris Saint-Germain 1-1 Arsenal (4-3 on penalties): Champions League final player ratings

Football News

Paris Saint-Germain 1-1 Arsenal (4-3 on penalties): Champions League final player ratings

Désiré Doué inspired PSG’s fightback to win in a shootout after being stunned by early goal from a classy Kai HavertzMatvey Safonov Appeared to forget that goalkeepers are allowed to use their hands for Havertz’s strike. Didn’t get near any penalties in shootout but didn’t need to. 6Achraf Hakimi Wasn’t 100% fit after coming back from a month out with a thigh injury and couldn’t have the same influence he usually does. 7Nuno Mendes Arsenal thought they should have had a penalty in extra time after an incident with Madueke. Weak penalty in shootout saved by Raya. 6Marquinhos The PSG captain could do nothing about the unfortunate deflection for opening goal. Probably didn’t expect to be substituted, however. 7Willian Pacho Came off second best for most of his ding-dong battle with Havertz but recovered to make some key blocks in extra time. 7Fabián Ruiz Should have been booked in first minute for throwing the ball away and lacked his usual composure in central midfield. 6Vitinha The heartbeat of PSG’s midfield was everywhere as usual. Should have done better with a great chance to win and wasn’t happy to be taken off in extra time. 8João Neves The Portugal midfielder was unsettled by physicality of his battle with Lewis-Skelly but didn’t give up and played a key role. 8Désiré Doué Seemed to get frustrated early on at being double marked by Hincapié and Trossard. Much improved after the break as PSG stepped things up. 9Ousmane Dembélé Last year’s Ballon d’Or winner flitted in and out of the game but helped to create the penalty and ruthlessly dispatched it into the bottom corner. 7Khvicha Kvaratskhelia Grew in influence after an uncharacteristically slow start. The Georgian’s jinking feet forced Mosquera to concede the penalty before later striking the woodwork. 8Substitutes: Bradley Barcola (for Kvaratskhelia, 84) Express pace almost resulted in two goals at end of normal time. 6; Gonçalo Ramos (for Dembélé, 90+6) Couldn’t get much change out of Saliba and Gabriel. 6; Warren Zaïre-Emery (for Ruiz, 95) Gave PSG extra legs in midfield. 6; Lucas Beraldo (for Vitinha, 105) Cool penalty in shootout. 7; Illia Zabarnyi (for Marquinhos, 105) N/ADavid Raya Largely a spectator for the first half. Could do nothing to stop Dembélé equalising from spot and came close to being Arsenal’s hero in the shootout. 7Cristhian Mosquera Preferred to Timber and kept Kvaratskhelia quiet in first half. But clumsily gave away penalty and was hooked after escaping a second booking. 6Gabriel Magalhães Two outstanding goal-saving tackles in the first half and set the tone for Arsenal throughout. But will always be remembered for the skied penalty in shootout. 7William Saliba So reliable defensively and a class act in possession. The France defender never looks ruffled, even when facing the best attack in world football. 8Piero Hincapié Got the better of his man Doué in their personal duel on several occasions and also provided the occasional attacking threat. 7Myles Lewis-Skelly More than justified his selection ahead of Zubimendi. A critical block to deflect Kvaratskhelia’s shot on to a post and never stopped running. 8Declan Rice Sacrificed his attacking instincts for the good of the team and made some key tackles. Almost punished by Barcola for losing the ball with last act of normal time. 7Martin Ødegaard The captain helped to frustrate PSG in the first half without offering much going forward. Still a surprise to see him substituted straight after the equaliser. 6Bukayo Saka Not his most effective performance in attack, even if it was clear that PSG were always wary of his threat and did his job in defensive rearguard. 7Kai Havertz Took his goal – the second he has scored in a Champions League final – beautifully and led the line impressively throughout. 8Leandro Trossard Didn’t know much about his assist for Havertz’s goal and showed some nice touches. Ran out of steam after the break. 6Substitutes: Jurriën Timber (for Mosquera, 66) Almost got on the end of one cross but had his hands full with Barcola. 6; Viktor Gyökeres (for Ødegaard, 66) Shot deflected wide in extra-time was only sight of goal apart from penalty in shootout. 6; Gabriel Martinelli (for Trossard, 83) Wasted great opportunity to set up Madueke with heavy pass. Excellent penalty. 7; Noni Madueke (for Saka, 83) Couldn’t believe he wasn’t awarded a penalty after burst into the area. 7; Eberechi Eze (for Havertz, 91) Little impact in extra-time and a nervous penalty. 5; Martín Zubimendi (for Lewis-Skelly, 91) A steadying influence when he came on for extra time. 6

Ed Aarons at the Puskas ArenaSat, 30 May 2026
Source: The Guardian
Read story
‘Happy either way’: Arsenal fans find zen attitude to Champions League final

Football News

‘Happy either way’: Arsenal fans find zen attitude to Champions League final

Supporters filling north London pubs said they were already gratified by Premier League winThe streets of Holloway, usually bustling with families and trolly-dragging shoppers, were uncharacteristically quiet on Saturday afternoon. But shortly after the clock struck 5pm, loud roars echoed through the north London high street, located a short walk away from the Emirates stadium, as Arsenal walked on to the pitch for the Champions League final.While the team, still basking in the glory of their Premier League win last week, were in Budapest for their final showdown against Paris Saint-Germain, Gunners – or Gooners, as they are colloquially known – came out to support the team on their home turf.The Argos sign on Holloway Road was fitted with a banner after the letter r to form the word Ar-senal and pubs in the area were heaving with fans clad in red and white. The tense silence was broken mere minutes later when Kai Havertz scored a goal barely five minutes into the game.Lucy, 37, and Gregory, 48, travelled from Paris to Holloway for the final, though sadly they couldn’t make it inside the Victoria Tavern pub to view the game, which was heaving with fans. “The mood is amazing,” said Lucy, who has been a Gooner for 30 years. “We went to the Emirates and there was lots of people.” She said she connected with the team because of its strong pedigree of French players including Thierry Henry and Patrick Vieira.Gregory wasn’t too hopeful that Arsenal could pull off a double win. “PSG is a good team,” he said. Lucy did not see it as a make-or-break result: “I will be happy either way but more happy if we win the Champions League.”Issac, 42, was also waiting outside the pub, with fleeting hope that he would make it inside. He had travelled to Holloway from Ghana to celebrate with other Gunners on home turf. “It was the best thing ever,” he said of Arsenal’s Premier League win, the first time the team had taken the trophy in 22 years. Like Lucy and Gregory, he was already delighted with what Arsenal had achieved this season. “I’ll be disappointed but we’ve got a Premier League win which is more important to me,” he said.Most pubs around the stadium were at full capacity and a short bus ride away in Angel Islington, Gooner fever was also in full swing. “Honestly, I’m a mix of nervous and excited,” said 25-year-old Jack Devonport about the final, who had travelled into the area to celebrate with his fellow Gunners. Though, like near the Emirates, most pubs were already packed.He has been a lifelong Gooner. “I’ve seen everything. I was alive for the last Champions League final but I don’t remember it. I’ve seen us losing to Birmingham in the cup finals. I’ve seen the 6-0 on the Chelsea game. I’ve seen all the negatives and finally it feels like we’re at the pinnacle,” he said.When Arsenal were declared victors of the Premier League for the first time in 22 years last week, Devonport said he felt “relief more than anything”.“The one thing I’ve learned about football is that it isn’t always fair. Sometimes you can be the best team with the best squad but luck doesn’t always go your way,” he said. “You don’t always get what you deserve in football but to finally get over the line is everything to me.”Arsenal’s smashing performance this season has meant more than mere personal satisfaction to Devonport. “The last time we won the league I was five years old so to be able to watch every game this season with my dad has been massive,” he said.“To watch all the games together, to relive what he had when he was younger with his son is amazing. It’s something we’ll never forget.”And the evening began well for Arsenal with Kai Havertz firing them into a sixth-minute lead. PSG, however, equalised courtesy of an Ousmane Dembélé penalty in the second half to force extra time and subsequently a penalty shootout.There was heartbreak in the end for the red half of north London with Eberechi Eze and Gabriel Magalhães missing their spot-kicks as the French side won 4-3 in the shootout to retain their Champions League crown.

Sammy GecsoylerSat, 30 May 2026
Source: The Guardian
Read story
Paris Saint-Germain retain Champions League as Arsenal dream dashed in shootout

Football News

Paris Saint-Germain retain Champions League as Arsenal dream dashed in shootout

It was a showpiece that held the football world in its grip, the tension mounting exponentially, everything on the line. For Paris Saint-Germain, there was the opportunity to make it clear that this is a dynastic team; the rarity of retaining a Champions League title.For Arsenal, it was simple. Never mind the Invincibles. They stood to be immortal, a first triumph in this competition to follow their first Premier League triumph in 22 years; the thing that has changed everything about the mood around the club.It was a clash of styles, Arsenal defending with characteristic aggression after Kai Havertz had put them ahead in the early running. The striker had scored the winning goal in this game for Chelsea against Manchester City in 2021. Was he poised to be the hero again?PSG rallied, Ousmane Dembélé equalising from the penalty spot in the 65th minute and it was the prompt for the gloves to come off, both teams pushing, everybody aware that it would most likely come down to one moment. And, when the teams could not be separated after extra-time, it came in the penalty shootout.It was the longest of walks for Gabriel Magalhães, Arsenal’s defensive titan, to take the final kick of the regulation five rounds. His teammate, Eberechi Eze, on as a substitute, had missed the target in round two only for David Raya to square it back up by denying Nuno Mendes in round three.Gabriel had to score to keep Arsenal alive and he appeared to be delayed by the referee, Daniel Siebert. His heart hammered. So did that of everyone. And it was all too much. Gabriel went for power and the ball was still rising as it cleared the crossbar. The PSG fans behind the goal lit red flares in celebration. Arsenal were broken. Theirs had been a heroic effort. It was not enough.It was an occasion that hurtled towards its denouement, shaped by Havertz’s goal and what a finish it was from a player who knows a fair bit about delivering on this elevated stage. The angle looked too tight for him as he reached the left-hand side of the six-yard box after a run from halfway but it did not matter as he lashed his shot into the roof of the net.Why did Matvey Safonov have his arms low by his sides? Because the PSG goalkeeper did not expect the shot to go high. Havertz had initially reacted quicker than Willian Pacho to Leandro Trossard’s charging down of a Marquinhos clearance.Arteta had prioritised solidity with his selection. And why not? It had worked for him all season. He went for Martin Ødegaard over the X-factor of Eze; he was never going to play both in the middle of the pitch. He needed a more defensive player alongside Declan Rice and it was Myles Lewis-Skelly rather than Martín Zubimendi. Lewis-Skelly was excellent.Jurrien Timber was not fit enough to start at right-back so Arteta put his faith in Cristhian Mosquera. At left-back, he picked Piero Hincapiee over Riccardo Calafiori; the more secure option. Hincapie was also very good. It added up to four centre-halves across the defence. The battle lines appeared to have been drawn before kick-off.Arteta did not mind if PSG hogged the ball. Which they did. It was about whether his team could compress the spaces and keep them at arm’s length in the final third. Whether they could stand tall in the one v ones. Which frequently became two vones in Arsenal’s favour. Or even more than that. Arteta’s players worked tirelessly to cover for each other.The plan worked to perfection in the first half of normal time. PSG grew frustrated. They had a penalty shout for handball against Bukayo Saka on 17 minutes which the Arsenal winger got away after he miskicked an attempted clearance. But there was little else from PSG.Arsenal measured their progress in tackles. Mosquera won a big one against Khvicha Kvaratskhelia while Gabriel made a series of them. He was a one-man wrecking ball. Arsenal flickered on the transitions. After Lewis-Skelly surged upfield in the 26th minute, Saka crossed low to almost find Trossard, Safonov making a saving parry. When Ødegaard played in Havertz on 45 minutes, PSG needed a blocking challenge from Marquinhos.PSG told themselves to stay patient. The equaliser would come as long as they worked their patterns and rotations. Even if their opponents were all over them like an angry red rash. If only they could get in behind, which they struggled sorely to do.When they finally did so, they felt their hopes surge. Kvaratskhelia played the give-and-go with Dembélé and, at last, he was goal-side of Mosquera, whose challenge was clumsy. It was a clear penalty and perhaps a second yellow card for Mosquera, who had been booked for time-wasting on 47 minutes. He was spared the double punishment. Dembélé’s conversion was low into the corner.Arteta’s response was bold. Timber for Mosquera. And, more dramatically, Viktor Gyökeres for Ødegaard. Arsenal came out of their shells and there were moments when a better final ball might have led to real possibilities. Especially towards the end of regulation time when one substitute, Gabriel Martinelli, missed a pass for another one, Noni Madueke.PSG’s defending came to look a little last-ditch but they threatened at the other end. Before the end of normal time, Kvaratskhelia had stormed away and watched Lewis-Skelly deflect his shot against the outside of the near post while Vitinha whipped narrowly over when gloriously placed. Bradley Barcola, on for Kvaratskhelia, menaced with his jet-heeled pace on the counter.Arsenal continued to push in the first period of extra-time, with Eze on for Havertz. There was much to encourage their fans. Much for them to fret over, too. And rage against. When Madueke flicked on the afterburners in the 101st minute, he worked half a yard on the outside against Nuno Mendes. The pair grappled and they wrestled before Madueke went down and Mendes fell on top of him. No penalty, said Siebert, which was just about the right decision. Arteta was booked for his furious reaction. So was Rice.Luis Enrique made changes for the second additional period, taking off Marquinhos and Vitinha. His star count dwindled. Achraf Hakimi took over the captain’s armband. Désiré Doué took on greater responsibility. PSG got back on to the front foot, although Gyokeres almost stole it at the very end with a shot that deflected wide. The emotion was extraordinary. And then came the penalties.

David Hytner at the Puskas ArenaSat, 30 May 2026
Source: The Guardian
Read story
My Arsenal devotion began with watching them lose in a South African cinema

Football News

My Arsenal devotion began with watching them lose in a South African cinema

As a boy in the apartheid era I saw footage of the Gunners beaten in the 1969 League Cup final – on Saturday I will attend the Champions League showpiece with my sonI fell for Arsenal in the white‑and-black world of apartheid, where television was banned as a tool of communist propaganda and the club of my dreams was 6,000 miles away and mostly invisible to me. So it feels fitting that a surreal love story that began for a small boy in South Africa in 1969 will reach a new peak on Saturday night in eastern Europe. This 65-year-old Arsenal fan and his 25-year-old son, who is just as besotted by the Gunners, will be at the Champions League final in Budapest as we face the dazzling powerhouse of Paris Saint-Germain.It’s the final game of Arsenal’s tumultuous grind of a season and we are as exhausted as we are still euphoric. We will remember that my last game of this campaign could have been Swindon’s 2-1 home defeat by Chesterfield in League Two. I have had my share of pain with Arsenal; but it would have been a far deeper burden to have spent 57 years supporting Swindon.It could have happened because my eighth birthday party in April 1969 included a trip to the movies, where we initially watched a Pathé News bulletin featuring footage of the League Cup final between Arsenal and Swindon which had happened six weeks before. I’ve seen those two and a half minutes many times since and can understand why I was smitten.But it’s more usual for a kid to back the winning team and, that day, Third Division Swindon beat Arsenal 3-1 with Don Rogers scoring two goals in extra time. “Swindon Town had come to town and beaten one of the country’s greatest football machines,” the posh old commentator rejoiced.Perhaps that description of Arsenal shaped my choice. It didn’t matter that they lost. I was going to follow the mighty red machine for ever – obviously not knowing that, decades later, “second again, olé, olé” would become a haunting song for Arsenal.I was just a kid back then and so my allegiance to Arsenal turned to adoration when the club won the league and FA Cup Double in May 1971. It was another trip to the movies in downtown Johannesburg, and footage of a long-haired Charlie George scoring the winning goal against Liverpool at Wembley, which entranced me and my Arsenal-mad friends. Once we got back to our suburban gardens we tried to emulate Charlie’s celebration in which he was spreadeagled on his back, arms stretched out in disbelief on the sun-kissed Wembley turf.I fell in love with Arsenal in dreamy slow motion because I could never see them live or even on television. But I still watched great footballers such as George Best, Bobby Moore and Johnny Haynes, and more prosaic journeymen such as Roy Hodgson, as they broke the sports boycott and made lucrative trips to play in South Africa’s whites-only league.The Gunners meant much more to me than my local team, Germiston Callies, and there was an almost delicious agony in the delayed gratification, or heartache, of Arsenal news. Most Sunday mornings I woke early without knowing what had happened the previous afternoon.My run to the corner shop took less than 30 seconds. I trembled with excitement and, despite the shop-owner’s usual muttered instruction for me to buy the newspaper before reading it, flipped to the back pages and the English football results.There was a mysterious power to the blunt news which read either gloriously:I was soon transfixed by second-half commentaries of First Division games on the BBC World Service. Whenever Arsenal featured I could listen to them playing live and hear the score in real time. The brilliant commentator Peter Jones painted pictures with words so vividly that it lit up my imagination.I was also sustained by copies of Shoot! magazine, which were shipped from England and arrived six weeks late. My friends and I read every article and studied every photograph. We could soon list the entire squads of middling First Division clubs such as Coventry and Southampton – and discuss the best bubble perm, moustache or comb‑over in 1970s football.Television finally arrived in South Africa and occasional English football games were screened from 1978. The first Arsenal matches I watched in full were three successive FA Cup finals at Wembley. Sandwiched between dismal 1-0 defeats by Ipswich and West Ham, in 1978 and 1980, there was a glorious 3-2 win over Manchester United.I already knew that I had to escape the army and apartheid and somehow get to England, where I would be saved by music, movies and Arsenal. But my understanding of football fervour caught fire when I spent two years in the 1980s teaching at a Soweto school.In January 2000 I interviewed Radebe for the Guardian. During our emotional reunion he told me: “When I left Soweto six years ago I was very depressed. I was so homesick I wanted to give up.” I told Radebe I had also cried when I left South Africa, aged 23, in August 1984.But I went to my first Arsenal game three weeks later, a 1-1 draw with Chelsea. I was on the North Bank alone, but at home. I followed Arsenal home and away; and I never felt lonely. I felt as if I belonged. Arsenal were my second family in a very different life.In the 1980s you could still walk into Highbury at 2:45, pay £4 at the turnstiles and be on the North Bank before kick-off at 3pm. I usually stood in the same area and many faces became familiar. Every fortnight we would exchange nods and a few words. Sometimes we even hugged in delirium, without even knowing each other’s names, when a late winner was scored.Arsenal were not very good when I arrived but everything changed with George Graham’s appointment in 1986. We soon had a great back four of Lee Dixon, Tony Adams, Steve Bould and Nigel Winterburn and a trio of black players who were as skilful as they were resilient. David Rocastle, Paul Davis and Michael Thomas were my favourite players.Racism in English football was rife in the 1980s. I heard the chants and saw the bananas being thrown; but Arsenal were different. Arsenal were integrated. It didn’t matter if we were white or black – we all bled red.There were last-minute league titles and cup wins and then, incredibly, the unforgettable Arsène Wenger years, when he transformed English football while we lost ourselves in the sublime artistry and steely grit of a team that contained Thierry Henry and Dennis Bergkamp, Patrick Vieira and Sol Campbell.Arsenal had also kickstarted my sportswriting career when, at Highbury in December 1984, I made my first visit to a press box. As a journalism student I was meant to shadow David Lacey but the Guardian’s great football writer had not been assigned to Arsenal that day. I could have followed him elsewhere but I chose to watch Arsenal with Robert Armstrong, who eventually became this paper’s rugby correspondent.After the game I ended up in the office of Don Howe, the manager, with Armstrong and three of his Fleet Street colleagues. Howe shouted cheerfully down the passage to the striker Ian Allinson, who had scored two goals in a 3-1 win over Luton, to make us some tea.I have interviewed many famous Arsenal names since then – from Liam Brady, Graham, Adams and Paul Merson to Wenger, Bergkamp, Cesc Fàbregas and Bukayo Saka. Rather than making me tea, Saka, one of my favourite players, was accompanied by five PR people and agents.I met Bergkamp near the end of the 2003-04 Invincible season when he and his teammates did not lose a single league match. The Dutch master told me that a few weeks earlier, when he returned home after Arsenal lost in the FA Cup semi-finals to Manchester United, he found his son, Mitchell, crying bitter tears. The five-year-old was devoted to Arsenal. “I had to try and comfort him,” Bergkamp sighed, “but it took a long time.”A couple of years later I took my own son to his first Arsenal game. Jack was also five and, in October 2006, he saw Arsenal, with players such as Fàbregas, Henry and Robin van Persie, beat Watford 3-0 in just the fourth league game played at the Emirates Stadium.A few months later, on Boxing Day, I took Jack to the return fixture at Watford’s rickety old Vicarage Road. After Watford’s Tommy Smith equalised Gilberto Silva’s opening goal, Arsenal conjured up an 83rd-minute winner from Van Persie. It was the best Christmas present ever for Jack and we went mad with the travelling Arsenal fans.We remember all these facts because last year Jack gave me a beautiful present. In a black book, with a red ribbon, he laboriously wrote down all the details of every Arsenal match we had seen live together over the previous 19 years. It took him days of work and, while he could have printed all the details off the internet, he used a pen to write each date, each game, each goal and each player’s name as an old-school reminder of my other-worldly introduction to Arsenal.We remembered how Jack had cried in February 2011 when we watched Arsenal lose the Carling Cup final at Wembley to Birmingham. In the distressed aftermath I wondered what I had done to my boy as, swallowing my disappointment, I promised that he would see Arsenal lift many trophies in the years to come. I would eventually be proved right as Arsenal have won four FA Cups since then – but the league remained painfully elusive until last week.Jack is so obsessed by Arsenal that, for the past four years, he has lived opposite the Emirates Stadium. From his front door it takes 20 seconds before we are swept up in the chanting throng which, this season, has never felt far from a collective nervous breakdown.There have been some beautiful moments as well. On 23 November, Jack and I were off our seats and jumping around, agog, between the North Bank and the halfway line. Eberechi Eze, a childhood fan of the club, scored a hat-trick against Spurs. Four days later, we were back as Arsenal rolled over Bayern Munich in a statement 3-1 victory.In mid-March, when the 16-year‑old Max Dowman ran almost the length of the pitch, the ball staying magically close to his feet before he rolled it into the Everton net with an elegant caress to seal another late win, we were falling and laughing as we crashed into other jubilant fans.I banged my bad knee hard and it was a beautiful feeling, the pain proving it was real.There have been horrible moments too. After the Carabao Cup final, where we were dismantled by Manchester City, I was with the sombre Arsenal fans on platform two at Wembley Central. Opposite us the taunting City supporters sang: “Second again, olé, olé …”Arsenal played well away against City in the league on my birthday, 19 April, but we lost 2-1. Our front room was crammed as screams of delight gave way to howls of anguish. The life‑size cutout of Mikel Arteta, given to me by my youngest daughter, Emma, stayed silent. The City juggernaut loomed over us and the league, once more, was in the balance.We were at the Emirates for all our remaining home games: the excruciating 1-0 defeat of Newcastle, the 3-0 romp past Fulham and the decidedly painful 1-0 win over Burnley which followed the video assistant referee trauma of an away victory by the same score over West Ham.I dreaded the prospect of needing a win, away to Crystal Palace, on the last day of the season. But joy came in a different way when, last week, City drew with Bournemouth. Arsenal were champions and, as soon as the game ended, Jack called me. He was crying, and laughing, as he asked a simple question: “What have you done to me, Dad?”It was Jack’s first league title as an Arsenal fan. And now we are on our way to Budapest in the hope of seeing Arsenal win the Champions League for the first time.We will watch the final together, in hope, while remembering how lucky we are that I chose the team who lost to Swindon all those years ago in a different century, on a different continent, as my world turned from black and white to the most beautiful colour of red.

Donald McRaeSat, 30 May 2026
Source: The Guardian
Read story