AccaMate logo

Football News

Latest Sports Stories

Filtered by tag:Champions LeagueClear filter
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
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
Liberation of Premier League title can help Arsenal blunt PSG and join Europe’s elite

Football News

Liberation of Premier League title can help Arsenal blunt PSG and join Europe’s elite

Mikel Arteta must find the balance between newfound freedom and tried-and-tested solidity against Luis Enrique’s attacking machineWelcome to Budapest: city of stew, city of pavement squares, city of men in cotton smocks offering brisk muscular relaxation in geothermally heated cubicles. Eleven days on from the profound emotional release of winning the Premier League title it seems fitting Arsenal will approach their season’s endgame in a city that is basically perfect for a restorative summer city break.Saturday afternoon at the Puskas Arena already looks like a twin-track event for Mikel Arteta’s team, an occasion that changes shape according to the angle from which you see it. On one hand, victory against Paris Saint-Germain in the Champions League final would represent the greatest day in Arsenal’s history. On the other, this is an occasion that feels strangely light, fun, celebratory, a free-hit kind of final.And this really is something new for a team whose entire public identity in the age of Arteta has been defined by the curation of anxiety, every step or stumble pitched as a referendum on the validity of the project, on the basic character of the knitwear-clad avatar of pain striding along at the front of the parade.When was the last time this team were able to approach a day like this without some deep clog of existential dread? How will a non‑tortured, fully validated, daddy-does-actually-love-us Arsenal carry themselves? What does this team playing without fear even look like?Even the well-meaning performative attempts to enjoy the title run-in felt painfully stiff and processed. Get on the fun boat. Bring the fire. Join us as we micromanage to the last detail the liberating of our own emotions. Suddenly Darth Vader is doing stand-up. Spock wants to disco dance. Mr Pincus, can you hear me Mr Pincus?And now we have this, a chance to breathe, to take the air by the Danube, and to luxuriate in a slight but significant shift in the tone and texture of this Arsenal era.Perhaps the travelling fans can simply enjoy looking around for omens. English teams have played four Champions League ties at the renovated Puskas Arena, winning four and not conceding a goal, although admittedly none of their opponents could field a furiously irresistible Georgian goal-werewolf.Coldplay and Ed Sheeran, also English, have played sold‑out mega-shows there. As have Depeche Mode, who have a French name but are in fact from Essex. So unlucky there, Paris. Even the Ballon d’Or ceremony has been moved to London, which would certainly be handy for dual Euro and World Cup king Martín Zubimendi/Declan Rice.In the real world PSG will be favourites to win, and with good reason. They’ve done it before. They have a clear advantage in attacking personnel, a team that approach these occasions armed to the teeth, a bayonet in each sleeve, a back-up Kalashnikov in their waistband.But there are new variables now, fresh unknowns. Two key things have changed. The most important is Arteta himself, both in his professional status and his relationship with the club.A few weeks ago some more deranged elements of the wider online fanbase were calling for him to be sacked. The scepticism wasn’t confined to the hysterical fringe. There have always been doubts, and a surprisingly heartfelt wider desire for Arteta to fail, to be exposed as a helmet-haired fraud, an empty pair of grey slacks; annoyance at the capering presence at the edge of the picture, the paperclip-salesman sloganeering, the sense of being lectured by a male wellness tycoon. As recently as this season’s semi-finals the French press was making sly references to Arteta’s “overly emotional register”.Well, not any more. Football is an outcome-based industry. Elite clubs crave success. Elite players respond to it. And Arteta is now unarguably an elite coach. Even getting to a Champions League final is an act of levelling up. It makes you a Max Allegri, a Mauricio Pochettino. Winning it would be something else altogether, a fresh name on a list that over the past 12 years reads Carlo Ancelotti, Zinedine Zidane (three times each), Luis Enrique (twice), Jürgen Klopp, Hansi Flick, Thomas Tuchel and Pep Guardiola; basically the capi dei capi, the guys who get to do the jobs.Arsenal’s executive has never publicly wavered on Arteta. But that gravity has shifted. The club now has an asset to placate, to hang on to, the star of his own title-winning project, and a manager who will be of interest to Spain’s big two, to PSG themselves, to the Football Association in due course.Another interesting note of trivia: Arteta would be the first English coach to win the European Cup since Joe Fagan in 1984. Well, he does at least have a British passport and live in London. And he is also the best qualified British candidate to manage the England team. Maybe this is his destiny. Maybe the set pieces, the big lads at the back, all make sense in this light. Maybe the game isn’t actually gone, but back.Perhaps not. But that moment of status-uplift is hugely significant. Arteta has a Scottish Premiership title as a player at Rangers and FA Cups as captain and coach of Arsenal. But winning the Premier League is by some distance the most significant moment of his 27-year professional life.This is a football personage who has made an elite-level career out of almost but not quite reaching the summit. As a kid he made it to La Masia, but not through La Masia, blocked by an extreme wealth of talent, including, among others, Luis Enrique. He went to PSG for almost 18 months, but in a period when this meant winning the Intertoto Cup. He went to post‑peak-Wenger Arsenal, the years of shrinkage and falling away.Perhaps he could find elite validation with a steamrollering Spain? But steamrollering Spain already had Xavi, Andrés Iniesta, Xabi Alonso, Cesc Fàbregas, Sergio Busquets, David Silva and Santi Cazorla, and Arteta never won a cap. Hang on, maybe he can play for England! Except, no, Fifa says he can’t.Arteta’s coaching career also kicked off with a spell of standing near someone else while they won things, before three successive second places at Arsenal. He may project certainty, process chat, trusting the methods. But Arteta is also human. He has spoken of doubts, of a feeling that maybe it’s just not me. Except, it is him. Arteta is the captain now. Will he look, speak, walk differently?Ideally not. There is a theory out there Arsenal will experience The Freeing Up. The ankle weights are off. The handbrake will not just be released via the annoying electric button, but jimmied out with a screwdriver and thrown through the side window.Is this a good idea? Does it make sense for Arsenal to abandon the disciplines that took them to this place, just as they come up against Europe’s most unforgiving attack? Live by the rigidly disciplined tactical straitjacket, die by the rigidly disciplined tactical straitjacket. You’re not going to outdance Michael Jackson. But you may beat him at a really long and painful game of Scrabble.Arsenal are not the defensive nihilists they have often been cast as. Much of the season has been spent managing the absence of their most creative players, with a centre-forward who runs about as if he’s being chased by a sheepdog. PSG are also less freewheeling than they have been painted. Both of these teams start from a position of achieving control. They rank one and two for fewest shots conceded in Europe’s top five leagues. PSG have four attacking players of genuine high quality, but their effectiveness is built on a structure that allows them to run forwards and seek out duels. This is not a free-flowing, off-the-cuff team. It is attacking super-strengths implanted into a system.It seems likely the outcome will rest on how Arsenal defend and counterattack in wide areas. There is a precedent here. It is easy to forget that for 26 minutes in Paris last May, Arsenal dominated these same opponents, and in an interesting way.Luis Enrique’s team pinned Arsenal’s full‑backs in their own half in the first leg of that tie. At the Parc des Princes Myles Lewis-Skelly and Jurriën Timber came inside fearlessly, flooded the midfield and enabled a hugely aggressive pressing structure. Arsenal couldn’t finish the chances they made. Fabián Ruiz scored a brilliant goal to kill the tie. But the plan worked while it worked.Logic still suggests PSG have too much attacking power. But if Arsenal can keep it goalless for an hour the game may just start to lean towards this new-look champion team, out there just living for the moment (context: probably not just living for the moment). It will as ever come down to details. And maybe, just maybe, to that absence of fear.

Barney Ronay in BudapestFri, 29 May 2026
Source: The Guardian
Read story
Arteta insists Arsenal’s ‘ambition is bigger’ for Champions League glory after title win

Football News

Arteta insists Arsenal’s ‘ambition is bigger’ for Champions League glory after title win

Gunners face PSG in Budapest final on Saturday‘We have one, and now we want the second one’Mikel Arteta has dismissed suggestions the pressure is off Arsenal in Saturday’s Champions League final after their first Premier League title for 22 years and insists he and his players are hungry for more trophies.Paris Saint-Germain, who defeated Arsenal in the semi-finals last year before being crowned European champions for the first time, saw off Chelsea, Liverpool and Bayern Munich in the knockout stages and are strongly fancied to retain their crown. Jurriën Timber looks likely to start after Arteta confirmed the Netherlands defender had recovered from a groin injury, although he has not featured since the win over Everton on 14 March.Arsenal have yet to win the Champions League and reached the final on one previous occasion, in 2006, when they were defeated by Barcelona. Arteta is determined Arsenal seize their opportunity on the biggest stage in club football after finally ending their long wait for the league title.“The ambition is bigger,” the manager said. “We have one, and now we want the second one. That’s all we’ve been talking about. There has to be a platform to reach bigger destinations and to aim for more. And the team is capable, because we’ve shown it in the last two seasons, in this competition. What we’ve done this season in the competition, and I want the players to be so confident that we’re going to win.”Arteta, asked whether he had noticed something different when he looks in the eyes of his players, said: “That they want more. Going through those moments brings you a different kind of desire. Because you lift it, you know exactly how it feels. You want to reproduce that feeling as many times as possible.“We have the opportunity to write a new chapter in the history of this football club. And in order to do that, we have to play with such clarity, a lot of courage, and a relentless desire to win. We have those three aspects, and I’m sure we’re going to be close to winning.”Bukayo Saka, who scored Arsenal’s goal in last season’s 3-1 aggregate defeat by PSG, revealed that Thierry Henry – part of the team that lost to Barcelona 20 years ago – had been in touch this week to offer encouragement. The England forward said it would round off a perfect season if they can beat PSG and that winning the Premier League after finishing second three years in a row had given the players plenty of confidence.“We all know where my journey started as a seven- or eight-year-old at Hale End – it was a long, long way away from trying to win the Champions League with Arsenal,” he said. “It feels like this last week it’s all become a reality and tomorrow is another exciting opportunity to create more history and win another for the club that I love. That goes a long way and it helped us win the title and hopefully it will give us an advantage on the pitch here.”Saturday’s game will be Arsenal’s 63rd of the season, more than any other team from the top five European leagues. It will be PSG’s 56th but Saka insisted fatigue would not play a part.“We’ve had a week to recover and we’re ready to go again and a game like this is not going to be decided on minutes,” he said. “It will be decided on moments and which team can produce a bit of quality and be well organised.”

Ed Aarons in BudapestFri, 29 May 2026
Source: The Guardian
Read story
‘He was alive – you saw it in his eyes’: inside the years that shaped Mikel Arteta

Football News

‘He was alive – you saw it in his eyes’: inside the years that shaped Mikel Arteta

In the runup to the Champions League final, the Arsenal manager’s first footballing steps in the Basque Country and Barcelona are recalled by those who shared themThe way Santi Cazorla tells it, rolling about laughing, Mikel Arteta may just be the worst person you could ever wish to watch a match with. Which is why he knew his friend would be a coach and why he told him to go away and become one, convinced great things were coming. “When we were injured at Arsenal, we used to meet at home for games, and he would grab the remote and pause it,” Cazorla recalls. “I would say: ‘What are you stopping it for?’ He would say: ‘No, go back, go back,’ rewind it 30 seconds, and then ask: ‘What do you see?’ I would say: ‘I see a paused screen. I don’t see anything!’”So Arteta would explain. “‘Don’t you think this player is badly positioned? … If he goes a bit deeper, this space opens up … if the pivot goes there, this happens … that line should be deeper …’ I would look at him and think: ‘What’s with this guy?’” Cazorla continues, still cracking up. “He was a coach already. All game, every game: pausing, rewinding. The match is finished and we’re only in the 35th minute. ‘Do you see it?’ ‘Yes, yes, you’re right, now come on, press play.’ But I didn’t see it. I love football, I can watch it all day, but I don’t notice those things. Mikel does. I think it’s a gift.”Born in Gipuzkoa, the smallest province in Spain and an outlier producing a quantity of elite managers that invites an investigation, Arteta was always a bit different; everyone says so. Which isn’t to say that those who shared his first steps saw what Cazorla did, still less the coach who leads Arsenal into the Champions League final. Fond though they are, and there is warmth in every word, most didn’t see a coach just yet, but they saw something. Not talent exactly, although that too, but something else a little deeper, lasting.“Mikel caught your attention very young,” Jon Ayerbe says. “The word I’d use is alive; you saw it in his eyes. He grasped everything fast, had character and was so competitive. Give him the ball, he’ll find a solution. And he was a year younger than us, eh.”“Above all, he was the most intelligent,” Álvaro Parra adds. Mikel Yanguas says: “You looked at him and thought: ‘Bloody hell, he’s got something special. If anyone makes it, it’s him.’ He had personality, ambition.” Ayerbe, Parra and Yanguas played with Arteta at Antiguoko, a youth club in San Sebastián that took on professional academies and won.Arteta was good enough at tennis to have pursued a different path, his father making him choose his sport, and Antiguoko’s former coach Roberto Montiel enjoys recounting an Arteta goal against Real Sociedad, all cheek and technique, that reminds him of Lionel Messi. Arteta was two-footed and tiny then, a No 10 who later became a No 4, and “a born sportsman”, Montiel says. He was dedicated and smart, too. “He was always clear he would make it and sacrificed his life for it,” Parra says. “He went to Barcelona, leaving everything behind. And later he turned down lucrative offers – Dubai, Qatar, the US – to work with Guardiola at Man City because it was the right step.”At 14, Arteta had begun training at Athletic Club, 100km west along the AP-8. There, one of his coaches was the future Athletic, Eibar, Sevilla and Olympiakos manager José Luis Mendilibar, who was struck by this kid that never lost the ball and always played with clarity and sense. “What you could imagine, thinking about it now, was that someone with that intelligence and understanding would also develop an ability to explain it to others, so they could understand too,” Mendilibar wrote later. That sentiment is echoed by Luis Fernández, the coach who signed an 18-year-old Arteta for Paris Saint-Germain in 2001. “When you told him what you wanted, he did it first time,” Fernández says.By then, Barcelona had shaped him too, the first formative experience away from home. “It was 1997,” Yanguas recalls. “Someone saw us representing Gipuzkoa at an Easter tournament and invited us to a trial at Barcelona. We stayed near Pedralbes and at the end they said yes to the three of us: me, Mikel and Jon Álvarez. We left that summer: 17 August, the day of San Sebastián’s fiestas, so I remember it well.”They moved into La Masia, the traditional Catalan farmhouse alongside the Camp Nou that was Barcelona’s spiritual home and an actual home to 32 boys aged 11 to 18, three or four of whom were basketball players. Andrés Iniesta, Carles Puyol and Iván de la Peña were among them. Pepe Reina would become one of Arteta’s closest friends. Each dorm had four bunks, a couple of camp beds sometimes squeezed in too. Through the window they could see the pitch where Bobby Robson’s team trained. Well, part of it: a screen covered half.“It was just us, the cooks, the security guard and one guy overseeing everything,” says Roberto Trashorras, who became close to Arteta. “It’s totally different nowadays. We sorted things out among ourselves. Because we were alone, we looked after each other. There were no mobiles. I remember queueing at midnight to ring home from the payphone, Puyol and De la Peña ahead of me. We were teenagers, so there’d be the usual messing about: jokes, water bombs. Mikel was funny, extroverted, but we were the victims usually … until you get a bit older and it’s your turn.”A bus took them to school – parents chose between three options – they would train and then … well, not much, Yanguas says. “We would go to [the department store] El Corte Inglés; we were from San Sebastián, a small city, and we didn’t have an El Corte Inglés there. Or we’d go to the cinema. I remember seeing Titanic with Mikel, Victor Valdés, Fernando Macedo. At weekends your parents would come.”They were 15 and, looking back, Yanguas admits he wasn’t ready. Although that cadete (under-16) team were national champions, he returned to San Sebastián at the end of the first year. “It was hard for me,” he says. “I think about it now and I was an introvert. Mikel was different, better prepared: more outgoing, more adaptable, better at relating. Maybe inside he was struggling but we saw someone who handled it very well. On the pitch too: he would demand the ball. I thought it was natural then but I coach now and realise it’s not. No one offers, no one asks for the ball. Mikel did constantly. It’s hard to do that: ‘Give it to me, I’ll sort this.’ He was surrounded by great players but had the confidence and self assurance to do that.”Jofre Mateu was two years older than Arteta, with whom he would play in the B team, and had already made a first-team appearance. “Mikel used to laugh about his hair. He said he had ‘bull’s hair’: so hard and it didn’t move. But, honestly, the thing I most remember is that one day he took my car when he was learning or recently passed and crashed it into the Masia wall.” Jofre laughs. “It was three metres, impossible to crash. Impossible. And he goes: ‘Nah, nah, relax, I-don’t-know-what.’ He puts his arm on the window, looks back to reverse, but he’s putting it in first. ‘Yeah, I think you need more lessons. You can take taxis from now on.’ My car was only two months old: a VW Golf.”Which raises an obvious question: are you stupid? “Totally,” Jofre says. But, actually, handing over the keys wasn’t a risk: if anything defined Arteta, he says, it was how sensible he was. “He wasn’t there to piss about, he was there to do the right thing,” Jofre says. “He was super-responsible, he had something.”In fact, another scene defines Arteta better. “Thiago Motta was hot-headed and in a training session he got in a fight, which wasn’t unusual,” Jofre says. “I don’t remember who with, but it wasn’t Mikel, yet he steps in: ‘Thiago, man, you’re teammates: you can’t do this.’ I remember it because Mikel didn’t really have the ‘weight’ to do that. It would be like Marc Bernal standing up to, say, Gavi now. He didn’t do it in an ugly way, but he did it. Clearly, firmly. And we just all stopped. Like: ‘Olé tus huevos [Good on ya].’ I think that said something about him: he wasn’t the star, but he’s not going to let that happen.”La Masia was a footballing education, entirely new. “The players who arrive are the best in their teams but Barcelona make you think about tactics, space in a way that’s not normal,” says Luis Carrión, a Barcelona B teammate. “At Antiguoko, Mikel would have had the ball all the time; here he had to wait, occupy the right space. By standing still, you see a solution, a way out. They’d explain concepts – third man, triangles, final line – but it wasn’t ‘classes’, more repetition: passing drills every day.”Trashorras says: “Mikel was a dribbler, arriving in the area, but he learned to play one, two touches, not lose his position. One of the things that most struck me when I first got there is they would say: ‘Don’t go looking for the ball, the ball will come to you.’ ‘Yeah, but, it’s just there, I can …’ ‘No, no, no. Don’t invade someone else’s space.’ It can be hard to adapt but Mikel was sharp. It’s really, genuinely different. Pffff, it’s like a religion. And then when you leave it’s different too.”Not that Barcelona’s creed was Arteta’s only faith. There is a simple reason why he didn’t make it in Catalonia, or two of them – Xavi Hernández and Iniesta – but there was a world out there, ideas and character shaped across four countries, experiences in Spain, France, Scotland and England. “When I became PSG coach I asked for Mikel because I watched him in the juvenil [under-19s],” Fernández says. “I followed Johan Cruyff’s ideas, the importance of the pivot, loved Pep Guardiola and wanted a player of that type.“On the pitch you see Mikel’s intelligence, his understanding and, for sure, that comes out later when he becomes a coach. He had the perfect attitude to coach: professionalism. He was responsible, listened, learned and you didn’t need to keep telling him. He was an example for everyone. I admire him. I’m sensitive and when I see him and Gabi [Heinze], his very good friend in Paris, it makes me so happy. If you had asked me then if he would be a coach, I’d have said: ‘No.’ He wasn’t: ‘Do this, do that.’ I think he learned with Pep. I went to see him do a session and thought: ‘Bloody hell, look at Mikel.’ But it was always in him.”It just had to come out. “He was a kid with personality: polite, very professional for his age,” Carrión says. “A coach? You never know, but he watched a lot of football. I ran into him recently and we chatted about football; it’s always football.” With time, Yanguas suggests, you learn to express, understand and analyse the spaces you saw naturally, and Arteta always saw those. Focus and passion came as standard. Jofre, asked if he saw a coach in Arteta, replies: “Zero. But if you asked me about Xavi, I would have said zero. Luis Enrique, zero. Guardiola … OK, yes. But we were kids still, teenagers at La Masia more interested in the next game, some girl or where we’re going on Saturday.” Trashorras agrees: “With Pep, you saw it; with Mikel I couldn’t claim to have done, but you can’t argue with what he’s done.” In part because Pep did see it.And so, via Paris, Glasgow and Liverpool to Santi’s sofa in London, an offer and a new era, the other Arteta that was always inside somewhere. “We confided in each other; he was the captain, always looked after me and my family and helped so much during my injury,” Cazorla recalls. “He said: ‘What should I do, Santi? Keep playing, which I like most, or take the opportunity as Pep’s assistant?’ I love playing but there’s no better place to start coaching and I have a good relationship with him.’ I said: ‘Mikel, if that’s what moves you, go for it.’ It’s a difficult step but I was sure it would work. I would watch him pausing games and think: this guy is already a coach. I’d tell him: ‘You’re thinking beyond what a player does.’ And he would say: ‘Yeah, I see things that make me think I should be a coach. I feel that I am.’”

Sid LoweFri, 29 May 2026
Source: The Guardian
Read story
Football Daily | Formidables v Expendables? PSG v Arsenal could be a classic

Football News

Football Daily | Formidables v Expendables? PSG v Arsenal could be a classic

Here we are in the dog days of May, with the European club football season playing out a slow, sultry finale as the Geopolitics World Cup bangs ever louder on the door. Legendary managers and beloved players have made tearful farewells, shiny pots handed out, spies spotted in slapstick circumstances. But wait! The big closing number is still to come. Paris Saint-Germain. The Arsenal. Budapest. Saturday, er, 5pm BST. It’s Bigger Cup Final!PSG, the defending champions, find themselves in a similar scenario to last year. Having swashbuckled their way through the choppier side of the draw, Luis Enrique’s lads face a team famed for their tenacity and titanium defence. Last year it was Inter who tried to stand up to PSG’s formidable attacking unit, and were dismantled so comprehensively that manager Simone Inzaghi was working in Saudi Arabia five days later. That’s a day for each goal Inter conceded, with PSG racking up the most one-sided result in Big Cup Final history, finally launching a particularly persistent monkey off their collective backs.Speaking of former specialists in failure, Arsenal have signed off from their banter era in style. Having won their first league title for 22 years – a moment marked by a glorious impromptu party outside the Emirates – their first Big/Bigger Cup final since 2006 feels almost like an afterthought, a shiny sixpence discovered moments after winning the lottery. Make no mistake though: getting their hands on and heads in that massive trophy would take Arsenal’s already stellar season into the stratosphere – and complete an unprecedented treble of Europots for English clubs with buildings in their names. Maybe next season, eh Newcastle? Oh.Eddie Howe could at least offer Mikel Arteta some advice on getting a result against PSG, something Arsenal failed to do in last season’s semi-finals. In their defence, few have been able to live with Luis Enrique’s immensely talented team, unshackled from anxiety and riding an attacking groove so ruthless, we’re starting to think PSG actually stands for Pass, Shoot, Goal. Qatar’s finest also find themselves in the unusual position of neutrals’ favourites, and have around 7,000 collective extra minutes in the tank, having cantered to the Ligue 1 title; this season, Declan Rice has clocked up more league game time than Ousmane Dembéle and Kvicha Kvaratskhelia combined.Still, if there’s any team on earth you’d back to spoil PSG’s party, it would surely be Arteta’s masters of defence and dark arts. If Arsène Wenger gave us the Invincibles, this new Arsenal unit are more like the Expendables – a grizzled band of henchmen perpetually ready for one last job. Plus, they already know how to defend a one-goal lead in a Bigger Cup final, because they play that way pretty much all the time. This Arsenal side have a unique set of skills, and can control games in a manner that is hugely impressive, if occasionally hard to watch. Anyway, what is Bigger Cup without its great spoilers, from catenaccio to José-ball? This is a perfect final showdown: silk against steel, magic versus muscle, the unstoppable force and the immovable object. And it’s live!*Follow Bigger Cup final for free with pre-game buildup and live updates from PSG 0-1 Arsenal (aet) with Rob Smyth. Plus: Scott Murray covers Scotland 1-1 Curaçao in a GWC warm-up (1pm BST kick-off).“The mural is absolutely top class. I have fond memories growing up on these streets, so it really does mean a lot” – through finger-and-thumb spectacles, John McGinn takes in a 25ft artwork in his home town of Clydebank. More murals are planned as part of Irn-Bru’s campaign in the lead-up to GWC, so if you’d like Grant Hanley plastered over your garage, you know what to do.double quotation markWas the repeat reference to Phil Taverner’s punishment (Thursday’s letters) a rare slip on Football Daily Ed’s part, or was his original offence deemed so heinous that he’s to be named and shamed on a daily basis for the foreseeable? Just asking for a friend” – Phil Taverner.double quotation markDonyell Malen played 46 times for Aston Villa and scored just seven goals, then scored 14 times in 18 games for Roma to finish as second-top scorer in Serie A this season after arriving in January. This might explain how Scott McTominay won Serie A player of the season, and why Italy failed to qualify for their third World Cup in a row” – Noble Francis.double quotation markRe: George Smith’s letter. Not only is the $100+ fee for a train ride to the MetLife Stadium gouging, it is virtually mandatory. There is no pedestrian access during GWC, and the Meadowlands area has swamps that are foul with toxic waste” – Steve Hibbert [Big Website gave it a go – Football Daily Ed].If you have any, please send letters to the.boss@theguardian.com. Today’s prizeless letter o’ the day is … Phil Taverner. Terms and conditions for our competitions, when we run them, are here.This is an extract from our daily football email … Football Daily. To get the full version, just visit this page and follow the instructions.

Niall McVeighFri, 29 May 2026
Source: The Guardian
Read story
Kvara d’Or? Tbilisi dreaming of more glory for ‘special’ Kvaratskhelia

Football News

Kvara d’Or? Tbilisi dreaming of more glory for ‘special’ Kvaratskhelia

In the streets where he grew up the PSG winger’s success is an inspiration and a continual source of prideThe cage where Khvicha Kvaratskhelia’s love for football began is still buzzing with life today. Sandwiched between the vast Soviet apartment blocks of Dighmis Masivi, children scream, “Kvaraaaa!” as they strike the ball, replica shirts bearing his name stretched proudly across their backs.This same “stadium”, as locals call it, fills each evening – like many across Tbilisi – with children playing football for hours, stopping only when mothers lean from balconies and shout that dinner is ready.There is a buzz about the neighbourhood, as they wait to watch their native son try to win a second straight Champions League when he plays for Paris Saint-Germain against Arsenal in Budapest on Saturday. There is also a buzz about how far his stardom can reach and whether it is possible he could take home the Ballon d’Or in October.Among those who once played here with Kvaratskhelia was Giorgi Bliadze, a childhood friend and former classmate. “It would be a dream come true as much for me as it would for him,” he says. “It would mean seeing the same dream we spoke about as kids become reality … proof that dedication and childhood ambition can turn into history.”For Bliadze, the possibility of Kvaratskhelia winning the Ballon d’Or is about more than individual success. “It would also be a huge moment of pride for our whole neighbourhood,” he says. “Ever since seeing him in those cages, everyone knew he was going to become something special. The whole community has been waiting for his success.”It is not only those personally close to Kvaratskhelia who want him to take home the Ballon d’Or. Tengiz, who has lived in the area for decades, says: “Out of millions of people, it’s fate that our neighbour is better than them all.”Tengiz talks about the history of Georgia, how back in the days of the Soviet Union, Dinamo Tbilisi won the 1981 Cup Winners’ Cup. “Back then it took a whole team to put Georgia on the map,” he says. “Now just one man can do it. It is unbelievable.”To understand Georgia’s eagerness for Kvaratskhelia to lift the Ballon d’Or, you have to understand the country. In a state with a population of 3.9 million and which, in its modern form, is younger than Cristiano Ronaldo, Kvaratskhelia’s rise extends far beyond football.In many ways, Georgians speak about him less as a footballer and more as a representative of the country; a figure whose global success reflects on the nation, much like Luka Modric’s symbolic importance in Croatia or Mohamed Salah’s in Egypt.“He is the revolutionary of Georgian football,” says Tsotne Kinkladze, who played with Kvaratskhelia in the Dinamo academy and is a football pundit for Georgia’s national broadcaster. “Imagine how much his success has already changed the country. Now imagine what would happen if he became the best player in the world. That is the level of impact and achievement he has brought to Georgia. Neither the country nor Georgian football will ever truly be able to repay what he has done for us.”Saba Sapanadze, one of the country’s leading sports journalists, agrees. “For Georgia, this would be … I don’t even know. Even imagining it gives me goosebumps. At just 25 years old, he is already our greatest player of all time and if he could win the Ballon d’Or, it would cement his legend for ever.”Kinkladze remembers how distant this level of success once felt. “During our childhood, it was impossible to imagine that a Georgian footballer could ever reach these heights,” he says. “At the time, most Georgian players were limited to post-Soviet leagues. In Europe’s top five leagues, there was basically only Levan Mchedlidze [a forward who spent over a decade at Empoli].”Giorgi Sirbiladze, also from Kvaratskhelia’s old neighbourhood, is part of Dinamo’s academy now. “If he wins the final and plays how he should play, he has to win it,” he says of the Ballon d’Or. “I really look up to him. His success makes me dream too.” And with that Sirbiladze goes back to kicking his signed Kvaratskhelia ball around.Kvaratskhelia has been arguably the dominant force in this season’s Champions League, scoring 10 goals and setting up six in 15 games and becoming the first player to record a goal contribution in seven consecutive knockout matches. At home to Chelsea on game two of that run he scored twice and assisted another goal in a 5-2 win.Sapanadze has been the driving force behind the campaign for the ‘Kvara d’Or’, as he calls it. “After that dominant performance against Chelsea, I started saying it. I started believing he would become a leading candidate for the Ballon d’Or,” Sapanadze says. “Of course, then he went on to do the same to Liverpool and then Bayern [Munich] … his first goal against Bayern was out of this world, and he was the main difference in both games.”Back in Dighmis Masivi, the kids are still playing, rattling the ball against the cage. They dream of replicating the success of the man who was in their same position 15 years ago. Kvaratskhelia was then under the guidance of Manana Merabishvili, the head of his class in school.“Let’s not only speak of Khvicha as a player, but as a person,” Merabishvili says. “Since childhood, he was humble and talented … he used to show up the day before and pass all the exams.“A large amount of it was genetic, as his father was also a footballer and his younger brother is now playing for Dinamo. However, of course I believe I played some part. In the younger ages when he would become lazy I would give him a little slap around the head to keep him focused.”A lot of factors are in play regarding whether Kvaratskhelia will win the Ballon d’Or; it is a World Cup year after all and Georgia failed to qualify. But if PSG win the final and he produces another stellar performance, he would have to be in with a shout.Before Kvaratskhelia, kids playing in Dighmis Masivi would have associated the Ballon d’Or with distant footballing superpowers. Now, the idea of a Georgian winner feels imaginable in neighbourhoods such as this, all over Tbilisi.

Ted Todorovic-Thomas in TbilisiFri, 29 May 2026
Source: The Guardian
Read story
Fresh v fatigued? Why PSG have a big advantage in Champions League final

Football News

Fresh v fatigued? Why PSG have a big advantage in Champions League final

Luis Enrique rotated his squad in Ligue 1, whereas Mikel Arteta relied on his best XI in three domestic competitionsA look at the most basic numbers might have you believe that the Champions League finalists have had equally demanding campaigns. The final in Budapest on Saturday will be the 63rd game of the season for Arsenal and the 56th for Paris Saint-Germain. However, the French side also played seven matches at last summer’s Club World Cup, which means both teams have played 62 matches since the start of last June.Delve a little deeper, though, and there is more to those figures than meets the eye. While Arsenal were able to rest properly last summer, PSG were in the US, reaching the final of a competition played in sweltering heat, which started only 14 days after they had beaten Inter in the Champions League final.They had barely any time off to rest after it, either, because their season started exactly one month after the Club World Cup had ended, with the Super Cup against Tottenham. And their defence of the Ligue 1 title began just a few days later. The newly expanded Club World Cup set up the teams involved for a difficult season, where their players were forced to play catchup on their rivals when it came to rest and recuperation.There is no way of quantifying how much Chelsea’s players were affected by their run to the final, but it is no coincidence that they only won two of their first six league games of the season and went on to finish way down in 10th. Cole Palmer, for one, had such a disappointing campaign that he will not even be at this summer’s World Cup as a result.But, since the new season started, there is no comparison between the demands on PSG’s players and those on Arsenal’s. From the beginning of the 2025-26 campaign, Arsenal have played more matches than any other team in any of the top five European leagues, having gone deep in the League Cup and the FA Cup. And, crucially, their opportunities to rotate have, unlike PSG, been few and far between.For example, when PSG’s domestic season started against Nantes, their team contained just two of the players who had started the Champions League final a couple of months before. Nuno Mendes, Achraf Hakimi, Ousmane Dembélé, Désiré Doué and Khvicha Kvaratskhelia came off the bench to force a 1-0 win, but that level of reinforcement has not been necessary every week. Far from it, in fact.Luis Enrique has regularly rested his players from Ligue 1 games. So, even though PSG have played a lot of matches, their most important players have been rotated heavily and should go into this weekend’s final relatively fresh.Many of PSG’s best players have played very little domestic football this season. Ballon d’Or winner Dembélé started just 11 of their 34 Ligue 1 games; Neves, Mendes and Fabián Ruiz made 13 starts each; Kvaratskhelia 18, Doué and Hakimi 16, and Marquinhos 11. And it’s not like they come off the bench all that much, either. Not one of them has played even half their team’s minutes in Ligue 1 this season.Many of them have been saved for the Champions League, where Luis Enrique clearly feels they are needed more. Mendes and Marquinhos have played more minutes in the Champions League this season than in Ligue 1, despite PSG playing 18 fewer matches in that competition.PSG have had a few injury problems, but players have missed most matches due to rotation. For example, Kvaratskhelia has missed just three league games due to injury, Marquinhos two, Mendes eight, Neves nine and Dembélé 10. They have just been given time off at every opportunity.And the bulk of their squad is made up of young or peak-age players, who should be able to contend with a packed schedule. Resting Marquinhos regularly might be necessary but many of them have simply been kept fresh for this crucial part of the season.PSG’s superiority in Ligue 1 has allowed Luis Enrique to manage injuries and prevent fatigue by carefully curating his players’ workloads, simply through rest whenever they’ve needed it. PSG won Ligue 1 for a fifth season in a row this year. Everyone knows how hard Arsenal had to work to win the Premier League title.Some of that is due to the trauma of their past failures. Three successive second-place finishes meant Arsenal were desperate to win it this time around and were terrified of throwing their lead away to Manchester City again, and they made hard work of getting the points they needed as they stumbled over the finishing line. Beating relegated Burnley 1-0 at home in their penultimate game was made to look like a mountainous task, for example.But they also struggled in the final straight at least in part because of how strenuous the season was, and also because, whether rightly or wrongly, Mikel Arteta chose not to rotate as much.Despite spending big last summer and boosting the depth of his squad, there were certain players he simply would not rotate. David Raya played every minute in the Premier League this season until the title was won – so he missed the final game – and he has started 13 of 14 their Champions League games.Declan Rice and Martín Zubimendi were as good as undroppable in central midfield, with Rice missing just two Premier League games and Zubimendi none. At centre-back, Gabriel Magalhães and William Saliba only missed out on the few occasions they were unavailable. All five of those Arsenal players started at least 30 Premier League games this season, whereas no PSG player started more than 27 in Ligue 1.In all competitions, meanwhile, that group of Arsenal players have all played more than 4,000 minutes of football this season. The only PSG player to break the 4,000-minute mark is Warren Zaïre-Emery.Across both squads, 12 players have played at least 3,000 minutes of competitive football this season, and nine of them play for Arsenal. If Jurriën Timber is passed fit, all of them could start on Saturday.Barring injury, getting through just one more match will not be beyond any of these super-fit players, but the demands of the season could have an impact on which team can last the distance and keep up the intensity their managers demand for the full 90 – or 120 – minutes. PSG could have a decisive advantage.

Ali TweedaleFri, 29 May 2026
Source: The Guardian
Read story