Arsenal must banish European final demons to make Champions League history
Arsenal's Spanish manager Mikel Arteta poses with the Premier League trophy at a presentation ceremony on the pitch after the English Premier League football match between Crystal Palace and Arsenal at Selhurst Park in south London on May 24, 2026.
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From Jens Lehmann's rush of blood to 'Nayim from the halfway
line', Arsenal will have to banish three decades of European final misery if
they are to win the Champions League for the first time.
Fresh from clinching their first English title since 2004,
Mikel Arteta's side are preparing to face Paris Saint-Germain in the Champions
League final in Budapest on Saturday.
Bringing home the club's first Champions League crown just
12 days after their long-awaited Premier League triumph would make it the
greatest season in Arsenal's illustrious history.
But the Gunners head to the Puskas Arena haunted by the ghosts
of past European failures.
Since Tony Adams lifted the Cup Winners Cup after Alan Smith
sealed a 1-0 win over Parma in 1994, the north Londoners have endured four
painful defeats in continental finals.
In 1995, they returned to the Cup Winners Cup final, losing
2-1 to Real Zaragoza in agonising fashion when Nayim caught out Arsenal keeper
David Seaman with an astonishing lob from 40 yards in the last minute of
extra-time.
Rubbing salt into Arsenal wounds, Nayim previously played
for their arch rivals Tottenham, whose fans have celebrated the moment by
chanting 'Nayim from the halfway line' ever since.
Five years later, Arsene Wenger took Arsenal to the UEFA Cup
final, with victory expected against Galatasaray in Copenhagen.
But the Turkish underdogs frustrated Thierry Henry, Dennis
Bergkamp and company in a 0-0 draw before winning 4-1 on penalties.
In 2006, Arsenal reached the Champions League final for the
first time.
However, Wenger's men left Paris in despair after their
keeper Lehmann was sent off for racing out of his penalty area to foul Samuel
Eto'o early in the first half.
Despite playing with 10 men, Arsenal took the lead through
Sol Campbell, but late goals from Eto'o and Juliano Belletti broke their
hearts.
Unai Emery has won the Europa League five times as manager
of Aston Villa, Villarreal and Sevilla, but his lone defeat in the final of
that tournament came with Arsenal, who were thrashed 4-1 by Chelsea in Baku in
2019.
Arsenal also lost the 1980 Cup Winners Cup final against
Valencia, with their only other European silverware coming in the
long-forgotten Inter-Cities Fairs Cup in 1970.
Exorcising those demons would be the crowning glory for
Arteta, who has ended Arsenal's six-year trophy drought by leading them to the
club's 14th Premier League title.
Following Sunday's 2-1 win at Crystal Palace in their last
game of the domestic season, Arteta joined Arsenal's players and backroom staff
to celebrate at a Mediterranean restaurant in London's Mayfair on Sunday night.
The party lasted long into the night at several other
celebrity hot spots, with Declan Rice seen singing the 'Ice Ice baby' tune that
has become Arsenal fans' anthem for their influential midfielder.
Just hours after lifting the trophy at sun-drenched Selhurst
Park, Arsenal captain Martin Odegaard summed up the ecstatic mood ahead of the
trip to Budapest.
"Everyone is so happy. We're living a dream, winning
the Premier League and being in a Champions League final," he said.
"Now we have a big final. If we could do it, it would
be unreal."
Arteta interrupted the revelry to keep his players focused,
praising the unity in the squad and urging them to follow their title triumph
by conquering Europe.
"We need that energy to flow. Going against that will
be a big mistake," the Spaniard said.
"We've already talked about what we have to do in
Budapest, how we're going to use all the incredible energy that we're all
carrying towards that final.
"We can't wait to write the new chapter in the history
of our club and win the Champions League."
Holders PSG present a formidable challenge after beating
Arsenal 3-1 on aggregate in the semi-finals last season.
But, after more than 30 years of European angst, Arteta
knows immortality is within their grasp.
"If we win one more, we are the champions of Europe -
as simple as that," he said.

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