Miserly Arsenal face PSG firepower in Champions League style clash
Arsenal's Italian defender #33 Riccardo Calafiori lifts 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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Arsenal's consistency beat out Pep Guardiola's Manchester
City to be crowned champions of England and led them back to Europe's summit
two decades after reaching the 2006 final.
In the Champions League Arsenal have conceded only six goals
in 14 matches and are unbeaten -- by contrast PSG let in 22 through the
tournament.
"Without the ball, they are the best team in the
world," said PSG coach Luis Enrique of the north London side.
Arteta's side depends on structure and discipline, seeking
to control opponents by stopping them reaching dangerous areas, limiting their
shots in the box -- no Premier League team has conceded fewer.
The Gunners aggressively press opponents high, seeking to
dominate territory, and hate giving the ball away themselves, avoiding risk in
their passing.
They possess imposing, physical players, from impressive
centre-back pairing Gabriel and William Saliba, through the spine of the team,
in Declan Rice and imposing strikers Viktor Gyokeres and Kai Havertz.
That aids their dead ball mastery, under the cunning eye of
set piece coach Nicolas Jover, whom they signed from Manchester City in 2021.
Swiss newspaper Blick pondered whether Jover was "ruining
football", with the Frenchman reportedly paid a bonus per goal scored via
a set piece.
"We want to be the best and the most dominant team in
every aspect of the game," said Arteta, imploring his team to score even
more from dead balls.
With 27 Premier League goals scored this season from dead
ball situations, 38 percent of their total, some have labelled Arsenal 'Set
Piece FC'.
"Every time they get a corner, my head is in my
hands," former Liverpool defender Jamie Carragher told Sky Sports.
"I've never seen anything like this before in
football."
After three consecutive second place finishes, Arsenal
recognise winning ugly is better than not winning at all.
"I don't know how you celebrate one goal different to
another -- maybe for YouTube one is nicer than another," said Arteta
unperturbed by criticism.
Arsenal won seven games 1-0 this season in the Premier League,
keeping 19 clean sheets.
If teams do penetrate the backline, they must beat David
Raya, enjoying a superb season in goal.
The Spaniard has matched the record of nine clean sheets in
the Champions League. A 10th could secure the trophy.
Their struggles from open play, particularly when star winger
Bukayo Saka was out injured, frustrated even their own supporters at times.
Yet as tens of thousands turned up to celebrate the Premier
League title, nobody was complaining.
Those joyous scenes outside the Emirates stadium, with some
players joining the fans until past five in the morning, allow Arsenal to
double down on their approach, particularly against a team as lethal as PSG.
While Arsenal have sometimes lacked star power in attack,
opponents PSG boast several electric forwards who thrive in organised chaos and
will back themselves to break down the competition's toughest defence.
Coach Luis Enrique may have weeded his team of superstars
but Ousmane Dembele, Khvicha Kvaratskhelia and Desire Doue are some of the most
dynamic attackers on the planet.
The French champions demolish teams in transition with
searing pace, helping top scorers PSG net 44 goals in the Champions League, one
short of the all-time record of 45.
PSG showed their attacking prowess in the first leg of their
semi-final tussle with Bayern Munich, edging the German giants 5-4 in an
all-timer. Arsenal seek to reduce risk, PSG encourage it.
"When we can keep the ball and create space, it makes
the match easier," said Luis Enrique after his team put five past Chelsea
in the last 16 first leg.
"We showed that we are a real team,
unpredictable."
They racked up eight goals against the Blues on aggregate,
plus six against Bayern Munich and four against Liverpool in the other knockout
games.
If the final does not follow the script, it will be because
Luis Enrique tears it up.
In the second leg against Bayern he shifted strategy and
denied Vincent Kompany the end-to-end contest he expected in a 1-1 draw.
"We can't always win with magic or extraordinary
play," said Doue.
However for the most part PSG, who put five goals past Inter
Milan in last season's final, have done just that.
Whichever style emerges triumphant will determine who leaves
Budapest with the European crown.

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