Arsenal booked its place in the Champions League final for the first time in 20 years after a tense 1-0 victory over Atletico Madrid on Tuesday night at the Emirates Stadium.
The win secured a 2-1 aggregate triumph for Mikel Arteta’s side following last week’s 1-1 draw in Madrid, sparking emotional celebrations among supporters who have waited two decades to see their club return to Europe’s biggest stage.
The decisive moment came just before halftime when Bukayo Saka once again delivered on the biggest occasion. Atletico had threatened early through Julian Alvarez and Giuliano Simeone, but Arsenal gradually settled and began to control possession.
The breakthrough arrived in the 44th minute after Viktor Gyokeres burst through the Atletico defence before finding Leandro Trossard in the area. Trossard’s low effort was only weakly parried by goalkeeper Jan Oblak, allowing Saka to react quickest and calmly finish from close range.
The Emirates erupted as Arteta punched the air in celebration, sensing his side was within touching distance of history.
Arsenal still had work to do after the break as Atletico pushed desperately for an equaliser. Gabriel Magalhaes produced a crucial last-ditch challenge to deny Simeone, while goalkeeper David Raya stood firm to keep out a fierce effort from Antoine Griezmann.
When the final whistle arrived, it confirmed one of the club’s most significant European nights since its only previous Champions League final appearance in 2006, when Arsenal lost to FC Barcelona in Paris.
Now Arteta’s team heads to Budapest for the final on May 30, where it will meet either Paris Saint-Germain or FC Bayern Munich. PSG currently leads that semifinal tie 5-4 ahead of Wednesday’s second leg in Germany.
The latest triumph adds to growing belief that this could become Arsenal’s greatest ever season. The club remains on course for a Premier League and Champions League double, with the Gunners leading the domestic title race after Manchester City’s draw at Everton earlier this week.
Arsenal can secure the Premier League crown by winning its remaining matches against West Ham, Burnley and Crystal Palace.
Only weeks ago, questions were being raised about Arsenal’s mentality after a difficult spell threatened to derail its campaign. Critics branded the team “nearly-men” and accused them of lacking the resilience required to win major honours.
Those doubts are rapidly fading.
Arteta, who previously admitted he visualised leading Arsenal to Champions League glory even during the difficult early days of his reign, now stands just one victory away from delivering the club’s first European crown.
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