Arsenal’s Long Road to Baku Leads to Defining Moment of Their Season

Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang (center), who scored a hat-trick during the 4-2 win at Valencia in the semi-final, leads Arsenal’s celebrations. Photograph: Javier Soriano/AFP/Getty Images
Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang (center), who scored a hat-trick during the 4-2 win at Valencia in the semi-final, leads Arsenal’s celebrations. Photograph: Javier Soriano/AFP/Getty Images
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Arsenal’s Long Road to Baku Leads to Defining Moment of Their Season

Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang (center), who scored a hat-trick during the 4-2 win at Valencia in the semi-final, leads Arsenal’s celebrations. Photograph: Javier Soriano/AFP/Getty Images
Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang (center), who scored a hat-trick during the 4-2 win at Valencia in the semi-final, leads Arsenal’s celebrations. Photograph: Javier Soriano/AFP/Getty Images

Last May, in a sequence of pow-wows to determine the chosen candidate to replace Arsène Wenger, Arsenal’s executive team thrashed their way through the shortlist one by one analyzing a series of criteria: style of football, an eye for promoting youth, man-management in the player-power age, and so on. Critical, though, in all of this was one overriding thought. How quickly can this manager get the club back into the Champions League? It did not really matter how they got there, or what it looked like along the way but the mission Arsenal were desperate to accomplish was crystal clear.

Hiring a man whose CV screams Europa League specialist enhanced those odds. Hands were duly shaken with a proven expert in one of the two available routes into the Champions League. He might have come from left field in the debate about who was best to follow Wenger – “where’s Unai Emery come from?” tweeted a bewildered Ian Wright as the news broke – but there was a certain logic at work.

That logic made sense as Emery took this strangely erratic team, a bunch whose form has crumbled in the Premier League, back to his old stamping ground in Valencia. Arsenal were electric going forward – rapid, clinical and supercharged. The strike force of Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang and Alexandre Lacazette put in Champions League performances as they swept their team into the Europa League final. It is Emery’s fourth final in this competition. He has won three.

“That’s what the club saw in him as a coach,” said Lacazette. “He came to take the team to the next step and he did because we reach the final in his first season.” Well, the final represents more like half a step. Progress will be tangible only if they clamber on to the winners’ podium with big smiles in the very early hours of 30 May. So here we are. The interminably long road to Baku (which actually started in Baku in the opening group game at FK Qarabag in a match Arsenal started with a forward line of Danny Welbeck supported by Emile Smith Rowe) boils down to the defining moment of the season.

Win and the campaign has been a successful one by their main criterion. Lose and the problems run deeper. This final is actually a pivotal point for something bigger, something that stretches beyond a contest against Chelsea.

Arsenal have aspirations to try to re-establish themselves higher up the football ladder, as a more robust challenger for the top four, a more competitive contender for the Premier League title, even the rose-tinted hope to become a team capable of a genuine tilt at the senior European title. They know they are off that pace and the best way to build momentum is to get back into the Champions League.

The squad Emery inherited is still in need of surgery, and the operation to attack the transfer market is complicated. Arsenal are expected to announce a heavy loss with the next financial results, their model shows no interest in personal investment from the owner, and logistically they lost their head of recruitment when the enigmatic talent spotter Sven Mislintat left, and they are unable to appoint a director of football, with their former midfielder Edu the favorite, until July. These are hardly ideal circumstances to rebuild with efficiency. Yet again so much boils down to their capacity to qualify for the Champions League and the double boost, in status and finance, that brings.

Last October Arsenal and Emery were still finding each other out – to an extent they still are – as Raúl Sanllehí and Vinai Venkatesham sat down to elaborate on how a return to Europe’s top table is so vital to the club’s model. “We need to regain that positioning, that privilege, to be seen as a Champions League club,” Sanllehí said. “From there the wheel starts rolling again. That is what is going to give us the speed, also to be attractive to better players, to generate more money, it is the virtuous circle. The better we do, the more money will be generated, the better players are going to come, the better we are going to do.”

Tempting as it is to obsess over the bigger picture, the body language of Arsenal’s players and fans at Mestalla emphasized how much it meant to win their semi-final, to play with joy and ambition in their boots. Sport in essence has to be about trying to lift silverware for victory’s sake more than the consequence of a golden ticket.

Lacazette tried to get to the heart of it. “We know it was a great opportunity to go to the Champions League and that is really important,” he said. “But as well it is about trophies. The club needs to win a trophy, the players as well. Above all we have got the chance to win a trophy.”

(The Guardian)



Klopp Dismisses Real Madrid Speculation as 'Nonsense' and Denies Any Contact

23 March 2026, Bavaria, Ismaning: German football coach Jurgen Klopp  on stage at the Telekom press conference to present the concept for the World Cup. Photo: Felix Hörhager/dpa
23 March 2026, Bavaria, Ismaning: German football coach Jurgen Klopp on stage at the Telekom press conference to present the concept for the World Cup. Photo: Felix Hörhager/dpa
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Klopp Dismisses Real Madrid Speculation as 'Nonsense' and Denies Any Contact

23 March 2026, Bavaria, Ismaning: German football coach Jurgen Klopp  on stage at the Telekom press conference to present the concept for the World Cup. Photo: Felix Hörhager/dpa
23 March 2026, Bavaria, Ismaning: German football coach Jurgen Klopp on stage at the Telekom press conference to present the concept for the World Cup. Photo: Felix Hörhager/dpa

Former Liverpool manager Jürgen Klopp has dismissed as “nonsense” a suggestion he could take over as Real Madrid coach next season and said he hasn't heard from the Spanish club.

Klopp hasn't coached since his shock departure from Liverpool in 2024, when he said he was “running out of energy." He's stayed in the game as the Red Bull group's head of global soccer, overseeing clubs like Leipzig, Salzburg and the New York Red Bulls.

“It's all just nonsense. They haven't even called once, not one single time. And my agent is over there, you can ask him too, they haven't called him either,” Klopp said in televised comments about speculation linking him to Real Madrid.

He was speaking at an event on Monday in his role as a TV pundit for the World Cup.

Klopp didn't rule out a return to coaching someday but said he wasn't thinking about the Germany job in case Julian Nagelsmann were to leave after the World Cup.

“At the moment I'm obviously not thinking about that at all and luckily there isn't any reason to do that,” he said in comments reported by German agency dpa.

Last month, Red Bull said it was “extremely satisfied” with Klopp's work after a report in an Austrian newspaper claimed his role was in question because the drinks giant's clubs hadn't made enough progress in the year since he took charge.


Pressure on Italy as Play-off Hopefuls Eye 2026 World Cup

 Italy's head coach Gennaro Gattuso gestures during the Italian team press conference in Florence, Italy, Monday, March 23, 2026. (Lapresse via AP)
Italy's head coach Gennaro Gattuso gestures during the Italian team press conference in Florence, Italy, Monday, March 23, 2026. (Lapresse via AP)
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Pressure on Italy as Play-off Hopefuls Eye 2026 World Cup

 Italy's head coach Gennaro Gattuso gestures during the Italian team press conference in Florence, Italy, Monday, March 23, 2026. (Lapresse via AP)
Italy's head coach Gennaro Gattuso gestures during the Italian team press conference in Florence, Italy, Monday, March 23, 2026. (Lapresse via AP)

The final line-up for the 2026 World Cup will be decided over the next week, with 16 teams competing for the last four places allocated to European countries.

Twelve runners-up from the qualifying groups and four teams that earned spots through their UEFA Nations League results have a second chance to punch their ticket to football's global showpiece.

AFP Sport looks at the four play-off routes that will determine the remaining qualifiers for the first 48-team World Cup:

Path A

Four-time World Cup winners Italy face immense pressure as they attempt to qualify for a first appearance at the tournament since 2014.

After lifting the trophy in 2006, Italy's record at the World Cup has been dire. They suffered two successive group-stage exits before missing out entirely on the 2018 and 2022 editions.

In order to avoid another qualifying failure Italy must overcome Northern Ireland in Bergamo on Thursday, before a potential final against Wales or Bosnia and Herzegovina on March 31.

"It's only normal that there's pressure - only if you had no blood in your veins would you not feel it," said Italy coach Gennaro Gattuso, who played in the 2006 final which the Azzurri won on penalties against France.

Northern Ireland are big underdogs against Italy but hope to end a 40-year absence from the World Cup.

Wales host Bosnia in Cardiff in the other semi-final.

Manager Craig Bellamy told AFP earlier this month that he "feels a responsibility" to lead Wales to a second straight finals. Their appearance in Qatar was the country's first at the World Cup in 64 years.

Path B

Ukraine's footballers will hope to lift the morale of a war-torn country by competing at a first World Cup in 20 years. To get there, they need to beat Sweden on neutral ground in Valencia and then Poland or Albania.

Sweden picked up just two points in a dismal qualifying campaign, but a team now coached by former Chelsea and Brighton boss Graham Potter will get another shot on the strength of their Nations League performances.

However, Sweden will be without key man Alexander Isak as the Liverpool forward is not yet ready to return from a broken leg suffered in December.

Poland can count on Robert Lewandowski who is eyeing a third World Cup, but Albania -- led by former Arsenal and Barcelona defender Sylvinho -- believe they have what it takes to qualify for the first time.

Path C

Kosovo stand two wins away from a first major tournament a decade on from their admission to UEFA and FIFA. They came second in their qualifying group after two wins over Sweden and a victory in Slovenia.

"It's a massive opportunity for us. The whole country is buzzing with excitement. Everyone's over the moon," Kosovo captain Vedat Muriqi told FIFA.com.

Mallorca striker Muriqi sits second only to Kylian Mbappe in La Liga this season with 18 goals. The 31-year-old is also Kosovo's all-time record scorer.

Slovakia, who last featured at the World Cup in 2010, host Kosovo in Bratislava while Türkiye and Romania square off in Istanbul.

Türkiye have not played at the World Cup since a surprise third-place finish in 2002. Romania's most recent appearance was in 1998.

Path D

Troy Parrott's heroics snatched the Republic of Ireland a play-off berth, but there is much still to be done if the Irish are to return to the World Cup stage.

Ireland, who haven't featured at the tournament since 2002, head to Prague to take on the Czech Republic in the semi-finals. The winner of that tie will host the final against Denmark or North Macedonia.

"There's a quiet confidence in the group growing together, it's great to see but we know there's a lot of hard work to come," said Ireland assistant John O'Shea.

Denmark missed out on automatic qualification after a dramatic defeat in Scotland but will be expected to see off North Macedonia, whose lone tournament appearance came at Euro 2020.

Kasper Schmeichel is absent for Denmark after revealing last week that he may have played his final game, with two surgeries required to repair his damaged shoulder.


Madrid’s Mbappe Fit and Ready to Play Every Game Before World Cup

Soccer Football - International Friendly - International Friendly - France Training - INF Clairefontaine, Clairefontaine-en-Yvelines, France - March 23, 2026 France's Kylian Mbappe arrives before training. (Reuters)
Soccer Football - International Friendly - International Friendly - France Training - INF Clairefontaine, Clairefontaine-en-Yvelines, France - March 23, 2026 France's Kylian Mbappe arrives before training. (Reuters)
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Madrid’s Mbappe Fit and Ready to Play Every Game Before World Cup

Soccer Football - International Friendly - International Friendly - France Training - INF Clairefontaine, Clairefontaine-en-Yvelines, France - March 23, 2026 France's Kylian Mbappe arrives before training. (Reuters)
Soccer Football - International Friendly - International Friendly - France Training - INF Clairefontaine, Clairefontaine-en-Yvelines, France - March 23, 2026 France's Kylian Mbappe arrives before training. (Reuters)

France striker ‌Kylian Mbappe says he has fully recovered from a knee injury and wants to play all of Real Madrid's remaining matches in the season run-in as he builds toward the World Cup.

The 27-year-old missed four league games in 2026 due to a ‌lingering knee issue ‌from last season ‌but ⁠featured off the bench ⁠in the 64th minute of Madrid’s 3-2 win over Atletico on Sunday.

Mbappe has been named in France’s squad for friendlies against Brazil on March 26 ⁠and Colombia three days later ‌in the ‌United States, which is co-hosting the ‌June 11-July 19 World Cup ‌with Canada and Mexico.

"I have made a 100% recovery," Mbappe told AS.

"I prepared for the last two World ‌Cups in the best way possible, which is to play, ⁠score ⁠goals, win titles, and fight until the last minute for my club, and this year I am going to do the same to arrive in top form."

France will play in Group I at the World Cup with Norway, Senegal and the winner of an intercontinental playoff.