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
TT

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)



Man City's Rodri Keeps Door Open to Real Madrid Move

FILE PHOTO: Soccer Football - FA Cup - Third Round - Manchester City v Exeter City - Etihad Stadium, Manchester, Britain - January 10, 2026 Manchester City's Rodri celebrates scoring their second goal REUTERS/Peter Powell/File Photo
FILE PHOTO: Soccer Football - FA Cup - Third Round - Manchester City v Exeter City - Etihad Stadium, Manchester, Britain - January 10, 2026 Manchester City's Rodri celebrates scoring their second goal REUTERS/Peter Powell/File Photo
TT

Man City's Rodri Keeps Door Open to Real Madrid Move

FILE PHOTO: Soccer Football - FA Cup - Third Round - Manchester City v Exeter City - Etihad Stadium, Manchester, Britain - January 10, 2026 Manchester City's Rodri celebrates scoring their second goal REUTERS/Peter Powell/File Photo
FILE PHOTO: Soccer Football - FA Cup - Third Round - Manchester City v Exeter City - Etihad Stadium, Manchester, Britain - January 10, 2026 Manchester City's Rodri celebrates scoring their second goal REUTERS/Peter Powell/File Photo

Manchester City midfielder Rodri has kept the door open to a possible move to Real Madrid as he enters the final year of his contract with the Premier League club, saying he cannot turn down the world's top teams and that a return to LaLiga would appeal to him.

The 29-year-old Madrid native began his senior career at Villarreal before signing for Atletico Madrid in 2018. He moved to City a year later ⁠and has since ⁠enjoyed a highly successful spell in England, winning the Champions League once and four Premier League titles among a host of major honors.

"Would I like to play in Spain again, in LaLiga, in Madrid? I'd like to return, yes, obviously," Rodri told Onda Cero's Radioestadio Noche program ahead of ⁠Spain's friendly against Serbia on Friday.

"I have a year left on my contract; there will come a point when we'll have to sit down and talk."

Rodri, who is working his way back to top form after rupturing his anterior cruciate ligament in 2024, said having played for Atletico would not prevent him from making a move to their city rivals.

Former Atletico players to have made that switch include goalkeeper Thibaut Courtois and forward Alvaro Morata.

"There are other players who have gone ⁠down that ⁠path - not straight away, but in time. You can't turn down the best clubs in the world," Rodri added, according to Reuters.

Rodri also played down any suggestion of rivalry with Vinicius Jr after Real boycotted the 2024 Ballon d'Or ceremony, when the City midfielder won the award ahead of the Brazilian winger.

"I think they wanted to pit Vinicius and me against each other, but not at all," Rodri said. "I have great respect for him and for everything he did that year too. In the end, it's other people - third parties - who decide who wins the Ballon d'Or."


PSG's Ligue 1 Visit to Lens Postponed to Aid Champions League Preparations

FILED - 26 November 2024, Bavaria, Munich: Paris Saint-Germain's Achraf Hakimi in action during the UEFA Champions League soccer match between PSG and Bayern Munich at Allianz Arena. Photo: Tom Weller/dpa
FILED - 26 November 2024, Bavaria, Munich: Paris Saint-Germain's Achraf Hakimi in action during the UEFA Champions League soccer match between PSG and Bayern Munich at Allianz Arena. Photo: Tom Weller/dpa
TT

PSG's Ligue 1 Visit to Lens Postponed to Aid Champions League Preparations

FILED - 26 November 2024, Bavaria, Munich: Paris Saint-Germain's Achraf Hakimi in action during the UEFA Champions League soccer match between PSG and Bayern Munich at Allianz Arena. Photo: Tom Weller/dpa
FILED - 26 November 2024, Bavaria, Munich: Paris Saint-Germain's Achraf Hakimi in action during the UEFA Champions League soccer match between PSG and Bayern Munich at Allianz Arena. Photo: Tom Weller/dpa

Ligue 1 leaders Paris St Germain's visit to second-placed Lens, set for April 11, has been postponed to May 13 to allow them more time to prepare for their Champions League quarter-final against Liverpool, the Ligue de Football Professionnel (LFP) said on Thursday.

Strasbourg's visit to Brest, scheduled for April 12, has also been moved to May 13 to help them prepare for ⁠their Europa Conference League ⁠last-eight clashes with Mainz, Reuters quoted the LFP as saying in a statement.

"These decisions are in line with the board of directors’ clear strategic aim of enabling France to retain its fifth place in ⁠the UEFA coefficient rankings, which secures four places in the UEFA Champions League," the LFP said.

PSG, the reigning European champions, host Liverpool three days before the Lens fixture and travel to Anfield for the second leg on April 14.

PSG and Lens are separated by one point in Ligue 1, with ⁠PSG ⁠having a game in hand. Lens had earlier pushed back against PSG's request.

"It seems to us, in fact, that a worrying sentiment is taking hold: that of a French league gradually being relegated to the status of an adjustment variable at the whim of certain parties' European imperatives," Lens said in a statement on Monday.


Asian Cup Draw Postponed

The draw for January's Asian Cup finals has been postponed (AFC)
The draw for January's Asian Cup finals has been postponed (AFC)
TT

Asian Cup Draw Postponed

The draw for January's Asian Cup finals has been postponed (AFC)
The draw for January's Asian Cup finals has been postponed (AFC)

The draw for January's Asian Cup finals, which was due to be held in Riyadh on April 11, has been postponed, the Asian Football Confederation announced on Thursday.

Officials have rescheduled the event to a later date "to ensure the undisrupted attendance of all stakeholders at the final draw ceremony," the governing ⁠body said in ⁠a statement.

"The AFC expressed its appreciation to the Local Organizing Committee for the AFC Asian Cup Saudi Arabia 2027™ for their full readiness to host the draw as planned, and it appreciates the understanding and continued cooperation of its Participating Member Associations, fans and stakeholders," the statement added.

Saudi Arabia is due to host the 24-team quadrennial continental championship for the first time with the last remaining round of qualifiers taking place on Tuesday.

Qatar are the defending champions and have already secured their ⁠berth ⁠at the finals alongside four-times winners Japan, plus fellow World Cup qualifiers South Korea, Iran, Jordan, Australia and Uzbekistan.

The AFC announced on Tuesday that the latter stages of the Asian Champions League Elite would go ahead as planned in Jeddah, with matches running from April 13 to 26.