Inter Beats City Rival Milan to Reach 1st Champions League Final in More Than a Decade

Inter Milan's Lautaro Martinez celebrates after scoring the 1-0 goal during the UEFA Champions League semi-final second leg match between FC Inter and AC Milan, in Milan, Italy, 16 May 2023. (EPA)
Inter Milan's Lautaro Martinez celebrates after scoring the 1-0 goal during the UEFA Champions League semi-final second leg match between FC Inter and AC Milan, in Milan, Italy, 16 May 2023. (EPA)
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Inter Beats City Rival Milan to Reach 1st Champions League Final in More Than a Decade

Inter Milan's Lautaro Martinez celebrates after scoring the 1-0 goal during the UEFA Champions League semi-final second leg match between FC Inter and AC Milan, in Milan, Italy, 16 May 2023. (EPA)
Inter Milan's Lautaro Martinez celebrates after scoring the 1-0 goal during the UEFA Champions League semi-final second leg match between FC Inter and AC Milan, in Milan, Italy, 16 May 2023. (EPA)

Inter Milan reached its first Champions League final in more than a decade with a 1-0 victory against city rival AC Milan on Tuesday.

Inter had a 2-0 lead from the first leg of the semifinal and Lautaro Martinez's 74th-minute goal ended any hopes for Milan to stage a comeback.

Several players from both teams fell to the ground in tears at the final whistle as the Nerazzurri won the so-called “Euroderby” 3-0 on aggregate to progress to its first final since it won the league, Italian Cup and Champions League under José Mourinho in 2010.

Inter players and staff celebrated for long afterwards with their fans, singing and dancing in front of the Curva Nord packed full of Nerazzurri supporters in an electric atmosphere at San Siro — the stadium that both teams share.

“It’s obviously a great emotion, a dream that I had together with the guys, that we nurtured right from when the draw was made,” Inter coach Stefano Inzaghi said. “We had to believe in ourselves and we have got here by merit, no one has gifted us anything.

“We had a long road, with difficulties but I think we earned it. I think probably from tomorrow we’ll realize more what we have done. But it’s a wonderful night with the fans, with our family, you can’t ask for anything more.”

Inter will face either 14-time champion Real Madrid or another juggernaut in Manchester City on June 10 in Istanbul. The second leg of the other semifinal is on Wednesday, with the scoreline locked at 1-1.

“Whoever we end up with, we will be unlucky, because they are two really great teams with incredible quality,” Inzaghi said with a wry smile. “I will watch tomorrow’s match, like I watched the first leg. ... Obviously we will follow it closely.”

For Milan, the lengthy wait goes on. It last reached the showpiece event in 2007, when it won the last of its seven titles.

“At the moment there’s only disappointment, there’s only disappointment because we could have been in a Champions League final,” Milan coach Stefano Pioli said. “But if we think that last year we went out in the group stage and this year we managed to reach the semifinals we can and should be proud.

“But it’s clear we dreamt of reaching the final, we wanted the final, we wanted to beat our rivals.”

Milan was able to welcome back Rafael Leão. He missed last week’s loss with a thigh injury and the Rossoneri were hoping his comeback would inspire the team to do the same.

The difference was immediately apparent as Milan played with an intensity it sorely lacked in the first leg amid a frantic start from both teams.

Brahim Díaz saw a weak shot comfortably smothered by Inter goalkeeper André Onana early on before Leão almost got Milan back into it with his first real sight of goal, shortly before halftime. The winger sprinted into the left of the area but his angled drive grazed the outside of the far post.

Inter also had its chances to score the goal that would have all but killed the tie off as Henrikh Mkhitaryan fired over the bar, while Milan goalkeeper Mike Maignan pulled off a brilliant reaction save to keep out an Edin Džeko header from close range.

Inter sealed its place in the final when Martínez made his way into left side of the area and exchanged passes with Romelu Lukaku — who had come on for Džeko less than 10 minutes earlier — before firing in at the near post.

It was that same formidable attacking partnership that fired Inter to the Serie A title two years ago, earning the duo the nickname “LuLa.”

“The biggest regret is the first 10 minutes of the first leg when we conceded two goals in three, four minutes," Pioli said. “And also not scoring tonight when we had the chances ... that would have given us the enthusiasm, the energy, the extra confidence that could have helped us open up the match.”



Arteta Rallies Arsenal to Believe in Champions League Glory Ahead of Semifinals Against PSG 

Arsenal's Spanish manager Mikel Arteta attends a press conference at the Emirates Stadium in London, on April 28, 2025, on the eve of their UEFA Champions League semi-final first leg football match against Paris Saint-Germain (PSG). (AFP) 
Arsenal's Spanish manager Mikel Arteta attends a press conference at the Emirates Stadium in London, on April 28, 2025, on the eve of their UEFA Champions League semi-final first leg football match against Paris Saint-Germain (PSG). (AFP) 
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Arteta Rallies Arsenal to Believe in Champions League Glory Ahead of Semifinals Against PSG 

Arsenal's Spanish manager Mikel Arteta attends a press conference at the Emirates Stadium in London, on April 28, 2025, on the eve of their UEFA Champions League semi-final first leg football match against Paris Saint-Germain (PSG). (AFP) 
Arsenal's Spanish manager Mikel Arteta attends a press conference at the Emirates Stadium in London, on April 28, 2025, on the eve of their UEFA Champions League semi-final first leg football match against Paris Saint-Germain (PSG). (AFP) 

Arsenal manager Mikel Arteta is urging his players to believe they can win the Champions League for the first time because they have already beaten “the best opposition you can face in the competition.”

Defeating defending champion Real Madrid 5-1 on aggregate in the quarterfinals — after victories home and away — has raised expectations that Arsenal can go all the way.

Arteta acknowledged everyone associated with Arsenal is feeling the weight of history heading into the semifinals against Paris Saint-Germain, starting with the first leg at Emirates Stadium on Tuesday, and he wants his team to embrace that.

Asked whether Arsenal should be classed as the tournament favorite after its displays against Madrid, Arteta said they have “generated enthusiasm and possibilities no one probably expected.”

“But when you look at our history — and you go back to our history — we have never done it,” he said. “So there is so much to do. Hopefully if someone believes we can do it, it’s because of the performances and what the team is transmitting against big opposition.”

Arsenal lost the Champions League final to Barcelona in 2006 and in the semifinals to Manchester United in 2009 and hasn’t been back to the last four since.

“There’s a lot of people working at the club for many, many years and they’ve never been in this position,” Arteta said. “That tells you how unique and beautiful it is. It is the biggest competition, the European Cup, and we’ve never done it. We need to earn the right to be in that final.”

Arteta is taking inspiration from Arsenal reaching the Women’s Champions League final for the first time since 2007 after beating record eight-time champion Lyon 4-1 on Sunday.

“It’s incredible what they have done,” Arteta said. “To achieve it in the manner they have done it, they’ve shown the road, the pathway, how we can do it.”

In a rallying cry, Arteta urged fans to “bring your boots, your shorts, your T-shirts and let’s play every ball together” against PSG in the hope of recreating the atmosphere at the Emirates for the first leg against Madrid, which Arsenal won 3-0.

“If we want to do something special,” he said, “that place has to be something special that we haven’t seen.”