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The Guardian - UK
The Guardian - UK
Sport
Rob Smyth

Arsenal 0-1 Paris Saint-Germain: Champions League semi-final, first leg – as it happened

Leandro Trossard goes close as Arsenal look to pile on the pressure in the second half against PSG.
Leandro Trossard goes close as Arsenal look to pile on the pressure in the second half against PSG. Photograph: Tom Jenkins/The Guardian

That’s all for our live coverage of a frustrating night for Arsenal. Thanks as always for your company and emails – goodnight.

Mikel Arteta’s verdict

We’re disappointed with the result. We put so much into the game. In the first 10-15 minutes we struggled to get momentum and dominate the game the way we wanted; we were very inefficient in where we won the ball and that caused us a few issues. But after that the team were better and better and better. It’s disappointing not to get a draw at least.

[On the 26 passes that led to PSG’s goal] Credit to them because they get off from a situation that is completely closed and on their weak side. They bring the No9 very very far from the reference of your central defenders, and after that a lot of things still have to happen for them to score. They were very clinical. You have to recognise the talent of the opposition.

[On the disallowed goal] That would have been a great time to score. It was millimetres offside, their keeper made two brilliant saves. Those are the margins at this level.

It’s half-time and we have a big chance to be in the final.

Vitinha gives the Paris Saint-Germain view

It was a great night. I think it was a very, very good performance. We controlled the game with the ball, and when we had to adapt to the circumstances of the game we did it.

[Donnarumma] made some great saves but the team was the key. We could have scored more but we are happy with 1-0.

This is not over. We have to play a great game in the second leg in Paris.

David Raya’s reaction

They started very quick and scored the goal. But after the first 15-20 minutes I thought we dominated most of the game, we created the chances and Donnarumma made some brilliant saves. It’s only half-time and we’ll take the positives from tonight.

I’ve not seen the disallowed goal. I think we needed that lift. But we showed for the last 70 minutes that we can win against any team. We’ll go to Paris next week to win the game.

[Did you miss Thomas Partey?] We know how important he is but we have good depth in midfield and Declan played as a No6. I think he had a great game.

We’ll try to approach the game the same way. I thought we played really, really well. They had their chances too but that’s football. Let’s go to Paris and win the game.

Read David Hytner’s match report

Serial Champions League-winner Clarence Seedorf gives his verdict on Amazon Prime

Winning some matches is one thing; winning the Champions League is another. I think the fear of winning kicked in today. I’m an Arsenal fan, in terms of how they’ve played over the years, but the thing I’ve always said is that they need a shift in mentality to elevate themselves.

Today I saw some elements … Actually, PSG did what I expected Arsenal to do: knowing when to press high, go low and just sit back and wait for the opponent to force a pass, then counter-attack. This is how you have to play in the Champions League and I didn’t see that at all from Arsenal.

This might free them up next week. They have nothing to lose.

Updated

Full time: Arsenal 0-1 Paris Saint-Germain

Reality bites. Arsenal need to produce one of the greatest performances in the club’s history if they are to reach the Champions League final. They were outclassed at the Emirates by a fabulous PSG side, who should probably have added to Ousmane Dembele’s fourth-minute goal.

Arsenal had their moments – Gianluigi Donnarumma made two brilliant saves and Mikel Merino has a goal ruled out after a three-minute offside check – but they were nowhere near their best. Perversely, that might be the positive they take from this game. Arsenal will surely play better in Paris next week; if they do, they still have a chance. But right here, right now, PSG look the best team in the Europe.

Updated

90+5 min A free-kick is given for a foul by White on Donnarumma and Mikel Arteta has to usher hit set-piece coach away from the fourth official.

90+5 min One last corner for Arsenal…

90+4 min I’m not sure Arsenal have won a European tie after losing the first leg at home. There was a famous semi-final win in Turin in 1979-80 when they were effectively half a goal down after a 1-1 draw at Highbury. There were going out on away goals until the late Paul Vaessen scored a dramatic winner.

Updated

90+3 min Martinelli shoots wildly over the bar after good play from Nwaneri. The referee played the advantage after Rice was fouled 22 yards from goal; Arsenal would have preferred the free-kick.

90 min: Arsenal substitution Ethan Nwaneri replaces Martin Odegaard, who had a really frustrating night.

There will be five minutes of added time.

89 min: PSG substitution Warren Zaire-Emery replaces Joao Neves.

88 min Rice smashes a hopeful free-kick that hits Barcola in the six-yard box and ricochets to safety for PSG.

87 min Martinelli is fouled just outside the area on the left by Hakimi. Rice is over the free-kick, Odegaard is conducting the crowd…

Ramos hits the bar!

85 min Another let-off for Arsenal. Ramos makes a perfectly timed run in behind the defence, onto a long ball forward, and toebungs a shot that beats Raya and clatters the top of the bar.

Great chance for Barcola!

84 min PSG should be 2-0 up and halfway to Munich. After another textbook slow-slow-quick move, Barcola plays a neat one-two with Ramos, charges into the area and drives wide of the far post. That’s a glorious chance.

Updated

83 min: Arsenal substitution Ben White comes on for Jurrien Timber, who has been hobbling for the last five minutes or so.

80 min After another patient PSG move, Kvaratskhelia cuts inside from the left and shoots over from the edge of the area. It’s been a game of subtle moodswings but overall PSG have been mightily impressive. If Arsenal can get past them, there’s nothing to fear in the final.

Updated

78 min A poor clearance from Kiwior puts Arsenal in trouble. Eventually Barcola lays the ball back to Joao Neves, who shoots over from the edge of the D. That was a pretty good chance.

77 min Saka’s shot is smartly turned round at the near post by Donnarumma. It wouldn’t have counted – Trossard was offside in the build-up.

Updated

76 min: PSG substitution Goncalo Ramos replaces Desire Doue.

75 min The two left-backs, Nuno Mendes and Myles Lewis-Skelly, have been outstanding. I’d be tempted to switch Saka to the left for a bit, especially with Hakimi on a yellow card.

Updated

74 min Kvaratskhelia sees Raya off his line and drives a chip from just inside the Arsenal half. In the end it fades well wide of the far post but for a split-second Raya would have been nervous.

72 min Martinelli runs at Hakimi and fires a cross that is headed away at the near post by Vitinha. Arsenal, without creating a heap of chances, have looked the likelier scoreres in the second half.

70 min: PSG substitution Bradley Barcola replaces the goalscorer Ousmane Dembele. Apparently his goal was preceded by 26 PSG passes.

69 min “Any Arsenal fans who are finding tonight a bit uncomfortable could just switch over to the snooker and watch John Higgins play Mark Williams in the quarter final of the World Championships at the Crucible in Sheffield, and pretend it’s 1994 again,” says Simon McMahon. “Wright, Campbell, Smith, they had a few proper strikers back then.”

68 min Arsenal are having a decent spell. Lewis-Skelly makes another excellent run through midfield and finds Saka; his pass is cut out.

66 min “It was a great save by Donnarumma but don’t you think it strange how deep he was?” says Niall Mullen. “He didn’t seem to narrow the angle at all. It was similar to the goal he conceded to Harvey Elliott at the Parc des Princes when he palmed it into the net instead of out for a corner.”

64 min I talked about Arsenal’s attacking options earlier. There’s also a case from being on Ben White at right-back, given his attacking chemistry with Saka and Odegaard. That said, he hasn’t played much in the last few months and that isn’t ideal preparation for facing Big KK Kvaratskhelia.

63 min Marquinhos fires a quick pass into Dembele, who can’t control it on the stretch on the edge of the area. Had he done so he’d have had a shooting chance.

62 min Doue is fouled by Merino after a slippery, tricky run. Nineteen years old he is.

61 min Hakimi runs onto a through pass and is about to shoot when Saliba stretches across to make an immaculate tackle. I know he’s made one or two mistakes of late but 99.94 per cent of the time he makes defending look so easy.

59 min A word for Jurrien Timber, who has recovered well after a nightmare start to the game. Kvaratskhelia and Doue have been a lot quieter either side of half-time.

58 min Arsenal think Saka is fouled on the edge of the area by Neves. They are wrong, the referee is right; Neves again nipped in front to make a stealthy tackle.

WHAT A SAVE BY DONNARUMMA!

56 min Rice surges through midfield, waits for Martinelli’s excellent off-the-ball run and plays Trossard through on goal in the inside-left channel. He moves into the area and rifles a low shot that is wonderfully saved by Donnarumma. He got down so quickly to his left and made just enough contact to brush the ball wide of the post.

Updated

55 min Superb passing and movement from PSG, who keep the ball for the best part of a minute. Eventually Doue tries to scoop a pass into the area for Hakimi; Kiwior defends well.

54 min Doue skips into the Arsenal area and is well challenged by Rice. Odegaard dribbles out, loses the ball and is relived to see Saliba clean up the mess.

Odegaard has been very quiet tonight.

52 min Arsenal come again. Trossard’s snapvolley is blocked, then Kiwior’s long-range blooter ricochets off a couple of defenders. PSG are trying to slow the game down.

51 min “Hey Rob, don’t you find that referee chat invariably kills the mood?” writes Niall Mullen. “In fact, I recommend it to any trigger-happy young men as a delaying tactic should you need it. Your partner might find it odd that you keep saying ‘but he’s from the Greater Manchester area’ over and over again but it will be worth it.”

Updated

NO GOAL!

50 min After three impermeable minutes, the goal is ruled out. It’s not entirely clear what happened; it looks like the scorer Merino was offside, never mind the blockers. But if that’s the case, why did it take three minutes?

Updated

49 min This may be a subjective offside decision, because a line of Arsenal players ran back from an offside position so the issue is whether anybody in an offside position blocked a PSG defender. That’s why they were all complaining to the referee when the goal went in.

48 min: VAR check for offside Oh my word, there’ll be mayham if this is ruled out.

Mikel Merino may be playing in midfield tonight but he’s still scoring goals. Rice curled a superb free-kick into the middle, where Merino got in front of Pacho six yards out and guided a careful header past Donnarumma.

GOAL! Arsenal 1-1 Paris Saint-Germain (Merino 47)

Now it’s PSG who are fuming with the referee!

Updated

46 min Joao Neves jumps for a high ball, catches Merino with his arm and is booked.

46 min Martin Odegaard gets the second half under way for Arsenal. No substitutions, yet.

More boos as Slavko Vincic emerges for the second half. When a famous referee is murdered, and it’ll happen in the next 10-20 years, we’ll all have blood on our hands.

Arsenal’s main attacking options on the bench are Ethan Nwaneri, Oleksandr Zinchenko and Raheem Sterling. There’s a case, if Leandro Trossard continues to struggles, for replacing him with Zinchenko. Then Lewis-Skelly – who has again looked eerily comfortable – moves into midfield and Merino goes up front.

Half-time reading

“Last time these two teams met, the Parisians played like they were wearing tungsten boots,” says Kári Tulinius. “Now they glide around like air hockey pucks. It’s like they’ve tired backwards.”

“One wonders whether Arteta calling for the fans to create a special armosphere was wise,” says Stephen Bradfield. “That was a given but calling for it may have had an impact on the players. There’s a fine line between motivation and over-motivation. It sounds like Arsenal have allowed, thus far, hearts to rule heads.”

This is a really interesting point. I thought that was Real Madrid’s biggest problem in the second leg against Arsenal, when they were far too emotional. I don’t think Arsenal have been anywhere near that bad tonight but they certainly haven’t been cool-headed.

Updated

Half time: Arsenal 0-1 Paris Saint-Germain

The half-time whistle is met by boos, which is little more than petulant nonsense. All fanbases are the same, it’s not unique to Arsenal. Slavko Vincic has made a few errors, all minor in the grand scheme, and we saw in the Copa del Rey final what can happen when you feed false narratives about referee.

Anyway, the game. It’s been frantic at times but always fascinating. PSG started with intimidating authority and took an early lead through Ousmane Dembele. Arsenal were all at sea for half an hour and would have gone 2-0 down but for David Raya’s outstanding save to deny Desire Doue.

The mood changed when Bukayo Saka started to demonstrate his infectious brilliantly and it was all Arsenal as half-time approached. Their best chance fell to Gabriel Martinelli, who drew an excellent save from Gianluigi Donnarumma after a lovely run from Myles Lewis-Skelly.

Updated

45 min: Big save from Donnarumma Lewis-Skelly scurries thrillingly through midfield, away from Hakimi, and slips an excellent pass inside Marquinhos to put Martinelli through on goal. He opens his body for the Thierry Henry finish and Donnarumma flies to his left to push it away. Terrific save.

44 min Timber wins the ball back well, marches through midfield and is cynically fouled by Hakimi. He could have been booked earlier; he has been booked now.

43 min Saka is furious to be penalised for a foul on Mendes, who made the most of a slight shove in the back, and boots the ball away in frustration. He’s booked. Arsenal think the world is against them, or at least the referee Slavko Vincic.

42 min “‘Big KK’ would surely suffice for Kvaratskhelia,” says Scott Blair, “and be less harrowing on the fingers?”

I’m not going near repetition of the letter K unless Kevin Keegan announces he’s the new Brazil manager or that he’s going on Strictly.

41 min A long free-kick bounces awkwardly in the PSG area. Merino helps it back across goal and Trossard’s speculative flick is saved comfortably by Donnarumma.

Arsenal don’t want half-time right now.

40 min This is Arsenal’s best spell. It almost leads to a goal when Saka’s cross is volleyed wide of an open goal by the stretching Martinelli. I think Martinelli was offside so it wouldn’t have counted, but the last few minutes have been much more promising for Arsenal.

Updated

39 min The first trademark run infield from Saka, who beats Kvaratskhelia and whips a shot towards goal from 25 yards. Donnarumma saves comfortably.

37 min: Arsenal penalty appeal! Kiwior, still up following a free-kick, takes advantage of a literal defensive slip on the left side of the area and plays the ball back to Merino eight yards out. He is about to shoot when Joao Neves makes a wonderful pickpocket’s tackle from the side. Merino goes down and the referee points theatrically towards the ball, which confuses a number of Arsenal fans who think he’s pointing for a penalty.

Updated

35 min Doue and Kvaratskhelia have switched wings for a bit. There’s still no respite for Jurrien Tumber, who may need to be taken off at half-time with twisted blood.

34 min “It’s been a difficult 48 hours for some supporters of less stellar football clubs,” writes Kim Thonger. “My club, Bristol City, got thrashed last night by Leeds in a vital playoff qualification game. I was thankfully trapped in the London Palladium watching the very wonderful Sarah Silverman, without my mobile, which had to be sealed into a Faraday cage pouch for the show. Them’s the rules. So I avoided the pain of the four goals hitting the back of the net. And for Bristol City’s final must-win game on Saturday, I shall be on a plane.

“Again, I will avoid the pain, or pleasure, perhaps. But I have discovered this, if I cannot watch or listen to the game, I am strangely calmer than I would otherwise have been. So, if any Arsenal fans are struggling with stress at this very moment, just lock yourself in the cupboard under the stairs for a couple of hours, without your phone. Take a torch and some chocolate HobNobs and a relaxing book, perhaps Three Men in a Boat by Jerome K Jerome, and emerge to check the result when the game has finished. You’ll thank me later, trust me. I wish Arsenal good fortune.”

Here’s a thing. Why don’t we all make a pact whereby we throw our phones in the sea and never use the internet ever again? Send your thoughts to Rob Smyth, PO Box 1994, London.

32 min That’s such a good save from Raya. It’s the change of direction that made it so good, because everyone thought Doue would shoot across goal.

Brilliant save by Raya!

31 min Dembele is released one v one in the area with Saliba, who does superbly to hold him up while support arrives. Eventually Dembele’s cross deflects to Doue, who cuts inside Timber and rifles a low shot towards the near post. Raya changes direction and plunges to his right to beat the ball away, a quite fabulous save.

Fabian Ruiz, offside but not flagged until the ball has gone dead, hits the post with the rebound. Doue’s shot would have counted.

Updated

31 min It’s a more even game now, although PSG still look the more relaxed and Kvaratskhelia has been the most dangerous attacking player by a mile.

30 min The camera cuts to Arsene Wenger, back at the Emirates for a rare visit. He’s come from Japan

Updated

28 min Here’s Zafar Sobhan on the aforementioned absence of Thomas Partey. “Presumably, Arsenal are still playing with 11 men (though on form of first 20 mins it doesn’t appear so), though. Where was Rice? PSG bossing the game in midfield.”

Now look, it’s hard enough doing an MBM without getting the chalkboard out, so I can’t tell you where Rice was or why Dembele was in a different postcode. I’ll have a look at half-time. Rice may have gone on a run forward. Actually, as I type, Arsenal’s formation looks closer to a double pivot – in the parlance of our time – with Merino to the left of Rice. No idea if that was the case at the start of the game.

Updated

27 min Arsenal work the ball nicely in the inside-left channel until Trossard screws his cross too close to Donnarumma.

26 min Arsenal can’t deal with Kvaratskhelia, which is bad news for my fingers. He moves into the area, shifts the ball onto his left foot and hits a shot that deflects off Timber. Raya plunges to his left to make a comfortable save.

24 min Arsenal are slowly growing into the game. Odegaard’s free-kick from deep is headed down by Kiwior and held comfortably by Donnarumma.

24 min “Watching this tonight in a small, rustic pub in south-west Poland and the thirty or so crowd are big-time behind Arsenal,” writes Peadar de Burca. “I’m nursing a Belgian Leffe and as much as I’d like to be the bigger man and join in, my loyalty to Liverpool won’t allow it. What’s wrong with me? We won the league. PSG beat us fair and square. Why can’t I take the tribalism hand-brake off and throw out a little Gooner-love? Maybe a second Leffe will help...”

A second Leffe always helps. It’s the fifth when things start to get a bit more, ahem, nuanced.

Updated

23 min Lewis-Skelly does superbly to win the ball off Hakimi, who brings him down in response. Hakimi might have been booked for that.

Even a little moment like that can change the mood.

22 min The Arsenal fans are already pretty unhappy with the referee. He’s given a lot of free-kicks to PSG, but they all looked good decisions to me.

20 min Timber, who is having a bit of a nightmare, again fouls Kvaratskhelia. Arsenal are really struggling. They need to hold their nerve – we’ve seen enough football matches to know one chance or goal could change the mood completely, particularly if it involves the inspirational Saka or Rice. Or any o

Updated

17 min Timber gets a last warning after wiping out Kvaratskhelia, who has made an irresistible start.

We’ve seen a replay of the penalty incident – Timber put his arm across Kvaratskhelia, who took the opportunity to go over. While there wasn’t enough contact for it to be overturned, Timber took a huge risk.

Updated

16 min: PSG penalty appeal! Kvaratskhelia slips Timber beautifully in the area, then goes to ground dramatically. The referee says plays on and an affronted Kvaratskhelia hares after him. No word yet whether there’s a VAR check.

14 min: Chance for PSG Kvaratskhelia wins a corner for PSG. It’s taken short to Doue and eventually leads to a cross from Hakimi on the other side that is headed towards goal by Marquinhos. It’s straight at Raya, who saves comfortably, but either side are Arsenal would have been in serious bother.

13 min PSG have started remarkably well, apparently oblivious to the fact they’re away from home in a Champions League semi-final. Their pressing and passing have been first rate; Arsenal may need to change something because they’ve hardly seen the ball.

Updated

12 min “A cold shower is meant to be marvellously invigorating,” writes Charles Antaki. “At the moment it seems about as invigorating as a bowl of cold tapioca, but let’s see.”

11 min Doue cuts inside from the right and drags a daisy-cutter from 25 yards that is comfortably saved by Raya.

10 min Rice’s corner is headed away, PSG break and Trossard is booked for a tactical foul on Hakimi.

Updated

9 min Much better from Arsenal. Martinelli runs at Marquinhos to win Arsenal’s first corner. Rice is going over to take it…

8 min That John Smith’s kick-off aside, it has been a formidable start from PSG. In the pre-match huddle, Declan Rice told his teammates, "We die without the ball”. They’re already on about their fourth life.

6 min There was so much to like about that goal. PSG kept the ball for a long time, waiting for an opportunity. It came when Dembele was found in space in the centre circle; as, Alan Shearer has just said on Sky, you wonder if he’d had have quite so much space with Thomas Partey on the field.

PSG have taken the lead with a fine team goal. They kept the ball for an age before Dembele released Kvaratskhelia in space on the area. He shuffled into the area, running at Timber, before flicking the ball back to Dembele on the edge of the area. It was an awkward ball to hit first time, but Dembele hit into the ground and across goal with his left foot. It went through the crowd, hit the inside of the far post and bounced into the net.

Updated

GOAL! Arsenal 0-1 Paris Saint-Germain (Dembele 4)

Ave it? Ave that!

Updated

2 min “Per the U.S. commentary this is the most youthful Champions League semi final since 1995,” says Matt Burtz. “With your extensive knowledge of football history you probably won’t even need to look up which tie was referenced.”

Well – and I say this with love for Franco Baresi in particular – it definitely wasn’t the one involving AC Milan! Great stat though, thanks for that.

1 min Shall we crack on? PSG, kicking from right to left as we watch, get the match under way and pump the ball straight out of play. Before the game Mikel Arteta told his team to “live it, embrace it”. That start from PSG was more “ave it”.

Updated

There will be a minute’s silence in memory of Pope Francis before the match. Or maybe it’s a minute’s applause. Nobody seems to know what they’re supposed to be doing.

Mikel Arteta and Luis Enrique smile warmly at they embrace on the touchline. The mood is so positive, so infectious, that it’s easy to forget it has to end in tears for one of these teams.

Updated

There’s a wonderful atmosphere at the Emirates, where the home fans are lustily belting out their new anthem Viva Forever. This feels huge.

Actually, no, this feels huge.

Updated

A young man’s game

Both teams only have one thirtysomething in their team: Leandro Trossard for Arsenal, Marquinhos for Paris Saint-Germain.

Let’s have a quick reminder of the teams before they take the field.

Arsenal (4-3-3) Raya; Timber, Saliba, Kiwior, Lewis-Skelly; Odegaard, Rice, Merino; Saka, Trossard, Martinelli.
Substitutes: Neto, Setford, Tierney, White, Zinchenko, Sterling, Butler-Oyedeji, Henry-Francis, Kabia, Nwaneri.

Paris Saint-Germain (4-3-3) Donnarumma; Hakimi, Marquinhos, Pacho, Nuno Mendes; Joao Neves, Vitinha, Fabian Ruiz; Kvaratskehlia, Dembele, Doue.
Substitutes: Safonov, Tenas, Kimpembe, Goncalo Ramos, Lee, L Hernandez, Mayulu, Barcola, Zaire-Emery, Lucas Beraldo, Mbaye.

Referee Slavko Vincic (Slovenia).

“It’s exciting to see two of the cities mentioned in Pop Muzik going at it today!” says Peter Oh. “Not you, New York, and not you either Harry Kane, I mean Munich.”

“I predict Arse(nal) de Triomphe today and Parisian Arc de Triomphe by a bigger margin in the second leg.”

Joe Pearson has taken the Pet Shop Boys reference and, er, jogged with it?

Does PSG have the brains and Arsenal have the looks (Arteta’s hair)? But PSG has already got lots of money. We’ll see how this goes.

What have I done to deserve this?

Updated

“Apart from reading you tonight,” says Steve Bradfield, “ I’ll keep abreast by the amount of cheering I can hear at home in Tufnell Park.”

What’s that, three miles? I’d imagine you’ll hear plenty. Arsenal fans have had plenty of stick over the years, but the Emirates won’t be a library tonight.

It’s 5838 days since Arsenal last played in a Champions League semi-final. On that night, alas, the dream was dead by 7.56pm.

Meet PSG’s president

Khelaifi is, in the words of one seasoned observer, “the most powerful person in sport that nobody has heard of”. That oversight is probably true of a British public to which his influence is yet to cut through. If nothing else the Qatari should receive a slightly more amenable welcome at Arsenal that the one afforded in November by fans of Bayern Munich, who certainly seemed well versed in his various functions when PSG visited.

There is one man at the Emirates tonight who knows what it’s like to be European champion.

Mikel Arteta’s pre-match thoughts

We’re excited: it’s a big game, a big night for us and a massive opportunity to take the next step.

[On the atmosphere] We have to generate one of the most amazing nights at this stadium [Theo Walcott, on Amazon Prime, whips out his boots in accordance with Arteta’s pre-match instructions]. Get ready, get ready just in case!

The game is about passion, energy and connecting with people. We’ve all experienced it – when you feel that on the pitch, it makes such a difference.

[On Arsene Wenger making a rare appearance at the Emirates] The reason I am here, the reason a lot of us are here, is because of him. Hopefully we can give him something back.

[On setting Arsenal’s ambitions higher than their recent achievements] I really believe it, I’m convinced about it. We have the capacity. We’ve been waiting for this moment for 10 months. In June we started to prepare for moments like this, and now it’s about delivering. Just express yourself and go for it.

The team look ready. Of course there will be difficult moments, we are prepared for that. Adapt to any context; any context is good for us. Live it, embrace it, and then you have to earn the right to win the game. In order to achieve that, every individual has to step up.

In a surprising development, Mikel Arteta chose this week to reference the famous Pie & Pints match of November 1986.

I tell them [the supporters], and I’m not exaggerating here: ‘Guys, bring your boots, bring your shorts, bring your T-shirts and let’s play every ball together. We want to do something special. The place has to be something special, something that we haven’t seen. I really hope that everybody that comes to the Emirates and is watching and following us, brings that energy with them.

Yellow cards were wiped after the quarter-finals. So if anybody wants to miss the second leg, they’ll have to get the extra mile and get themselves sent off tonight.

Désiré Doué, 19, starts in attack for PSG tonight

Désiré had a great career ahead of him from a young age. He was a creative player. He liked to make the difference individually, but he was also driven by the collective.

Having completed Real Madrid, Declan Rice’s next challenge is to deal with João Neves, Fabián Ruiz and Vitinha.

Arteta’s plan was for Rice to be a No 6 and clean up at the base of midfield. He called him a lighthouse, describing him as a player with the ability to guide his teammates, but soon saw that his new signing was capable of shining in more advanced areas. “He plays very, very high in Arsenal,” Thomas Tuchel, England’s manager, said of Rice last month. “He plays sometimes as a defensive second striker. When they press high he’s sometimes a double striker. He plays in the left 10 pocket.”

PSG team news: Doue preferred to Barcola

No surprises in the Paris Saint-Germain team either. Desire Doue replaces Bradley Barcola in the only change from the second leg of their quarter-final against Aston Villa.

Paris Saint-Germain (4-3-3) Donnarumma; Hakimi, Marquinhos, Pacho, Nuno Mendes; Joao Neves, Vitinha, Fabian Ruiz; Doue, Dembele, Kvaratskhelia.
Substitutes: Safonov, Tenas, Kimpembe, Goncalo Ramos, Lee, L Hernandez, Mayulu, Barcola, Zaire-Emery, Lucas Beraldo, Mbaye.

Updated

Arsenal team news: Trossard starts

The Arsenal team is as expected, with just one enforced change from the win at the Bernabeu. Leandro Trossard replaces the suspended Thomas Partey, so Mikel Merino will move back into midfield.

Arsenal (4-3-3) Raya; Timber, Saliba, Kiwior, Lewis-Skelly; Odegaard, Rice, Merino; Saka, Trossard, Martinelli.
Substitutes: Neto, Setford, Tierney, White, Zinchenko, Sterling, Butler-Oyedeji, Henry-Francis, Kabia, Nwaneri.

Updated

Champions League: previews and predictions for the semi-finals

Luis Enrique has the luxury of selecting from a full squad. The PSG manager named a strong team for the 3-1 ​loss to Nice on Friday – PSG’s first Ligue 1 defeat this season. Enrique ​must decide which of his attackers to drop, with Désiré Doué and Bradley Barcola battling to join Ousmane Dembélé and Khvicha Kvaratskhelia on the frontline. Otherwise, the rest of the XI picks itself​. ​His midfield trio of João Neves, Vitinha and Fabián Ruiz​ have been impressive this season and will look to dictate in the middle.

The head-to-head

Arsenal have never lost to Paris Saint-Germain, though it’s a small sample size. These are their previous meetings.

Cup Winners’ Cup semi-final, 1993-94

I think the chant “1-0 to the Arsenal” was born in the first leg of that game, when they were ahead at half-time. Either that or I’ve been dreaming about Arsenal and the Pet Shop Boys again.

Champions League group stage, 2016-17

Champions League league state, 2024-25

Preamble

Tonight, on a blissful spring evening in North London, 60,000 virgins will assemble in a a four-tiered bowl with polycarbonate roofing. We should probably explain that, eh.

Arsenal and Paris Saint-Germain, who meet at the Emirates Stadium in the first leg of their Champions League semi-final, are arguably the biggest clubs never to become champions of Europe. That gives tonight’s game a unique excitement: it’s both a heavyweight clash and a meeting of wide-eyed dreamers.

The last time Arsenal played in a Champions League semi-final, in May 2009, even Myles Lewis-Skelly, aged 2, barely know who the eff Myles Lewis-Skelly was. This is PSG’s fourth semi-final in the last six years, by contrast, but their first without Eminem. That’s another feature of this game – the two teams are just that, with an emphasis on the collective and an absence of galacticos.

If you combined all the votes in last year’s Ballon d’Or for the 22 players involved tonight, they’d still only have finished 18th. This is going to change in the future, perhaps the very near future. But that’s the point: right now, at 6pm BST on 29 April 2025, the players and fans of Arsenal and Paris Saint-Germain have it all ahead of them.

Kick off 8pm.

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