Arsenal v PSG is a battle of contrasts, with a much deeper significance

CHAMPIONS LEAGUE FINAL : Comment: Stellar attack against collective structure, imagination against order, and a meeting of the two best teams in Europe. But an enticing final would not hide darker discussions if PSG became the first state-owned club to defend the Champions League, writes Miguel Delaney

Arsenal, if you listen to some at the club, may now have their chance at “revenge”. They felt they were actually better than Paris Saint-Germain in last season’s semi-final, which may still baffle many people who’ve watched the Qatari project since.

The rest of Europe might just want a better crescendo than the semi-final ultimately offered, and perhaps that the Champions League final has been due for some time. There hasn’t been a great final in years, arguably since 2005, despite claims from 2008, 2012 and 2017.

That has meant the semi-finals have often represented the absolute peak of club football, even if this year’s didn’t reach the heights that had been anticipated.

There were joyous celebrations as Arsenal reached their first Champions League final since 2006 (Getty)
There were joyous celebrations as Arsenal reached their first Champions League final since 2006 (Getty)

It’s not an exaggeration to say that the expectation after the Bayern Munich-PSG first leg was that we would all be sitting here on Thursday morning trying to make sense of another sensation.

That didn’t really happen. PSG were just too good. This time, Bayern just couldn’t get close enough when it mattered.

That poses another question, relevant to Arsenal’s lingering frustration from last season, relevant to where European football goes next.

If PSG put in a very modern display of excellence in the first leg, the second leg was a more classically continental display.

They shut Bayern out, where they had previously opened them. There were no concerns about defending here.

It further fosters the sense of a truly complete team, arguably the best that Europe has seen since Pep Guardiola’s Barcelona when performing at their top level.

There are of course caveats. PSG benefit from all of the advantages of being a Qatari sportswashing project, at the same time that power has trampled Ligue 1.

Luis Enrique’s PSG could emulate the Real Madrid side that became the first in the modern era to defend the Champions League (AP)
Luis Enrique’s PSG could emulate the Real Madrid side that became the first in the modern era to defend the Champions League (AP)

The new darlings of the competition do bring darker discussions.

PSG would not just become the first side since Real Madrid in 2018 to retain the trophy, and just the second in the Champions League era.

They would ensure a state-owned club has won the competition for the third time in four years, a development that would be all the more conspicuous when the conflict in Iran has raised questions about future strategies from such Gulf autocracies. There’s an extra layer to this, given that Viktor Orban – characterised as “a competitive authoritarian” – is no longer the premier of Hungary, having been voted out weeks before this prestige fixture in Budapest he had long desired.

Such concerns, as has been said before, reflect a lot about football in 2026.

Arsenal, themselves owned by a classic US billionaire capitalist, find both of these state-owned clubs – PSG and Manchester City – standing in their way in the season’s two major trophies.

If Mikel Arteta’s side were to win the league, it would make this final the first meeting between domestic champions since 2020.

Arsenal and PSG met in last season’s semi-finals, with the Gunners now bidding for ‘revenge’ in Budapest (PA Wire)
Arsenal and PSG met in last season’s semi-finals, with the Gunners now bidding for ‘revenge’ in Budapest (PA Wire)

That prospect does speak to something else about this final. It might end up a rare final that is definitively between the best teams in Europe. That arguably hasn’t been seen since 2020 either, and before that you probably have to go back to 2014 or 2009.

There’s even the symmetry of how Arsenal were undeniably the best team of the first half of the season, given how they finished top of the group stage, and PSG again the best team of the second half and the knock-outs.

The most pertinent question, however, is whether Arsenal can really be as good as PSG for the final – or whether they even need to be.

The football both sides play also plays into many other contrasts.

Khvicha Kvaratskhelia’s direct dribbling and speed are emblematic of how PSG want to play (Getty)
Khvicha Kvaratskhelia’s direct dribbling and speed are emblematic of how PSG want to play (Getty)

While PSG are self-assuredly looking to perpetuate their dominance and win a second Champions League, Arsenal are striving to finally claim their first, and properly begin their own era.

Duly, Luis Enrique’s side constantly look like they are expanding the pitch, while Arsenal play within the margins.

That contrast from the two semi-finals is set to become even more acute.

Stellar attack against collective structure; imagination against order.

The reality of it is unlikely to be quite so simple, as Enrique would himself warn.

After the entire European season seemed to be going the same way as a coruscating Kvicha Kvaratshkelia run – surely a contender for Ballon d’Or – how susceptible are PSG to one Gabriel Magalhaes set-piece header settling it?

Gabriel, meanwhile, sums up Arsenal’s strength in defence and from set-pieces, which could make the difference in a one-off game against PSG (Getty)
Gabriel, meanwhile, sums up Arsenal’s strength in defence and from set-pieces, which could make the difference in a one-off game against PSG (Getty)

Or, after a season when Arteta’s side constantly played on the line, will PSG blow them off it?

Or is this already a new Arsenal, elevated to the Champions League final and consequently having had a weight lifted?

The temptation will be to cast this as some kind of battle for the soul of football given the contrasting styles, but the wider context makes it a lot more complicated than that.

In the most immediate and simple sense, it is an enticing match between arguably Europe’s two best sides.

The hope is it leads to the final the competition has long been due.

Category: General Sports