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Arsenal Beat Atletico Madrid 1-0 to Reach Champions League Final

Arsenal reached the Champions League final for the first time since 2006, beating Atletico Madrid 1-0 at the Emirates in the semi-final second leg to advance 2-1 on aggregate. The result eliminates Los Colchoneros from European competition and ends a 20-year wait for the London club at this stage of the tournament.

The tie had been level heading into the second leg, the sides having drawn 1-1 at the Metropolitano in Madrid, where Viktor Gyökeres converted from the spot for Arsenal and Julián Álvarez equalised for Atletico via a penalty of his own.

Saka settles the tie in first-half stoppage time

Bukayo Saka (23) scored the only goal of the second leg in the 44th minute, turning in a rebound at close range after Jan Oblak had parried a shot from Leandro Trossard. It was a straightforward finish from inside the six-yard box, but it proved sufficient to send Arsenal through on aggregate.

Reports ahead of kick-off had noted that fireworks were set off outside Atletico’s team hotel at approximately 1:30 a.m. the night before the match, an apparent attempt to disrupt the visitors’ preparations – though Simeone made no public reference to it in the build-up to kick-off.

Arsenal controlled the tie without being dominant

Arsenal’s defensive organisation was central to securing the result. With a 1-0 lead and aggregate parity broken, Mikel Arteta’s side managed the second half without conceding the chance that would have forced extra time, restricting Atletico to speculative efforts from distance.

Atletico’s inability to convert their first-leg penalty advantage into a more commanding cushion ultimately cost them. Simeone’s side had the first-leg draw to work with but needed a clean sheet in London – and Saka’s goal before half-time made that impossible.

Atletico’s Champions League campaign ends at the semi-final stage

This was Atletico’s fourth Champions League semi-final under Diego Simeone, who has now reached the final twice – in 2014 and 2016, losing both to Real Madrid – without adding a third appearance. Whether this exit accelerates any structural rethink at the club, particularly around the futures of Álvarez and key defensive figures, remains to be seen. Barcelona’s recent transfer activity connected to Arsenal’s squad is one indicator of how the attention of rival clubs sharpens around a club reaching a final.

Arsenal await final opponents in Budapest on 30 May

Arsenal will face either Bayern Munich or Paris Saint-Germain in the final at the Puskás Aréna in Budapest on 30 May, with PSG trailing 1-0 after the first leg of their semi-final. It will be only the second Champions League final in Arsenal’s history. Whether Arteta’s side can go further than the 2006 team – who lost 2-1 to Barcelona in Paris – will depend on which opponent emerges from the other semi and how Arsenal’s squad holds up across the remaining weeks of the season.

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