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Rock-solid Arsenal ready for PSG test in Champions League final

 


Arsenal's pursuit of Champions League glory in Saturday's final is likely to depend heavily on how well the core of their team deals with a rampaging Paris St Germain side.

With the pressure of trying to deliver the Premier League title now released, Arsenal are seeking a glittering double and proof they are firmly ‌part of Europe's elite.

They face a formidable challenge in Budapest against Luis Enrique's outstanding PSG team, with their rare blend of eye-catching flair, intelligence and hard graft.

But Arsenal manager Mikel Arteta has built a spine to his side that might just be the perfect foil.

At its base, goalkeeper David Raya has kept nine clean sheets in Arsenal's 14-game unbeaten run to the final.

Arteta acknowledges he ruffled some feathers when he brought the Spaniard in three years ago but views it as one of ⁠the decisions that helped Arsenal clinch their first domestic title in 22 years and reach their first Champions League final in 20.

In central defence, the pace and ball-playing composure of Frenchman William Saliba is balanced perfectly by Brazilian Gabriel Magalhaes' raw aggression and knack of scoring vital goals - usually from corners.

Gabriel, 28, joined Arsenal in 2020, less than a year after Arteta took over, and while there was talk they might have to sell him to raise funds at one stage that now seems unthinkable.

The centre back has consistently proved his importance to the side, such as the last-ditch intervention that prevented Atletico Madrid's Giuliano Simeone levelling in the semi-final.

In big games "somebody has to deliver a magic moment", Arteta said, "and Gabriel again delivered that".

MIDFIELD HORSEPOWER

If Arsenal are to prevent PSG running ‌wild, as ⁠they did in last year's 5-0 demolition of Inter Milan in the showpiece match, £105 million ($141 million) record signing Declan Rice will have to be firing on all cylinders in midfield.

Dubbed "the horse" due to the amount of work he gets through, the 27-year-old's relentless running, pinpoint set-pieces and tireless tackling are central to Arsenal's game.

He played in all but one of Arsenal's Premier League matches before they wrapped up the title and has ⁠racked up well over 3,000 minutes in all competitions this season, second to Raya.

"It's a final, anything can happen," Rice told the BBC. "We are going to be ready for it. We want the double."

At the top of Arsenal's spine is likely to be close-season signing Viktor Gyokeres, who has ⁠scored five goals in the Champions League campaign.

That might look modest compared to the 10 of PSG's Khvicha Kvaratskhelia but the Sweden striker also triggers Arsenal's early press - key to why PSG coach Luis Enrique thinks his opponents are "the best team in the world ⁠without the ball."

Former Arsenal boss Arsene Wenger, whose 'Invincibles' team was famed for flair but also had a resolute backline, has said Arteta’s side are now an impressive proposition.

"This Arsenal team's main strength is their ability to keep a clean sheet," the Frenchman told UEFA, "and in a final, that is very important."

Source — Reuters

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