MIKEL ARTETA DEMANDS "PERSPECTIVE" AS ARSENAL FACE SEASON-DEFINING EUROPEAN QUARTER-FINAL
Mikel Arteta responds to nearly men claims as Arsenal battle injuries before their Sporting quarter-final clash.
When Arsenal take on Sporting in their Champions League quarter-final first leg on Wednesday, there’s more on the line than just surviving another knockout night in Lisbon.
This is one of those moments where Arsenal need to prove those back-to-back losses first to Manchester City in the Carabao Cup final, then a tough one against Southampton in the FA Cup, aren’t about to torpedo the rest of their season, either in Europe or in the Premier League.
People keep calling Arsenal the “nearly men” under Mikel Arteta, and it’s hard to argue with three straight second-place finishes in the league. But this season, they’ve played with a certain edge, pulling nine points clear at the top, reaching one cup final, and still pushing for more in Europe and the other domestic competitions. Their style gets picked apart sometimes, sure, but now everyone’s watching their mentality.
Up until the City and Southampton defeats, Arsenal hadn’t lost back-to-back games all season. The Southampton loss was only their fifth all year. And as the pressure mounts in the Champions League and Premier League, the trophies they truly crave, Arteta needs to prove that falling just short in the past isn’t going to haunt them while chasing their biggest prize since 2020.
Arteta himself keeps it real. “Have some perspective about how difficult it is, what we’ve done so far,” he said when asked about avoiding a losing streak. “Feel the pain, feel the emotion, and use it to be better.”
He says the team knows exactly what went wrong against Southampton, and he doesn’t think the loss was deserved. “That’s football, we got punished for things that are part of who we are,” he said. “Those are the things we need to protect, always.”
Still, Arteta insists his players are “hungrier than ever”, and these recent stumbles don’t change anything about how huge the Sporting match is. “If we’d won, it’s still the Champions League quarter-finals, it doesn’t get much bigger,” he said. “We worked all season to get here, and we know exactly who we’re up against.”
But even with a nine-point Premier League lead, Arsenal fans are chewing their nails. Why? Because City are on a roll. Guardiola’s team dominated Arsenal at Wembley and then hammered Liverpool in the FA Cup over the weekend. On top of that, Arsenal are battling injuries, with 11 players recently pulling out of international duty, and both Saka and Timber are out for the match. Gabriel Magalhaes tweaked his knee against Southampton, and Odegaard is still building up fitness.
Sporting boss Rui Borges isn’t expecting Arsenal to be flat just because they've lost two in a row. “They’ll be a wounded beast,” he said. “That means they'll be more focused, more determined, and it actually makes our job harder. But we’re ready. We believe we can do something extraordinary, something Sporting has never done before.”
Sporting have never made it to the last four of the Champions League, and they’re hoping to pile more pressure on Arsenal.
Arsenal’s goalkeeper David Raya gets it, too. He says the frustration from those defeats is exactly the fire they need. “We’ve got to use that pain as our fuel for the rest of the season,” he said. “It starts with Sporting. That’s all that matters right now.”
GABRIEL JESUS RANKS BUKAYO SAKA ALONGSIDE VINICIUS JUNIOR AND RODRYGO
Gabriel Jesus compares Bukayo Saka to Vinicius Junior as Arsenal sit nine points clear in the Premier League.
Gabriel Jesus isn’t shy about putting Bukayo Saka right up there with the likes of Vinicius Junior, Raphinha, and Rodrygo. When Rio Ferdinand asked him where Saka ranks among the best wide players in football right now, the Brazilian striker didn’t hesitate.
“They’re all at the same level,” Jesus said. He knows Saka as well as anyone, having played alongside him for four years at Arsenal. “He’s at the same table. Sure, they each play their own way, and they’ve had their ups and downs, but all of them step up in big moments. Saka’s earned his place in that group. He still needs to win a few big trophies, but those will come.”
For Jesus, it’s not just Saka’s talent that stands out; it’s his attitude. Despite all the pressure and the spotlight at Arsenal, Saka’s kept his feet on the ground. “Honestly, I’m a huge fan of his personality. He’s strong but so humble. These days, you don’t find many players who rise through the academy, become huge for the club, and still stay the same,” Jesus said.
With Arsenal heading into the season’s final stretch, Jesus sounds more optimistic than ever. He sees how the team’s grown under Mikel Arteta, with players like Saka leading the way, and he truly believes this is the squad to finally win the Premier League again. “I’m really confident. We’re in a great spot, and we have such a strong squad,” he said. “I believe 100% we’re doing something special this season.”
Saka’s influence has been massive. His form has kept Arsenal on top of the Premier League table, holding a nine-point lead over Manchester City even though City have a game in hand. Jesus, who arrived from City in 2022 with four league titles under his belt, thinks this team’s ready. They’ve fallen short before, but he’s convinced they can finish the job this time.
HOW EBERECHI EZE’S MONTH-LONG INJURY BLOW RESHAPES ARSENAL’S TREBLE PURSUIT
Arsenal playmaker Eberechi Eze is out for six weeks with a calf injury, missing the Champions League and FA Cup.
Arsenal’s hopes for a historic treble took a real hit with the news about Eberechi Eze. He’s out for at least a month, maybe longer, after picking up a serious calf injury at a pivotal point in the season. Honestly, it couldn’t have come at a worse time. Mikel Arteta now has to face some tough fixtures without one of his key creative forces.
The BBC reports Eze will miss four to six weeks after getting injured in the Champions League win against Bayer Leverkusen. He already sat out Arsenal’s Carabao Cup final loss to Manchester City and pulled out of international duty. Arteta is still waiting for a full assessment from the medical team, but either way, the timing stings. Arsenal is chasing silverware in the Premier League, Champions League, and FA Cup, and losing Eze now is just brutal. On the bright side, captain Martin Odegaard is nearing his return from a knee injury, which should take some pressure off in midfield.
Eze has been a huge part of Arsenal’s attack this season. Before his injury, he played in 43 matches – two for Crystal Palace before his late-August move and the rest for Arsenal. He’s racked up nine goals and six assists for the Gunners, cementing himself as a key figure up front. In the Premier League, he’s appeared 26 times and contributed six goals and two assists. His Champions League stats are solid, too: one goal and two assists in nine games.
With Eze out, England manager Thomas Tuchel called up Harvey Barnes from Newcastle United. Barnes is in red-hot form, with 14 goals across all competitions, and this move finally ends his nearly six-year absence from international play and shuts down any talk he might switch to Scotland.
Looking ahead, Arteta has a rough road without his star playmaker. Arsenal sits at the top with 70 points, nine clear of Manchester City (though City still have a game in hand). The team returns after the international break with an FA Cup quarter-final against Southampton on April 4. Three days later, they head to Sporting CP for the first leg of the Champions League quarter-final. Then, there’s a massive Premier League clash with Pep Guardiola’s squad on April 19. It’s a brutal stretch; Arsenal’s depth is about to be tested like never before.