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PSG Edge Arsenal 1-0 in Champions League Semi-Final First Leg

Credit: Rythm FM

There’s a certain sound Emirates Stadium makes on big European nights — a simmering buzz, a defiant roar, the belief that maybe this is finally our time. But just four minutes into their Champions League semi-final first leg, all of that vanished. Like a candle in the wind.

Paris Saint-Germain came to London with a plan: hit hard, hit early. Arsenal barely had time to blink before the scoreboard read 0-1.

It was a beautiful but brutal opening — 26 uninterrupted passes straight from kick-off, PSG moving like a well-oiled machine before Ousmane Dembélé ghosted in to finish coolly. Arsenal hadn’t touched the ball. It felt like PSG had sucked the air out of the stadium with surgical precision.

This wasn’t the disjointed, flashy-but-fragile PSG we’ve seen in past years. This was a team with a ruthless edge. Arsenal, for all their growth under Mikel Arteta, weren’t ready for that kind of opening blitz.

A Night That Asked Questions

After the initial shock, Arsenal woke up. Slowly. Gabriel Martinelli nearly bent one past Gianluigi Donnarumma. Leandro Trossard forced another save. A Merino header briefly sparked celebrations — until VAR waved it away. It was one of those nights where everything just felt… half a second off.

Arteta’s team looked like they were caught between two minds: go all out, or keep something in reserve for Paris? What unfolded was somewhere in the middle — cautious urgency, if such a thing exists.

At times, the Gunners moved the ball with purpose. Other times, they looked as if they were dragging a piano uphill.

Missing Piece: Partey in the Middle

Thomas Partey’s absence was more than noticeable — it was glaring. The midfield lacked steel. Declan Rice, so dominant in Madrid, was forced to play it safe. The driving runs, the vertical energy, the bite — all of it was blunted.

When PSG broke through the middle for their goal, the gap where Partey usually patrols was wide open. It’s no stretch to say his suspension might have shifted the entire rhythm of the game. He’ll be back for the return leg — and Arsenal will desperately need him.

What Happened to the Set-Piece Threat?

Earlier this season, Arsenal turned dead balls into gold. Corners, free kicks — if they got one, it felt like a genuine chance. Against PSG? Nothing. Flat deliveries, easy clearances, missed chances. For a team that built part of its identity around set-piece dominance, it was a puzzling no-show.

Especially when you consider that PSG have conceded more goals from set-pieces in Ligue 1 than anyone else. Arsenal didn’t just miss an opportunity — they never really tried to take it

All or Nothing in Paris

This wasn’t the night Arsenal fans dreamed of. But the dream isn’t dead — not yet.

It will take something extraordinary at the Parc des Princes. Arteta believes his side can do it. They’ve already survived Madrid. They’ve already made history. But now, with their backs against the wall, they’ll need to write their most thrilling chapter yet.

One goal down. One game to go. No margin for error. And everything still to fight for.

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