Olivia Smith gives Arsenal narrow advantage after catastrophic Lyonnes error
Olivia Smith's 78th-minute strike handed Arsenal a narrow first-leg advantage over OL Lyonnes, exploiting a catastrophic goalkeeping error from the French side's captain, Christiane Endler.
Olivia Smith struck with twelve minutes remaining to give Arsenal a narrow advantage in their Women's Champions League semi-final against OL Lyonnes on Saturday, converting after a calamitous mix-up between Lyonnes goalkeeper Christiane Endler and defender Ingrid Syrstad Engen at the Groupama Stadium.
The goal settled a tense, tight contest that Lyonnes had largely controlled. Arsenal, the defending champions, trailed at the break but found a way back — as they have done repeatedly in this competition — and head to north London next week with a slender advantage to protect.
The goal that changed everything
The opening sixty minutes offered little threat from Arsenal. Lyonnes moved the ball purposefully through midfield, probing the channels with their signature short-passing rhythm. The French side's goal arrived against the run of play — a clinical finish that punished a momentary lapse in Arsenal's defensive shape. The question after that goal was simple: could the visitors find an equaliser against a side that rarely concede at home?
They could. And Smith's moment arrived in the 78th minute. A routine delivery from the left was not dealt with. Endler, arriving to claim, collided with her own defender, Syrstad Engen, and the ball sat up invitingly for Smith, who struck first time, low into the far corner. The finish was precise. The preceding error was not.
What the Endler moment reveals
Endler is not a goalkeeper who makes these mistakes often. The Chilean is, by any measure, one of the finest shot-stoppers in women's football — a serial winner with Lyonnes and a figure of genuine authority at the club. That makes what happened on Saturday all the more significant. One source close to the club noted that the error was "uncharacteristic" but declined to comment further ahead of the second leg.
The collision with Syrstad Engen was a split-second misread. Both players were converging on the same ball, neither pulled out, and the outcome left the goal exposed. Smith did not need to be twice invited. The margin between elite performance and a costly error, in high-stakes knockout football, turned out to be very small.
Arsenal's squad depth making the difference
There is something to be said for how Arsenal managed this tie. They were not at their best for long stretches. Lyonnes had the clearer chances in the first half. Yet Arsenal found a way, as they have done across multiple rounds in this campaign. The introduction of Smith from the bench altered the dynamic. Her pace and willingness to press forced the error that settled the contest.
The club's depth in forward positions has been a feature of their season. Rotations have been managed carefully. Players returning from injury have been integrated gradually. That infrastructure is now paying dividends at the business end of a campaign where the competition's oldest trophy is at stake. Lyonnes, despite their domestic dominance and their volume of European appearances, found themselves without an answer once the momentum shifted.
What comes next at Emirates Stadium
Arsenal return to north London with the lead — but only a lead. One goal would tie the tie. Lyonnes are not a side that folds under pressure; they have navigated semi-final situations before and have the experience to hurt Arsenal on the counter. The second leg on 7 May will demand a different kind of performance from the English side.
The task, essentially, is to be what they have been all season: composed under pressure, ruthless when the moment arrives. Smith's growth as a performer in these high-stakes situations gives Arsenal genuine reason for optimism. She has scored in big games before. On Saturday, she delivered again when it mattered most.
The tie is not decided. But Arsenal have their foot in the door.
