Saka's strike sends Arsenal to Champions League final for first time in 20 years

Arsenal are in the Champions League final. Bukayo Saka's 32nd-minute goal on the night of 5 May 2026 gave Mikel Arteta's side a 1-0 win over Atletico Madrid at the Emirates Stadium and a 2-1 aggregate victory in the semi-final second leg — a result that ends a 20-year absence from European football's showpiece occasion. The Gunners will now face either Paris Saint-Germain or Arsenal's north London rivals in the final, with that contest still to be resolved.
The goal was Saka's defining contribution to a tie that Arsenal controlled from the first whistle. After a first-leg stalemate in Madrid ended 1-1, the north London club carried a narrow aggregate lead into the return fixture. Saka's strike — curling past Jan Oblak from the right side of the penalty area — turned that lead into a two-goal buffer before the interval and effectively ended Atletico's contest with more than half an hour still to play.
What this result means — and who Saka has become
The scale of what Arsenal achieved on 5 May should not be softened by caveat. This is a club that has not appeared in a Champions League final since May 2006, when a Ronaldinho-inspired Barcelona defeated them in Paris. Thierry Henry, who played that night at the Stade de France, was in the Emirates Stadium crowd on 5 May — a presence that underlined just how long the gap has been. The club's last four major semi-final collapses across domestic and European competitions had calcified into a broader narrative about Arsenal's ceiling in the Arteta era. Saka's goal did not merely advance the team; it reclassified the debate around it.
Saka himself has been Arsenal's most consistent performer across the 2025-26 season. His 32nd-minute finish was the product of a pre-planned move that exploited the narrow positioning of Atletico's defensive block, with the ball worked quickly from the left flank into the space Saka had already identified. The composure required in that moment — under the pressure of a one-goal aggregate lead, against a side whose defensive discipline is its defining characteristic — belongs to a player operating at the very top of the European game. He has now contributed goals or assists in five of Arsenal's seven Champions League matches this season.
The Arteta project and its inflection point
Arteta took over a fractured squad in December 2019. In the seasons since, the trajectory has been uneven but directional: a 2023 FA Cup win, back-to-back Premier League title challenges in 2023-24 and 2024-25, and a gradual sharpening of the squad's European identity. The semi-final against Atletico was the culmination of that process. Arsenal dominated possession in both legs, restricted Diego Simeone's side to chances arising from isolated errors, and controlled the tempo throughout. The coaching staff had clearly prepared specific game plans for Atletico's man-marking triggers; Saka's goal originated from exactly the kind of structured positional rotation the data had flagged as a vulnerability.
The counter-narrative worth examining is whether Arsenal's path to the final tells us anything about their readiness for it. The semi-final draw was, by several assessments, the most favourable in the tournament. Inter Milan, Bayern Munich, and Real Madrid occupied the other half of the bracket. Arsenal have not yet beaten a European heavyweight by the margin required to reach a final. That observation is not a dismissal of what the club has accomplished — it is a recognition that the final itself will be a different order of test.
The structural significance of a Premier League club in the final
The 2025-26 Champions League semi-finals produced three English clubs across the two brackets — a concentration that reflects both the commercial muscle of the Premier League and the specific tactical innovations Arteta and his contemporaries have introduced over the past three seasons. The financial gap between English clubs and their continental counterparts has widened in each of the past four seasons. Arsenal's presence in the final is, in that sense, a structural outcome of a league that now generates television and commercial revenue at a scale no other European domestic competition can match.
That framing is not intended to diminish Arsenal's achievement. It is intended to locate it. A club that spent the better part of two decades outside European football's top table has re-entered it by combining domestic investment, a defined coaching philosophy, and — critically — the retention of its best players through a period in which larger clubs came calling. Saka, Martin Ødegaard, and William Saliba have each been linked with moves away in the past 18 months. None has left. Arsenal's final standing will depend in part on whether that continuity holds.
What comes next
The final is scheduled for early June 2026 at a venue still to be confirmed. Arsenal will enter it as genuine contenders for the first time in two decades — a status the club's supporters have not had cause to claim since the Wenger era. The immediate challenge is sporting: managing the fixture congestion of a compressed domestic season while maintaining the defensive solidity that has characterised the European campaign. The longer-term question is whether this appearance marks a permanent recalibration of Arsenal's ambitions or a singular high point in an otherwise transitional project.
On the evidence of 5 May, Saka has answered that question for himself. The rest will follow.
Arsenal's last Champions League final appearance was in 2005-06, when they lost 2-1 to Barcelona in Paris. The Gunners last won a major trophy in 2020 (FA Cup).
Wire provenance
This editorial synthesis draws on the following public wire/social posts:
- https://t.me/TheAthletic/4821
- https://t.me/TheAthletic/4818
- https://t.me/TheAthletic/4816
- https://t.me/TheAthletic/4822
- https://t.me/TheAthletic/4819