skysports - 5/8/2025 9:40:21 PM - GMT (+2 )

A frustrated Mikel Arteta believes Arsenal have been the best team in the Champions League this season despite their exit to Paris Saint-Germain in the semi-finals.
Arsenal's European dream was ended by goals from Fabian Ruiz and Achraf Hakimi, who earned Paris Saint-Germain a 2-1 win on the night and a Champions League final date with Inter Milan.
The French champions were under immediate pressure as Declan Rice got under a Jurrien Timber cross to head off target, kickstarting a frantic five-minute spell that required Gianluigi Donnarumma to pull off outstanding stops to keep out Martin Odegaard and Gabriel Martinelli. The early didn't goal didn't come and Arsenal were always playing catch-up from that point.
Please use Chrome browser for a more accessible video player
Arteta believes his side deserved to make the final based on the two legs and pointed to the performances of Donnarumma as the key factor in their failure to do so.
"I don't think there's been a better team in the competition from what I've seen," Arteta told TNT Sports.
"But we are out. We deserved much more but this competition is about the boxes, the strikers most of the time and the goalkeeper and theirs was the best player in both games.
"I'm so proud of the boys, they deserve lots of credit for what they're doing and the amount of injuries. We arrived here in the worst state. You have to get here with everyone fit and available with lots of minutes. They had a week. We came here in a different context. That gives me a lot of positivity for the future."
Donnarumma made eight saves and Arsenal created 4.77 worth of expected goals across the two legs but only found the net once as an inability to be clinical with their finishing cost them dear.
Please use Chrome browser for a more accessible video player
And later at his press conference when asked if he felt the best team had lost, he added: "Yes, and I am saying that because they (PSG) just told me that. Today, I see how much my players wanted it because they were in tears.
"We deserved much more. When you analyse both games, the MVP (Most Valuable Player), has been their goalkeeper.
"The Champions League is decided in the boxes, and it's won them the game. The result should have been very different. It gives me so much pride, but at the same time I'm so upset and so annoyed that we didn't manage to do it."
'I don't agree at all'Enrique was asked to address Arteta's claim that PSG had suggested the Gunners were the better team over two legs.
"The league of farmers, no? We are the league of farmers," Luis Enrique joked, referencing the French Ligue 1 when speaking to TNT Sports. "But it's nice. We are enjoying the result and the compliments of everybody speaking of our team -- our mentality, how we play. It's nice.
"I don't agree at all. Mikel Arteta is a great friend, but I don't agree at all.
"They played in a clever way, but in the two legs we scored more than them and that is the most important thing in football. Arsenal played a great match, and we suffered, but we deserved to get to the final."
Arteta has revived Arsenal's fortunes on both the domestic and European stage with this their first Champions League semi-final appearances in 16 years. But his five-and-a-half-year tenure has yielded just one trophy - their 2020 FA Cup triumph.
The Gunners have failed to progress from each of their last four major cup semi-finals: the 2020-21 Europa League, 2021-22 League Cup, 2024-25 League Cup and 2024-25 Champions League.
And when asked if he was concerned his current crop of stars do not have what takes to win trophies, Arteta replied: "Well, it depends. Two years ago, nobody believed that we could qualify for the Champions League, or even think that we could finish second and compete in the league. And the amount of points that we have scored in other years, makes you a champion.
"The reality is you need something to lift, and to get that trophy, and the disappointment is that we don't have it.
"But we have the best example in the PSG dressing room with Marquinhos. Eleven times, he has tried to win the Champions League. Eleven times and let's see if they win the final. You have to go up and down.
"So we need to look in the mirror at somebody like this with that trajectory and if you want to be in sport and you want to be competing for trophies, you better be able to deal with that."
Please use Chrome browser for a more accessible video player
Former Arsenal manager Arsene Wenger said:
"Overall in two games, you would say they (PSG) were better than Arsenal, had more chances and were never really in danger."
Arteta's Arsenal at a crossroads - it's time for ruthlessnessSky Sports' Sam Blitz:
When Mikel Arteta signed his new Arsenal contract in September, he was asked what his main objective is for the club. "To win," he said. "It has to be that. It has to be that aim."
Arsenal's need to take that next step has followed Arteta around all season, one where the Spaniard revealed he is in part four of a five-step plan for this club - the last of which is to "create a dynasty" by winning trophies.
"It generates belief," he told Sky Sports later in the season. "Experience of having been successful helps you with the other ones."
Arteta said those words last December, five years after being named Arsenal manager. But while there are dreams of a dynasty, the reality is he has now gone five years without a trophy. Only the FA Cup, six months into his tenure, has been acquired - and even that was a trophy which came out of the blue.
The latest blow to Arteta's trophy hunt came at PSG and the Parc des Princes, the same place where Arteta's professional playing career took off. Among his team-mates was Mauricio Pochettino - and parallels between the two are now being made.
Pochettino's Tottenham Hotspur side were attractive and ambitious, with multiple title races ending in second and third-placed finishes, plus a Champions League final appearance. But that Spurs team became infamous for not winning anything. Are Arteta's side running the risk of being remembered in a similar vein?
Read Sam Blitz' analysis of what's next for Arsenal after another trophyless season
read more