Arsenal
Arsenal stands in a tricky situation as they go into a massive night in Lisbon. The Gunners currently sit nine points clear at the top of the Premier League, but back-to-back cup exits against Manchester City and Southampton have knocked their momentum. This trip to the Estadio Jose Alvalade is their chance to make a second straight Champions League semi-final and silence the talk of a late-season collapse. Pressure is high on Mikel Arteta, especially since his side have been perfect in Europe up until this point.
Arsenal Suffer Double Blow Ahead of Sporting Clash
Mikel Arteta has confirmed a major blow for the squad, revealing that both Bukayo Saka and Jurrien Timber will miss the first leg of the Champions League quarter-final against Sporting CP. Speaking to the media, the manager noted, via Fabrizio Romano, that the pair aren’t ready to play yet, though he’s hopeful they’ll be back this weekend. Both players were out for the recent FA Cup loss to Southampton, and their absence leaves a massive hole in the lineup for the trip to Lisbon. While this creates a tactical headache, the return of Viktor Gyokeres to his old stadium adds a bit of drama for the travelling fans.
“They’re not ready yet. Let’s see. Hopefully, they’re going to be ready for the weekend if everything goes well”.
The Statistics Behind the Stars
Bukayo Saka has been the creative engine for North London throughout the 2025/26 season, bagging six goals and three assists in 27 Premier League games. He’s been just as sharp in Europe, keeping an 86% passing accuracy and consistently setting up chances. Meanwhile, Jurrien Timber has shown how versatile and reliable he is across 30 appearances this year. The Dutch international has an impressive 89% pass completion rate and has chipped in with three goals and five assists from deep, showing just how vital he is to the way Arsenal build play.
Arsenal set to go hard and overpay for this 16 G/A world-class attacker in the summer?
In my view, losing these two at the same time forces Arteta to choose between playing it safe and sticking to the aggressive wing-play he usually prefers. Without Saka’s elite dribbling and Timber’s movement into midfield, the Gunners become easier to read, which is something a disciplined Sporting side will definitely try to take advantage of.