Arsenal - Emirates Stadium
Arsenal - Emirates Stadium
PSG UCL Final favourites: 3 reasons why Arsenal face an uphill battle in Paris
Few neutrals expected this UCL Final to arrive with such a stark contrast in experience. Arsenal, brilliant but still chasing their first European crown since the competition’s modern era, meet a Paris Saint-Germain side that has rebuilt itself quietly and ruthlessly over the past two seasons. Since losing Kylian Mbappé, PSG have found something arguably more dangerous than individual brilliance: collective, positional football with genuine depth across every line. The PSG UCL Final now stands as one of the most compelling European showpieces in years, and here is why the French champions carry the weight of favouritism into it.
1. PSG UCL Final pedigree built on tournament football experience
Paris have been to the final before, and that matters far more than pre-match narrative suggests. Luis Enrique’s squad contains players who have operated repeatedly under knockout pressure at this level. Players like Marquinhos and Fabian Ruiz carry institutional memory that no amount of Premier League form can substitute.
Arsenal, meanwhile, are appearing in their first UCL Final in over two decades, and while Mikel Arteta has prepared his side meticulously in Europe this campaign, the pressure of a one-off final on the grandest stage is entirely different territory. Historically, first-time finalists have lost at a rate exceeding 60 per cent since 2000, and that pattern deserves respect rather than dismissal.
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2. Tactical flexibility gives PSG a decisive edge in the PSG UCL Final
Luis Enrique has demonstrated throughout this campaign that his PSG side can shift shapes mid-game with real conviction. They have operated as a fluid 4-3-3, compressed into a 4-4-2 mid-block, and pressed aggressively from a 4-2-3-1, depending on what the opposition demands. Arsenal, by contrast, rely heavily on structured ball progression and high defensive lines, which PSG’s forwards have shown a consistent ability to exploit with diagonal runs behind the press.
Furthermore, Arsenal have scored more goals from set pieces than any other side remaining in the competition, which points directly to a dependence on dead-ball situations rather than open-play variety. Against a PSG backline as organised and aggressive as this one, those opportunities may dry up considerably.
3. Attacking depth across the front line creates constant defensive problems
Bradley Barcola, Ousmane Dembélé, and Gonçalo Ramos each offer entirely different threats, and that rotation of profiles creates a problem that Arsenal’s defensive structure has not consistently solved in this tournament. Dembélé in particular has been decisive in the knockout rounds, contributing six goal involvements in five matches.
Also read: 3 mistakes Arsenal should not make against PSG in UCL Final
PSG’s front three work in rotation rather than fixed positions, so Arsenal cannot prepare a set defensive assignment that holds for ninety minutes. Given that Arsenal have conceded from transitions in both their semi-final legs, there is genuine cause for concern going into what promises to be a historic PSG UCL Final. Paris, on balance, simply carry more ways to hurt you.