
EPL Index
·16. April 2025
Player Ratings: Arsenal Outclass Real Madrid to Reach Champions League Semis

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Yahoo sportsEPL Index
·16. April 2025
There’s a difference between dreaming and daring. Real Madrid, serial champions and purveyors of the impossible, arrived cloaked in hope, murmuring once more of La Remontada. Arsenal, newer to this stage and still shaping their Champions League identity under Mikel Arteta, didn’t flinch. They didn’t dazzle with relentless pace or shock with chaos. Instead, they dismantled Madrid with something far more unnerving: control.
In an arena that thrives on emotional electricity, Arsenal cut the power. Their 2-1 victory at the Santiago Bernabéu, complementing last week’s 3-0 masterclass at the Emirates, wasn’t a lucky escape or a tactical fluke. This was a five-goal dissection of the European holders, a performance rich in poise and laced with resilience, booking their place in the semi-finals where Paris Saint-Germain now lie in wait.
Bukayo Saka’s penalty miss could have skewed the narrative. With Arsenal awarded a spot-kick following VAR intervention on Raul Asencio’s clumsy grappling of Mikel Merino, the England international went for audacity over assurance. His attempted panenka was telegraphed and comfortably caught by Thibaut Courtois.
Madrid sensed a sliver of momentum, especially after the French referee momentarily gave them a lifeline – awarding a penalty for a supposed foul by Declan Rice on Kylian Mbappe. Yet, after a lengthy stoppage and heavy protests, common sense prevailed. The decision was reversed, and Madrid’s manufactured lifeline was cut.
Arsenal’s second half was a masterclass in game management. Real Madrid became increasingly erratic, their rhythm fractured by frustration. Then came Saka’s redemption. Just past the hour, he collected possession on the edge, and with calm that belied the earlier penalty blunder, dinked Arsenal into the lead on the night.
The Bernabéu was momentarily roused. William Saliba’s error handed Vinicius Junior a swift reply, punishing a rare lapse with lethal precision. Yet rather than wilt, Arsenal recalibrated. Their shape held, their decision-making sharpened.
As time ebbed away, the tie had long since been decided. Gabriel Martinelli’s injury-time goal, a clinical finish to a flowing counterattack, was less a decider than a decoration. It signalled not just a win on the night, but a seismic shift in the Gunners’ European ambitions.
Carlo Ancelotti’s men were outfought and outthought across two legs. The quiet dispersal of home fans before full-time was a rare sight at this temple of comebacks – evidence that not even hope could outrun reality this time.
For Arsenal, it’s more than progression. This was validation. They’ve grown into a team that can control tempo, negate star power, and embrace risk without recklessness. PSG will test that growth. But this Arsenal are not just surviving in the Champions League. They’re shaping it.