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Carabao Cup

Rosenior Acknowledges Fan Frustration as Chelsea Navigate a Turbulent Week

Rosenior accepted supporter unrest and pledged to work hard to unlock Chelsea’s potential. He vows.

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Liam Rosenior accepted that unrest among Chelsea supporters had merit after a fractious start to the new year and promised to work to win them over. The head coach faced questions following an FA Cup third round tie in which Tosin Adarabioyo added a second shortly after the interval. Miles Leaburn halved the deficit from a corner, a vulnerability Rosenior had highlighted before the match, and Marc Guiu struck shortly after the hour mark to restore Chelsea’s two-goal advantage. Pedro Neto and Enzo Fernández added two more in stoppage time to apply a layer of gloss to the scoreline, yet the result did not silence travelling fans.

Chants against the club’s divisive ownership from The Valley’s away end were audible throughout the tie. When told after the match that supporters remained unhappy Rosenior said: “If your fans are happy, it means you’re doing a good job.” He added: “All I’m going to focus on at the moment is working as hard as I possibly can to help this team achieve the potential, the unlimited potential that it has.” He qualified that intent with: “And if you concentrate and focus on your work, hopefully people will see that we’re onto a good thing.” Rosenior himself “was not the subject of any ire (or notable support).”

The discontent centres on the owners. A recent poll from one of the most prominent supporters’ groups found that more than 90% of those surveyed expressed a lack of confidence in BlueCo’s decision making. The club’s current strict adherence to structure rather than established star power stands in sharp contrast with the Roman Abramovich era, when the club captured every available trophy under the stewardship of managers such as Carlo Ancelotti, José Mourinho and Antonio Conte.

After just two days on the training pitch with his new players, Rosenior has preserved many of the principles Enzo Maresca promoted. Hato tucked infield from fullback much like Marc Cucurella would, while the aggressive goalkeeper positioning that characterised Rosenior’s Strasbourg side was not imposed on Filip Jörgensen. “They’ve been well coached. I’ve made no secret of that.”

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Looking ahead to Wednesday’s Carabao Cup semi-final against Premier League-leading Arsenal, Rosenior stressed process over micro tactics: “There are other elements to football other than tactics,” he said. “Tactics are one element. Shape, systems, technique, they’re all wonderful things. But there are other things that I feel maybe we can improve on.”

Arsenal

Cup Victory Divides Manchester City Camp Over Premier League Title Effect

Guardiola downplayed Carabao Cup impact; players insist momentum has revived City’s title hopes. etc.

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Manchester City’s Carabao Cup success produced contrasting reactions from the manager and his players over the implications for the Premier League title race. Pep Guardiola praised the performance but cautioned that the trophy might not alter the campaign against Arsenal. “I would like to have nine points in front of Arsenal,” he admitted, even asking whether he would “change” the trophy for that lead. He added: “It will have no impact,” calling the competitions “different competitions.” Guardiola also warned that “They will be more concerned when they come to [the] Etihad,” a reference to the league meeting on April 19, and suggested the win could help his side against Liverpool in the FA Cup quarterfinals.

Players presented a starker assessment. Nico O’Reilly told the CBS Sports studio: “Yeah, 100%. The blood never went—we’ve always smelt blood. We’re confident in ourselves, we know we can do it, they’ve got to come to our place which is a tough place to come to as everyone has seen this season. So we do smell blood and we’ve got to keep going. It does a lot for us [winning the final], builds momentum and just push on now. Obviously it’s a big blow for them. They were going for everything, just as we were [before defeat to Real Madrid in the Champions League].”

Rodri echoed those sentiments, calling the match’s effect “A lot, a lot,” and explained: “That’s why I say it’s a game not only for this title [Carabao Cup] but to show that we can beat them.” He conceded “There is still a lot to do,” and reflected on City’s Champions League exit: “and it’s clear we didn’t want to go out of the Champions League, but we went out and now we have to take the positives, we have more time to prepare for the games. So that’s something to take into account—but we also have to celebrate this. The Real Madrid game was pretty tough [losing 5–1 on aggregate ] but the team has recovered. We knew it was a very important game against Arsenal not only because of the title but also because we had to face the best team in the league. Now we need to rest, go back to the next round of internationals and come back with the optimism that we still have two more competitions to fight for.”

Arsenal retain a nine-point lead, though City have a game in hand and can reduce the gap to three with victory at the Etihad on April 19. Mikel Arteta vowed: “We’re going to use this disappointment and this fire in the belly to have the most amazing two months that we have ever [had] together,” adding: “That’s on us and we’ll manage that energy in the right way. Now we have to go through that pain and disappointment and it’s normal and it’s part of football.” Arsenal have lost only four matches across all competitions this season and have followed earlier defeats with double-digit unbeaten runs, a pattern they will seek to replicate after Wembley.

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Arsenal

Arteta Stands by Starting Kepa After Carabao Cup Final Loss

Arteta would start Kepa again after the 2026 Carabao Cup final despite the Wembley mistake. vs City.

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Mikel Arteta said he would repeat the decision to start Kepa Arrizabalaga in the 2026 Carabao Cup final, even after Arsenal lost the showpiece at Wembley to Manchester City following a costly error from the stand-in. The mistake allowed O’Reilly’s second of the afternoon and, while the goal was described as a collective failing, much of the disappointment was directed at the luckless stand-in.

Arteta defended the choice as one of principle. “I have to do what I feel is right, which is honest and which is fair,” he told assembled media after the final whistle. “I think we have an outstanding goalkeeper in Kepa. He’s played all the [games in the] competition and I think it would have been very unfair for him and for the team to do something different.”

Questions were raised about whether cup involvement had been part of the agreement that brought Arrizabalaga from Chelsea to Arsenal. The manager was clear that no promises were made. “I can never promise a player to play certain competitions,” Arteta insisted, “they have to earn it and do enough.

“We are guided by what we see. What he’s done in the competition, and how he helped us to get us to the final, I believe it was the right thing to do. Errors are part of football, and unfortunately it happened in a crucial moment.”

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Arteta reiterated his stance to broadcasters. “I would do it again,” he told Sky Sports.

The use of different goalkeepers for different competitions has a long history in English football. As early as 1888–89, Preston North End employed James Trainer for the league while Dr. Bob Mills-Roberts was selected for the FA Cup; Mills-Roberts kept his place for the FA Cup final and kept a clean sheet in a 3–0 win. History has not always been so kind to the substitute.

Pep Guardiola benefited from his decision to trust James Trafford against Arsenal on Sunday. Gianluigi Donnarumma’s understudy made three fine saves to keep City in the tie earlier in the first half. “Players can be happy, unhappy. It is what it is,” Guardiola shrugged after announcing his decision ahead of kickoff.

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Arsenal

Gabriel: Arsenal Ready for Carabao Cup Final After Tough Run-In

Gabriel says he and Saliba enjoy duels with Haaland as Arsenal prepare for Carabao Cup final. Sunday

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Arsenal centre back Gabriel has underlined the squad’s appetite for the upcoming Carabao Cup final against Manchester City, saying he and William Saliba relish the personal battles with Erling Haaland and that his teammates “can’t wait” for the Wembley tie.

The match offers more than a single trophy. Arsenal lead their upcoming opponents by nine points at the top of the Premier League table, advanced into the Champions League quarterfinals on Tuesday night, and will have the opportunity to reach the FA Cup semifinals after the international break.

Critics have questioned Mikel Arteta’s attritional style and a perceived reliance on set-pieces, but success at Wembley would mute those debates in north London. Arsenal are aiming for their first major trophy, excluding the Community Shield, in six years and this is their first Carabao Cup final since 2018, when they lost 3–0 to a superior Cityzens side.

Gabriel has been a central figure in a resilient Arsenal defence since arriving after the club’s 2020 FA Cup triumph. He said the group feel confident ahead of the occasion. “It’s a really good feeling for this club to be in the final against a top team,” he said (via The Athletic ). “We have a good feeling, and we can’t wait for Sunday. We want to win every game we play. We know it’s going to be a big battle, but we are ready and we’ll try to win.”

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On his own role he added: “I’m a defender, so I need to bring energy for my teammates and for our fans,” he continued. “I give everything when I’m on the pitch. I try to push everyone.”

Gabriel and Saliba have long contested duels with Haaland and the Brazilian made clear he welcomes the test. “I enjoy every game, every striker,” he said. “It’s my job, so I like to battle. He is a top player, and I think he likes to play against me as well. It’s fun—we enjoy it.”

Arsenal’s wider platform this season has also been shaped by David Raya, described in the squad’s coverage as having developed into one of the world’s best goalkeepers in north London and standing in line for a third successive Golden Glove award.

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