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How Arsenal’s Most Recent Champions League Final Unfolded — 2006 Recall

Arsenal’s last Champions League final came in 2006 at Stade de France, where they lost 2-1. Campbell.

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While Arsenal Women were celebrating their place as Europe’s top team at the end of the 2024–25 season, the men’s side were left to confront the gaps in their trophy cabinet. Mikel Arteta’s team go into this campaign hopeful of going all the way, with just 90 minutes separating them from a spot in the final.

The last time the men reached a European Cup final was in 2006. Arsène Wenger’s side became the first London team to reach a Champions League final when they travelled to the Stade de France to face Barcelona. Arsenal had progressed through a weak group and then eliminated Real Madrid, Juventus and Villarreal in the knockouts without conceding a single goal.

Barcelona arrived with a line-up featuring Ronaldinho, Samuel Eto’o and Deco, with Xavi and Andrés Iniesta on the bench. Lionel Messi was in his first season as a starter but did not play beyond the round of 16 after a season-ending hamstring injury.

Barcelona starting XI: Valdés; Oleguer, Márquez, Puyol, Van Bronckhorst; Edmilson, Deco, Van Bommel; Giuly, Eto’o, Ronaldinho.

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Arsenal starting XI: Lehmann; Eboué, Touré, Campbell, Cole; Pirès, Gilberto, Fàbregas, Hleb; Ljungberg; Henry.

The final swung early. Jens Lehmann became the first player in the history of the European Cup to be sent off in the final after hauling Eto’o to the ground outside the box, an event that erased a late Ludovic Giuly goal which was pulled back because of the red card. Despite going down to ten men, Arsenal took the lead when Sol Campbell headed home a Thierry Henry free kick shortly before half-time.

Barcelona levelled in the 76th minute through Eto’o and took the lead four minutes later when substitute Juliano Belletti scored the winner. That result left Arsenal as the first team to finish as runners-up in the Champions League, UEFA Cup and Cup Winners’ Cup.

Arsenal have lost three major European finals: the 1999–00 UEFA Cup final (defeat to Galatasaray on penalties) and the 2018–19 Europa League final, a 4–1 loss to Chelsea in which Olivier Giroud opened the scoring and which proved to be Eden Hazard’s final appearance for the Blues.

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Rice and Saliba Lay Bare Injury Burden as Fixture Congestion Draws Criticism

Rice and Saliba disclosed lingering injuries and warned about obscene number of matches players endure.

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Declan Rice and William Saliba have both confirmed lingering injuries that carried from the Premier League season into the 2026 World Cup, underlining concerns about the demands on players at elite clubs.

Rice disclosed an ongoing hamstring issue after a heavy campaign with Arsenal and a quick turn to international duty in North America. “I was feeling a little bit of neural pain in my hamstring, which I was managing from after Christmas with Arsenal for a very long time,” he told ITV Sport. “Obviously, not a lot of people would have known that. It was all behind-the-scenes stuff but it was a smart decision.” Thomas Tuchel managed Rice’s minutes in England’s opener, taking the 27-year-old out of the match after 72 minutes. Rice said the substitution was prudent. “In the end, that last 20 minutes is probably where you pick up the most, and it’s where you play a 70-minute match. But that last 20 is where you really feel your body going for it. And I think it was a smart decision because the last few days I felt really, really good.” He added that he is “ready and fit, raring to go” for his country.

Saliba admitted he is not at full fitness but is playing through discomfort as France pursue another title. “I’ve had some minor niggles for several months,” Saliba said in his prematch press conference for Les Bleus’ clash with Iraq. “I’ve been gritting my teeth because there was the Champions League and the Premier League. But the coaching staff are handling it very well,” he continued. Reports have suggested a potential back operation could be considered after the tournament. Saliba, 25, played at least 50 times for Arsenal for a third straight season and featured the full 90 minutes in France’s 3–1 win over Senegal.

Rice highlighted the cumulative toll: he played 63 matches last season for club and country and could add eight more if England reach the final. “It’s an obscene amount of games,” Rice said. “The schedule was crazy but what can we do about it? You can’t sit and complain. We have to just get on with it for the moments like I had in the Premier League, winning that Premier League.

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“You know you’d play as many games as possible to have that feeling again and knowing that there’s a World Cup at the end of it as well. You know you’d put your body on the line to be always in to play. It’s a lot of games but we’ll get our break at the end.”

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Arsenal 2026/27 Premier League schedule: opener, derbies and key dates

Arsenal begin 2026/27 vs Coventry; key dates: Tottenham, Manchester City, Manchester United, season.

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Arsenal will launch their 2026/27 Premier League title defence with a Friday night home meeting against Coventry City. That opening fixture precedes a demanding early sequence that includes away trips to Aston Villa and a home game with Chelsea shortly afterward.

Supporters will be watching the north London derby dates closely. The away fixture at Tottenham Hotspur is scheduled for early December, while the return meeting at the Emirates comes in May. Historic meetings with Manchester United are also grouped in the winter months, with encounters in December and February.

Matches against last season’s runners-up Manchester City are set for late November and late January. The fixtures list in the draft also notes a final intention to finish the campaign at home to Brighton & Hove Albion.

The published schedule arranges a number of notable dates across the season. Arsenal face Liverpool at the end of October, host Manchester City on 28 November, and travel to Manchester City on 30 January. Boxing Day sees Arsenal play Crystal Palace away on 26 December and there is a home game against Manchester United on 19 December. The north London return with Tottenham at the Emirates is on 1 May.

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All kick-off times in the schedule are given in Eastern Time and British Summer Time or Greenwich Mean Time depending on the time of year. Live TV broadcasts will be chosen for select Premier League games throughout the season, and dates or kick-off times remain subject to change.

Fans planning the season can use the dates provided to map out travel and viewing plans. The schedule groups several high-intensity fixtures into the winter months, while key domestic rivals are spread across November, December, January and February, before the campaign concludes in May.

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2026/27 Premier League fixtures: opening tests for Arsenal and landmark derbies

Arsenal open at home to Coventry; Man Utd visit Hull. Liverpool start away at Newcastle key derbies.

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The 2026/27 Premier League schedule hands reigning champions Arsenal a Friday night start, welcoming newly promoted Coventry City to Emirates Stadium. Manchester United begin on the road against Hull City, described in the schedule as a newly promoted opponent, while Andoni Iraola’s Liverpool career gets under way with an away trip to Newcastle United on the Sunday. Monday’s opening-week fixture sends newly appointed Chelsea boss Xabi Alonso to west London rivals Fulham.

Among the early highlights, the first marquee derby arrives in gameweek four when Manchester City travel to rivals Man Utd. Roughly a month later, City make the trip to Anfield to face Liverpool in the first fixture after the three-week international break. The opening Tyne-Wear derby between Newcastle and Sunderland is set for early December, the same day Tottenham Hotspur entertain north London rivals Arsenal.

The calendar also confirms how the season will close. On the final day Arsenal, Aston Villa, Chelsea, Liverpool and Manchester United each play at home, against Brighton & Hove Albion, Tottenham, Brentford, Bournemouth and Fulham respectively. Across the full schedule, fixtures are listed consistently with dates and kick-off times noted in Eastern Time (ET) and British Summer Time (BST) or Greenwich Mean Time (GMT), depending on the time of year.

The published list sets out the opening weekends in detail: Arsenal v Coventry City kicks off on a Friday evening, Manchester United head to Hull City and fixtures such as Newcastle United v Liverpool and Fulham v Chelsea follow across the first days of the campaign. Supporters and broadcasters will track the slate of standout ties and derbies that punctuate the campaign from the opening weekend through to the season finale.

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Live TV broadcasts will be chosen for select Premier League games throughout the season, dates and/or kick-off times remain subject to change. All kick-off times stated are Eastern Time (ET) and British Summer Time (BST) or Greenwich Mean Time (GMT), depending on the time of year.

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