Arsenal 'on a mission' - is another special season on the horizon?
When Arsenal look back at their 2025-26 season, they may see the final weekend of April as pivotal. Twenty-four hours after Manchester City's defeat by Brighton handed them a lifeline in the Women's Super League title race, the Gunners came from behind to beat Lyon 2-1 in the first leg of their Women's Champions League semi-final.
When Arsenal look back at their 2025-26 season, they may see the final weekend of April as pivotal. Twenty-four hours after Manchester City's defeat by Brighton handed them a lifeline in the Women's Super League title race, the Gunners came from behind to beat Lyon 2-1 in the first leg of their Women's Champions League semi-final. With 90 minutes all that stands between them and a second successive appearance in the final, the climax to another glorious season could be unfolding.
"The first half was quite even - we gave away a cheap goal," captain Leah Williamson told BBC Sport after she afforded Jule Brand too much time and space to score Lyon's early opener. "But what you saw second half was a team on a mission, fuelled by the crowd. " Arsenal beat Lyon in Women's Champions League semi-final first leg What a 26,758-strong crowd at Emirates Stadium witnessed on Sunday was a microcosm of Arsenal's season.
Renee Slegers' side looked bright in the very early stages, but slowed as the first half progressed. Too much inconsistency, too many fine details missed. The Arsenal that emerged for the second half, much like they did after the winter break, looked rejuvenated.
They chased every ball, hassled the Lyon defence, and at every opportunity looked to play Olivia Smith, Caitlin Foord and Stina Blackstenius into space. "There was a phase in the first half where we wanted more aggression in our press and we had some great solutions at half-time," Slegers said. "That was what we did with conviction in the second half.