The Star Sport

Arsenal’s Wembley wobble: Tactical masterclass or mental block for Arteta?

On the Ball

Rowan Callaghan|Published

Nico O'Reilly the hero as Man City take the Carabao Cup, but the real question remains: Has this dented Arsenal's title charge? Photo: AFP

Image: AFP

For all the talk of evolution under Mikel Arteta, Sunday’s League Cup final felt like a step back into a familiar and uncomfortable narrative for Arsenal.

They were composed early on, controlled possession and looked every bit the side leading the English Premier League title race. But when the game shifted – as it so often does against a Pep Guardiola team – Arsenal had no answer. And that, more than the result itself, should concern Gunners fans most.

Because this wasn’t just a cup final defeat. It was another reminder that Guardiola still holds a tactical edge over his former assistant – and perhaps a psychological one, too.

Arsenal started well, dictating tempo and territory, but control without incision has become a recurring theme in their biggest matches. They failed to capitalise when they were on top and, against a side like Manchester City, that is asking for trouble.

When the momentum turned, it turned decisively. City did what elite teams do – they adapted. Guardiola tweaked his setup, his players responded, and within minutes the game had slipped from Arsenal’s grasp – homegrown talent Nico O'Reilly doing the damage. It was clinical, ruthless, and entirely in keeping with a team built on winning the moments that matter most.

Arsenal, by contrast, looked rattled. That fragility is becoming difficult to ignore. This is not the first time an Arteta side has fallen short on the biggest stage and while the progress is undeniable, the final step – turning control into trophies – remains elusive. 

The concern is not just technical, but mental. Finals are rarely won on tactics alone, they are decided by composure, clarity and conviction under pressure. On Sunday, City had all three. Arsenal, once again, did not.

For Guardiola, this was more than another medal. It was a statement. Even in a season that has not consistently hit their usual heights, City still have the know-how to outmanoeuvre their closest challengers when it matters most.

For Arsenal, it raises an uncomfortable question: if they cannot overcome City here, what happens when the title race tightens?

Their league clash on April 19 now looms as a potential title decider. Arsenal’s nine-point lead suddenly feels less secure. Should City win their game in hand and then prevail at the Etihad, that gap could shrink to just three points.

Doubts will linger until Arteta proves he can outthink and outfight Guardiola in defining moments.

And yet, this is where the narrative shifts.

For all City’s superiority on Sunday, they have not been infallible. This has not been a vintage Guardiola campaign. They are already out of the Champions League, while Arsenal continue to compete on three fronts – a dynamic some may argue even favours City.

More telling, however, is recent league form.

Arsenal have beaten Spurs, Chelsea, Brighton and Everton in their last four matches. City, meanwhile, have stumbled to draws against struggling Nottingham Forest and West Ham – hardly the rhythm of champions-in-waiting.

The run-in also tilts in Arsenal’s favour. City still face difficult fixtures against Liverpool and Chelsea, in addition to hosting the Gunners, while Arteta’s side appear to have a smoother path.

Perspective, then, is essential. Guardiola may have won the battle at Wembley, but the title race is not decided in one afternoon. It is shaped over months. And right now, Arsenal remain in control of their own destiny.