Arsenal can win Europa League and secure top six – but will they?
By Trent Nelson
Arsenal Can Win the Europa League With Fearless and Positive Football
That means the likes of Nicolas Pepe, as well as Willian when he is called upon, the trio of remarkable young talent, Bukayo Saka, Gabriel Martinelli and Emile Smith Rowe. It will take the captain, Pierre Emerick-Aubameyang, as well as his close friend, Alexandre Lacazette. It will require great play from not only Thomas Partey, but both Dani Ceballos and Martin Odegaard; poor play from one or the other will simply not do
Arteta wishes for his side to be creative and to control possession. He must allow for his club to assert this flair and feeling against a team like Slavia Prague. While they are no pushovers, they should be a club that the young and old of Arsenal can take advantage of over the course of two legs, building confidence all the while for whoever they would face in the matches to come.
While facing Villarreal in the semi-finals would be no simple question for Arsenal to answer, it is certainly not set in stone that the Yellow Submarine will get passed Zagreb. Despite the fact that they lost their coach to prison just days before beating Tottenham in the last round, it must be noted that stranger things have clearly happened.
On the other side of the bracket, however, while Manchester United will have a harder match than they might anticipate against Grenada – Roma and Ajax appears to be a truly super quarter-final tie.
For all teams involved, winning offers only nominal relief. A clash between Manchester United and either Roma or Ajax would offer another really wonderful match of high quality opponents; should Grenada get to the semi-finals instead however, the headlines will talk lovingly of the Spanish underdogs as they once spoke of Ajax themselves.
Were Arsenal to find itself in a position like just two seasons ago, in the finals against an English club, the second time in three seasons might very well be the charm. Against any of the other three, the club, on paper at least, appears to be in a positive spot, while I would wager that the toughest non-all-English-Europa League final would undoubtedly feature Ajax against Arsenal.
Those two legendary outfits battling it out would be something special, but in any event, Arsenal needs to find victory in the matches leading up to whichever fictional encounter we’re dreaming up.
Without the volition that comes to a team with compiled victories, the teams ambition will be lost on itself. So many of the players, regardless of age, do remember how it felt to watch Chelsea beat them in Europe; they want to win this trophy for themselves and the badge, as well as the boss, and so with great effort and focus, can certainly accomplish this goal.
Will they? This remains to be seen, for now.