âThis is not just a final⌠itâs a moment Arsenal must attack.â
Mikel Arteta has issued a rallying cryâand itâs louder, sharper, and more urgent than ever before.
Wembley is waiting. The lights are ready. The pressure is building.
And Mikel Arteta has just made one thing crystal clear:
Arsenal are not coming to this final to survive.
They are coming to attack.

Ahead of the Carabao Cup showdown against Manchester City, the Arsenal manager delivered a message that felt less like a routine pre-match statement and more like a call to armsâa demand for unity, intensity, and fearless ambition.
Not just from his players.
But from the fans.
âAttack the final,â Arteta urged.
Three words that instantly transformed the atmosphere around this clash.
Because this isnât just another opportunity for silverware. For Arsenal, this is something deeper. Something emotional. Something that has been building for years.

It has been almost six years since the club last lifted a major trophyâwith that 2020 FA Cup triumph coming in empty stadiums, stripped of the roar, the passion, the connection that defines football at its core.
This time, itâs different.
This time, the fans will be there.
And Arteta wants them fully involvedânot watching, not hoping, but driving the team forward.
âBe with us. Push for every ball. Every action,â he said.
It wasnât a request.
It was a demand for collective energy.
Because Arteta knows something crucial: in finals like this, the difference isnât always tactics.

Sometimes, itâs emotion.
Sometimes, itâs belief.
Sometimes, itâs the unstoppable force created when players and fans move as one.
And Arsenal need that more than ever.
Despite leading the Premier League and still competing across multiple competitions, the absence of recent silverware still lingers over the club like a shadow. Progress has been undeniableâbut in football, progress without trophies is never enough.
Arteta knows it.
His players know it.
The fans feel it.

âWhen youâve gone years without winning, it adds more necessity,â he admitted.
But not pressure.
Drive.
Hunger.
Obsession.
This isnât desperationâitâs determination.
And itâs exactly what Arsenal plan to unleash at Wembley.
Still, Arteta remains calculated. Focused. Refusing to get carried away by talk of eras, legacies, or even the possibility of a historic season.
Four competitions. Four chances. But only one mindset:
One game at a time.
âWe live in the present,â he insisted.
No distractions. No assumptions. No talk of quadruples.

Because in Artetaâs world, everything comes down to moments.
Defining moments.
And this final?
It could be the biggest one yet.
But standing in Arsenalâs way is a familiar figure.
Pep Guardiola.
The mentor. The teacher. The man who helped shape Artetaâs football identity during their time together at Manchester City.
Now, they stand on opposite sides.
Not as allies.
But as rivals.
And while the emotional connection remains, Arteta made it clearâthis is no time for sentiment.
âHeâs in Manchester, Iâm in London,â Arteta said.

Respect remains.
But this is business.
And on Sunday, only one side walks away with the trophy.
Behind the scenes, uncertainty still lingers. Questions remain over key players. Martin Ădegaardâs fitness is unclear after his knee injury. JurriĂŤn Timberâs condition remains in doubt. Even the goalkeeper decision is still under wraps, with both David Raya and Kepa Arrizabalaga in contention.
But Arteta isnât allowing uncertainty to become weakness.
Because this final isnât about perfection.
Itâs about mentality.
And Arsenalâs mentality has been evolving all season.

Resilience. Discipline. Belief.
Now, itâs time to add something more:
Ruthlessness.
Because Manchester City wonât hesitate. They wonât hold back. They will come with experience, power, and a hunger to respond after recent setbacks.
Which means Arsenal must meet them head-on.
No fear.
No hesitation.
Only attack.
As Wembley prepares to erupt, one question now echoes louder than ever:
Can Arsenal turn Artetaâs words into action?
Can they match Cityâs dominance with courage?
Can they transform years of waiting into one unforgettable moment?

Because this isnât just about lifting a trophy.
Itâs about changing the story.
And Arteta has made his message clear:
Donât wait for the final.
Take it.
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