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Arsenal plot Monaco downfall in Champions League

Forever linked by the legendary Arsene Wenger and Thierry Henry, Arsenal and Monaco scrap for Champions League supremacy in today’s league phase contest at the Emirates Stadium.

Only one spot separates the two titans in the 36-team UCL table, as each them cling on to one of the final two automatic qualifica­tion places for the last-16 stage after five matches.

Breel Embolo —Monaco

Six goals between Arsenal and Sporting Lisbon at the Estadio Jose Alvalade was not beyond the realm of possibility before kickoff on Champions League matchday five, although few would have expected five of those efforts to go to the men in red and white.

However, with the Ruben Amorim glue no longer holding the Green and Whites together, the Primeira Liga powerhouses were slaughtered by Mikel Arteta’s troops last time out in Europe, as the Gunners propelled them­selves into the coveted top eight spots with a 5-1 pummelling of Sporting.

Also beating both Shakhtar Donetsk and Paris Saint-Germain in UCL home affairs season, only Barcelona and Bayern Munich seven each have won more top-level European matches on their own soil than Arsenal’s six since the start of the 2023-24 season, and they have scored in each of their last 11 Champions League home contests.

Formerly struggling for shut-outs at the Emirates Stadium, Arsenal have now managed four clean sheets in their last six match­es in front of the North London crowd, and they are yet to suffer a home loss in any tournament this term, winning seven of their last eight at their headquarters.

The Gunners’ prolific powers on the road failed them at the weekend, though, as they were de­nied a late winner in a 1-1 Premier League draw with Fulham and could now slip nine points behind runaway leaders Liverpool if the Reds win their game in hand.

Sharing Arsenal’s 10-point total from five Champions League outings so far this season, only a marginally inferior goal difference is keeping Monaco below the Gunners as Adi Hutter’s men seek to right some wrongs from their most recent continental show­down.

While their upcoming hosts annihilated Portuguese opposition on matchday five, Les Mone­gasques were on the wrong end of a 3-2 scoreline when Benfica came to visit the Stade Louis II, letting 1-0 and 2-1 leads slip as Burnley loanee Zeki Amdouni completed an exceptional Eagles fightback.

Monaco’s late collapse on November 27 can be attributed to a red card for defender Wilfried Singo early in the second half, but the Ivorian redeemed himself at the weekend, netting the open­ing goal against Toulouse before Breel Embolo put the seal on a 2-0 victory.

Five points below leaders, Paris Saint-Germain, and level on points with second-placed, Marseille, in the Ligue 1 table, Les Monegasques have proven their credentials as genuine challengers for PSG’s crown, and they are now bidding to win Champions League away matches for the first time since the 2014-15 campaign.

The last time the visitors won back-to-back UCL games on the road, their second success coincidentally came against none other than Arsenal, whom they conquered 3-1 at the Emirates in February 2015 before a 2-0 home loss in the second leg of that last- 16 tie, which still sent Wenger’s team out on away goals

Gabriel Magalhaes and Riccar­do Calafiori are in the exact same boat, while Ben White and Take­hiro Tomiyasu will definitely sit this one out due to knee injuries, and Arteta’s defensive dilemma could see him bite the bullet and bring one player back in from the cold.

Monaco will also be working around a diminished defence for the game, albeit for different reasons, as Singo serves a ban following his red card and Christian Mawissa is also suspended for a totting-up of bookings.—Sportsmole

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