The wait is over.
After nearly six years and four failed semi-finals, Arsenal’s 4-2 aggregate victory over Chelsea in the Carabao Cup semi-final has put them back into a major final.
It will be their first under Mikel Arteta since he guided them to FA Cup victory in 2020 – and just their second in his time at the club.
It was tight, tense and at times dull, but as Kai Havertz rolled in an injury-time goal to confirm their place at Wembley, the euphoria from fans and players at the Emirates underlined the result’s significance.
In a match where both sides managed just two shots on target, the Gunners rarely looked troubled, showing the defensive solidity that has made them hard to beat.
Arsenal will compete in a ninth EFL Cup final when they take on either Manchester City or Newcastle on Sunday 22 March. Should they face City, it would be a repeat of the 2018 final, won by Manchester City when Arteta was part of Pep Guardiola’s coaching staff.
Beyond the chance to avenge that previous loss and win their first League Cup in 33 years, the final is an opportunity to change perceptions.
Mikel Arteta said: “There was a special atmosphere inside our stadium. It makes such a difference. We’ve been waiting a few years to get into this position and we’re certainly going to enjoy it [the final].
“It’s the best vitamins that we can put in our bodies because we’re playing every three days. But the fact that you worked so hard to achieve those moments and to have these moments together is just magical.
“You can see the joy, the smile, the energy and everything that works at the club.”
Midfielder Declan Rice added: “We deserve it. The last three or four years we’ve been at the top of the Premier League, competing and got really close but haven’t been good enough.
“That’s why this season we have that extra desire and fire in our bellies to go one step further in every competition. There’s a long way to go but to be in a cup final with this club is amazing.”
For the last few years, Arteta’s Arsenal have been a story of near-misses in cups and the Premier League. Now, one game away from ending their trophy drought, are the Premier League leaders about to silence the ‘nearly men’ tag for good?
Ex-Arsenal defender Matt Upson told BBC Radio 5 Live: “It has been a few years in the making and there has been a steady build-up to this point for Arsenal. Mikel Arteta has been laying the foundations, building the ethos, and togetherness of the team.”
Since winning the FA Cup in 2020, Arsenal had reached four semi-finals—and lost them all. During that time they hadn’t even won a leg, so seeing the job out on Tuesday could be a huge psychological boost, as would going on to lift the trophy in March.
In recent seasons they have also lost leads in the Premier League to miss out on the title, with pressure mounting on Arteta to deliver silverware this season more than ever. They will have bigger ambitions than the Carabao Cup, but securing early silverware could do a lot for the rest of their campaign.
Upson added: “I think the supporters are just as keen and eager as the players and manager to win a serious trophy. They want a Premier League, but this is a big part of achieving that goal.
“It is important that they win a semi-final. It is important that they win a trophy again because they’re not winning enough, given they have been amongst it for quite a while.
“That is what this season is all about. If you go all the way and do it. What that will do for the Premier League boost, then it is massive. The momentum and the feel of the stadium at the end is great for Arsenal.”
Defender William Saliba said: “It’s a big club, so there’s a lot of pressure every time. It’s good when there is pressure. We play football for that.
“We have a lot of games – there’s four months left. We want to win every competition. We have the squad for that and we have the coach for that.”
That ambition is backed by history: seven of the last 12 EFL Cup winners went on to win at least one other trophy in the same season.
Ex-Liverpool midfielder Jamie Redknapp told Sky Sports: “They are ready to win. They have suffered over the years but this result may relax them, they may enjoy it a bit more.
“I think they can start to relax and play. What they have done this season, it is an incredible effort and no reason they can’t win, two maybe three trophies.”
With 17 weeks to go until the Champions League final and no trophies yet, it is far too early to talk about a quadruple, but Arsenal are six points clear at the top of the Premier League.
Arteta’s side host League One strugglers Wigan in the fourth round of the FA Cup and are already through to the last 16 of the Champions League after winning all eight of their group matches.
Since 1960 there have been four different trebles; no English team has won the quadruple. Liverpool won the First Division, League Cup and European Cup in 1984, Manchester City managed a domestic clean sweep in 2018-19 and became the second club after neighbours Manchester United in 1998-99 to triumph in the Premier League, Champions League and FA Cup in 2022-23.
City were just three wins from an elusive clean sweep in that campaign, while United’s 2008-09 side reached within three wins of a quadruple but lost to Everton in the FA Cup semi-final and Barcelona in the Champions League final, finishing with two trophies.
Arsenal’s legendary ‘Invincibles’ went the entire league campaign undefeated in 2003-04 but secured only the league that season; their quadruple hopes were ended on 3 February 2004 by Middlesbrough, who beat them 3-1 on aggregate in the League Cup semi-finals.
Arteta certainly won’t be talking about quadruples just yet—but Arsenal fans can dream.

