Arsenal took the ball and the initiative early in their Champions League semi-final second leg against Atlético Madrid, with the tie level at 1-1 from the first leg and the night under way at 8pm BST at Arsenal. By 15 minutes, Arsenal had 74 percent of the possession, and by 16 minutes they had earned the first corner of the evening.
The first warning came before the corner count could become a story of its own. David Raya played a dangerous ball out of his box at 14 minutes, Bukayo Saka then scuffed a good chance wide at 17 minutes, and Declan Rice sent a low drive wide right two minutes later. Mikel Arteta responded in the stands with a spin of almost a full 360 degrees, a mix of excitement and frustration as Arsenal pushed forward but did not yet find a finish.
That pressure kept building. Julián Álvarez was clipped to the ground by Rice at 21 minutes, another moment that broke the rhythm of a match that Atlético had started better before Arsenal began to take control of possession. The Gunners had not scored from their previous 42 Champions League corners before this match, so each set piece carried its own weight, and the first one of the night arrived just as Arsenal’s grip on the game began to tighten.
Arsenal then came closest to turning control into a lead at 35 minutes, when they had two penalty appeals in quick succession. VAR checked both and waved play on, leaving Arsenal to keep searching for a breakthrough. The game was still alive, still tight, and still balanced on the same knife edge that had defined the first leg in Madrid.
What comes next is simple and unforgiving: Arsenal must turn possession, corners and pressure into a goal, or Atlético will keep the tie exactly where it has been for most of the night. After 42 failed Champions League corners before kickoff, Arsenal can ill afford another evening where dominance does not become damage.