Kai Havertz gave Arsenal a sixth-minute lead and Arteta’s side spent over an hour defending it, but a Ousmane Dembele penalty in the 65th minute forced extra time and ultimately a shootout that PSG won 4-3. Luis Enrique’s side dominated possession to an extraordinary degree, finishing with 75% of the ball and 21 total shots, yet needed spot kicks to separate the teams. Arsenal, who entered the final as the top-ranked side in the UEFA Champions League league phase, left Budapest empty-handed.

Key Moments
- 6′, Havertz opens the scoring for Arsenal with a normal goal, catching PSG cold in the opening exchanges and giving Arteta’s side the lead they would defend for nearly an hour.
- 46′, Cristhian Mosquera picks up a yellow card for time wasting at the start of the second half, a booking that prompts Arteta to withdraw him at the hour mark.
- 54′, Bukayo Saka is also cautioned for a foul, leaving Arsenal with two yellow-carded starters and increasing the pressure on Arteta’s defensive setup.
- 65′, Dembele converts from the spot to pull PSG level, canceling out Havertz’s opener and shifting the momentum firmly toward the French side.
- 66′, Arteta responds immediately, withdrawing both Odegaard and Mosquera to try to stabilize his side after the equalizer.
- 83′, Saka is taken off alongside Trossard as Arteta looks to freshen up the wings; PSG also make a change, replacing Kvaratskhelia.
- 103′, Declan Rice is booked for an argument during extra time, adding further disciplinary concern for Arsenal as the match heads toward penalties.
- 118′, Nuno Mendes receives a late yellow card for PSG in the dying minutes of extra time, but it does not alter the outcome.

Tactical Breakdown
PSG controlled the game from the moment Havertz’s early goal settled Arsenal into a low block. Luis Enrique’s 4-3-3 produced 887 total passes at 91% accuracy, compared to Arsenal’s 285 passes at 69%. The xG numbers told the same story: 1.77 for PSG versus 0.44 for Arsenal. The French side registered 21 shots, 12 of them from inside the box, but only four on target, partly because Arsenal’s goalkeeper David Raya made three saves and the defensive shape held up for long stretches. The corner count, 11-3 in PSG’s favor, reflected how completely they pinned Arsenal back.
The turning point came in the 65th minute when Dembele converted a penalty to level. Arteta had been managing yellow cards on Mosquera and Saka, and within a minute of the equalizer he had both off the field. That double substitution changed Arsenal’s shape but also disrupted any rhythm they had built around holding the lead. In extra time, PSG brought on experienced heads in Marquinhos and Vitinha around the 106-minute mark, stabilizing their own structure as the match ground toward a shootout.
For Arsenal, the defensive numbers were deceptive. They conceded 4 goals against across the entire league phase, per the standings data, and were the best-placed side after eight games. But in the final, managing a lead with one shot on goal in 120 minutes was always going to test the limits of any low-block plan. Four yellow cards across the 90 minutes and extra time meant Arteta spent much of the second half reacting to discipline issues rather than dictating his own changes. PSG, for their part, generated enough volume to justify their eventual win, even if their finishing left room for frustration.

Player Ratings
Champions League knockout bracket
Two-legged aggregate scores from the Round of 16 onward; the final was decided on penalties after a 1-1 draw.
Head to Head

Verdict
PSG are UEFA Champions League winners for the 2025 edition, claiming their first European title in the post-Mbappe era under Luis Enrique. For Arsenal, the defeat ends what had been a perfect group phase, eight wins from eight at the top of the league standings, without the trophy to show for it. Arteta’s side will return to England with plenty to reflect on: a team capable of the best record in the competition’s group stage ultimately could not sustain a one-goal lead when PSG’s pressure finally told.