Diego
Costa killed Arsene Wenger’s last hope of a glorious Arsenal farewell
as his goal sent Atletico Madrid through to the Europa League final on
Thursday. Wenger’s 250th European fixture with Arsenal also to proved to
be his last, decided by a typically ruthless finish from Costa, who
delivered the sort of barnstorming display defenders must have
nightmares about.
Arsenal’s defence, fragile and nervous throughout,
were particularly susceptible and this 1-0 defeat, 2-1 on aggregate,
means Wenger’s final season in charge will end with his team missing out
on Champions League qualification for a second year in a row.
For
all his domestic achievements, Wenger will also depart without a
European trophy to his name and it remains to be seen how sitting
outside the continent’s premier tournament will affect Arsenal’s pursuit
of a new coach, and players, this summer. “I’m very sad tonight,”
Wenger said. “Unfortunately you have to go through that — the game can
be very cruel, sometimes very nice, but the suffering is very strong
tonight.”
More immediately, there was the concerning sight of Laurent
Koscielny being carried off on a stretcher in the 12th minute after the
defender went down, with nobody near him, clutching his left Achilles.
“It doesn’t look very good, it’s his Achilles,” Wenger said.
“You
can always hope for a miracle in the scan but if he has a ruptured
Achilles, his chances for the World Cup are non-existent.”
Koscielny’s
exit made a tough task all the more difficult for Arsenal, who were
always going to be up against it at the Wanda Metropolitano, where
Atletico have not lost in the league all season and not conceded a goal
since January.
It was perhaps also telling that Costa’s physicality
and Atletico’s defensive rigour ultimately proved decisive, two
qualities Wenger’s Arsenal have lacked. “Costa came back here for nights
like this,” Atletico coach Diego Simeone said. “To be important, to
lead from the front. This side needs an aggressive striker and that’s
exactly what he is.”
Costa was hunting Arsenal’s back four from the
outset as he wrestled past Koscielny, knocked over Nacho Monreal before
firing wide with only David Ospina to beat. Koscielny was substituted
soon after, replaced by Calum Chambers, but Arsenal enjoyed one of their
best spells midway through the half, dominating possession and reducing
Atletico to a series of rushed clearances.
At the back, however,
they were shaky, as Ospina had balls booted out of his grasp by his
teammates on more than one occasion while their passing out of the back
was too often careless. By the end of the half, Atletico had regained
the ascendancy and in injury-time, they struck.
Granit Xhaka’s weak
header put Arsenal on the back foot and Antoine Griezmann threaded
through to Costa. He held off Hector Bellerin with ease before coolly
finishing past Ospina. Arsenal came again after the interval.
Aaron
Ramsey bundled his way through but the ball would not fall for him six
yards out while Mesut Ozil flashed too sumptuous deliveries across the
face of goal. Griezmann could have put the tie to bed after Costa had
turned Shkodran Mustafi inside out but the defender recovered just in
time to block.
A vintage Costa performance would not be complete
without a scuffle and he provided it when Mustafi tried too
enthusiastically to grab the ball off him for a free-kick. Both players
were booked and when Costa was substituted soon after, the striker was
given a standing ovation. Arsenal piled forward late on in search of an
equaliser but in truth, their night ended without them really creating a
clear-cut chance. When the final whistle blew, Wenger marched straight
down the tunnel as around him, Atletico’s celebrations began.
Atletico Madrid’s Diego Costa (right) scores against Arsenal during the Europa League second leg semi-final at the Wanda Metropolitano in Madrid on Thursday. b(Reuters)