Clubs that played both PSG and Arsenal this season came away with a split verdict before the Champions League final: Arsenal looked harder to score against, but PSG left the stronger attacking impression.
That contrast is now part of the buildup to the final, because the evidence comes from teams that had to face both sides in Europe. Bayern Munich, Bayer Leverkusen, Sporting CP and Athletic Bilbao all met PSG and Arsenal in their campaigns, giving their players and staff a direct comparison rather than a theory from the outside.
Eliesse Ben Seghir, who spoke after Bayer Leverkusen lost 2-7 to PSG at the BayArena on 21 October and after Leverkusen were later eliminated by Arsenal in the round of 16, said PSG was the most impressive team he had faced. He pointed to their ability to adapt, their different profiles and the depth of their bench, saying even the substitutes brought more. For him, PSG could suffer or dominate and still win, a quality that made them feel different from the rest.
He also gave Arsenal a very different kind of respect. Ben Seghir said they could play for 90 minutes and still find a goal from a set piece, a transition or a small phase of play, adding that it was very difficult to score against them. That fits the numbers from their European runs: Arsenal finished those matches unbeaten and conceded only two goals, while PSG conceded 22.
Athletic Bilbao reached the same conclusion from the other side of the bracket. Mikel Gonzalez said Arsenal and PSG both impressed Bilbao, but he described Arsenal as a side that concedes very few chances and said his team felt far from scoring when they met in Bilbao. Arsenal beat Athletic 2-0 on 16 September through a superb counter finished by Gabriel Martinelli and set up by Leandro Trossard, while Athletic then held PSG to a 0-0 draw on 10 December after spending 80 minutes under pressure.
Gonzalez went a step further and said Bilbao were the only team not to concede against PSG in the Champions League, while still calling both finalists the two best squads in the world with two top coaches. He also gave PSG the edge in one area that could matter in a final, saying they may have slightly more individual quality in attack to decide the match. Aymeric Laporte, speaking in the same comparison, was even more direct: “The players, the experience, the style of play, they have everything better.”
Sporting Portugal offered a final layer of context, even if their meetings came at different moments of the season. Sporting beat PSG 2-1 on 20 January in the league phase, then later lost to Arsenal in the quarter-finals by 1-0 and 0-0. Club representatives said PSG was not as strong at that stage as it later became and had left too many spaces defensively, a reminder that the shape of a team can change as the season unfolds.
For the final itself, that leaves a simple but sharp reading: Arsenal have earned the reputation as the more solid, harder-to-break side, while PSG have convinced opponents they are the more explosive and more adaptable attack. The final will settle the trophy, but the clubs that saw both already delivered the scouting report.
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