'Bring it on', says Rice as Arsenal chase Champions League history
Newcastle United's English midfielder #67 Lewis Miley (L) chases down Arsenal's English midfielder #41 Declan Rice during the English Premier League football match between Arsenal and Newcastle United at the Emirates Stadium in London on April 25, 2026. (Photo by Glyn KIRK / AFP)
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Declan Rice has
urged Arsenal to embrace the weight of history in their chase for a first
Champions League crown ahead of Wednesday's semi-final trip to Atletico Madrid.
The Gunners
travel to the Spanish capital for the first leg looking to move a step closer
to only their second Champions League final appearance.
Mikel Arteta's
side have been labelled English football's nearly men after three successive
runners-up finishes in the Premier League.
They have fallen
short in Europe as well, losing 3-1 on aggregate to eventual winners Paris
Saint-Germain in the Champions League semi-finals last season and bowing out
against Bayern Munich in the 2024 quarter-finals.
Arsenal have
never won Europe's elite club competition, with their lone final ending in defeat
against Barcelona in 2006.
The Premier
League has become the London club's holy grail after their painful streak of
near-misses in recent years.
But lifting the
Champions League for the first time would be an equally fitting riposte to
those doubting the mental strength of Arteta's men.
Just seven games
separate Arsenal from the club's greatest ever season.
They sit three
points clear of second-placed Manchester City in the Premier League title race,
with four matches to play and five for Pep Guardiola's men.
Three games
remain in the Champions League if Arsenal reach the final against PSG or Bayern
in Budapest on May 30.
Rice wants his
team-mates to prove their past experiences have made them battle-hardened for
their pursuit of history.
"We've
played in tough games in the last three or four years at the highest level, so
we know what to expect and what's to come," the midfielder said.
"That's
what it's been all season, and that's what we want it to be towards the end of
the season.
"We're
Champions League semi-finalists, let's embrace it, enjoy it and bring it
on."
After losing two
high-stakes showdowns with City recently -- a 2-0 League Cup final defeat and
2-1 loss in the Premier League -- the jury remains out on Arsenal's ability to
get over the line when it matters most.
A fraught 1-0
win over Newcastle on Saturday was hardly a convincing response to the cynics.
But it did end a
two-game losing run in the league and eased a little of the tension after four
defeats in their previous six matches in all competitions.
Arsenal are
sweating on the fitness of Eberechi Eze and Kai Havertz for the trip to Madrid
after they limped off last weekend.
Eze had taken
his goal tally for the season to 10 with a sublime strike against Newcastle.
The England
midfielder has been a rare source of attacking inspiration in a side whose
success has been build on a solid defensive foundations.
And Rice is
desperate for his international team-mate to be fit to face Diego Simeone's
side.
"That's
what he's been brought here to do. I said a few weeks ago, his ball striking is
unbelievable," he said.
"What a
player, what a guy. He's going to be massive for us these next few weeks. We
really need him."

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