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  1. How do things stand in the Premier League?published at 11:16 GMT

    Arsenal have a nine-point lead over Manchester City at the top of the Premier League table and will be hoping to extend that gap to lift the trophy at the end of the season.

    Mikel Arteta's side have 70 points after winning 21 of the 31 matches they have played.

    City are on 61 points after winning 18 of the 30 matches they have played.

    Pep Guardiola's side have a game in hand in the league because their fixture against Crystal Palace, which was due to be played over the Carabao Cup final weekend, is still to be re-scheduled.

    The two sides face each other again in the league at Etihad Stadium on Sunday, 19 April.

    The reverse fixture at Emirates Stadium, back in September, finished 1-1.

    Premier League top sixImage source, Getty Images
  2. 'The pressure will ramp up just that extra little bit'published at 11:12 GMT

    Arsenal 0-2 Man City

    Jamie Redknapp
    Former Liverpool midfielder on Sky Sports

    If Arsenal won, that would have quickly put Manchester City to bed, now, the pressure will ramp up just that extra little bit.

    There is a bit of a break now, with the international games, which will provide Arsenal with a little bit of thinking time.

    They are the favourites [for the Premier League title], and rightly so, and I still think they will win it, but it just changes the dynamic.

    For a team that hasn’t gotten across the line it asks the question and with a team like Manchester City coming for you, that is the last thing you want.

  3. Arsenal's 'mentality has got to be better'published at 11:10 GMT

    Arsenal 0-2 Manchester City

    Ian Wright
    Former Arsenal striker on Sky Sports

    Arsenal started pretty well but you have to take those chances.

    We couldn't get out of our own half. Man City have got to get the credit. What they've shown in the final is what they're capable of doing. They win games.

    Arsenal's project is about them trying to win the league. It's a different team that's going out there [in the league]. The mentality has got to be better than it was today.

  4. How Man City found their feet in second halfpublished at 11:08 GMT

    Arsenal 0-2 Man City

    Antonie Semenyo of Manchester City makes a run with the ballImage source, Getty Images

    Manchester City made a shaky start to the Carabao Cup final against Arsenal and needed their goalkeeper James Trafford to bail them out early.

    Three saves to deny Kai Havertz and Bukayo Saka in the early stages kept the score level before City found a foothold as the game progressed.

    But it was in the second half that City shifted into a higher gear and took full control of the contest.

    After the break, Pep Guardiola's side overloaded Arsenal's left defensive channel where Piero Hincapie was already on a yellow card and struggling to deal with the threat of Antoine Semenyo.

    That opened up the right side for City’s creators - including Rayan Cherki, Matheus Nunes and Semenyo - to combine and push the Arsenal defence onto the back foot.

    Both of Nico O'Reilly's goals came from moves that originated on that flank, with Semenyo creating the first and Nunes grabbing the assist for the second.

    By the final whistle, City resembled the seasoned, trophy‑hardened side they so often have been under Guardiola in the past.

    They might not yet have the consistency of the side that won a historic four Premier League titles in succession, but when they get it right they are a match for anyone, as they proved here.

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    Get Involved - 'They're going to win the league'published at 11:06 GMT

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    Seems to be a lot of doom and gloom from the Arsenal fans. Yes, they've lost a final, but it's the least of the trophies they are in for. And let's be honest, they're going to win the league for the first time in more than 20 years!

    Will

  6. 'Well, that’s the question isn’t it?'published at 11:02 GMT

    Arsenal 0-2 Man City

    John Murray
    BBC football correspondent on BBC Radio 5 Live

    Well, that’s the question isn’t it? We talked before the start of this match on whether it will provide a psychological advantage or not. That’s what we are going to find out now.

    The fact is Manchester City have a lot of ground to cover. Arsenal still have a nine‑point advantage. City have a game in hand, but matches are running out.

    They play each other in Manchester in four weeks. I thought quite ominously for Arsenal that virtually the last thing that Pep Guardiola said last night was: “It’s in their [Arsenal's] hands. We’ll try to win all our games and see what happens.”

  7. Postpublished at 11:01 GMT

    BBC football correspondent John Murray was asked if Arsenal's sobering Carabao Cup final defeat to Manchester City - their nearest challengers for the Premier League title - would have an impact on this season's title race.

    After three second-place finishes, the Gunners top the table and have a nine-point lead over City, albeit having played a game more and with a trip to Etihad Stadium looming large on 19 April...

  8. What has Arteta won with Arsenal?published at 10:57 GMT

    Arsenal

    Mikel Arteta won the FA Cup in 2020 as the Arsenal manager. His side also won the Community Shield twice, in 2020 and 2023.

    Arsenal have also finished as runners-up in the league under Arteta for the past three occasions - 2022-23, 2023-24 and 2024-25.

    As a player, Arteta won the FA Cup and Community Shield twice at Arsenal, in 2014 and 2015.

    Mikel ArtetaImage source, Getty Images
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    Get Involved - 'If you want to win you need to make big choices'published at 10:55 GMT

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    Sentiments won't win you trophies. It's a team game and should have been played with that in mind. Why waste all that time and effort to throw it all away. If you want to win you need to make big choices. Do you enter these competitions to win or lose?

    Peter

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    Get Involved - 'I blame the failure of a manager'published at 10:54 GMT

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    Arsenal parked the bus with 11 players in their box when City attacked but someone forgot to tell the driver. I blame the failure of a manager for that. The biggest flop at Arsenal.

    Thomas

  11. Man City lay bare Arsenal weaknesspublished at 10:53 GMT

    Arsenal 0-2 Man City

    Pep Guardiola manager of Manchester City with Manel Estiarte head of player supportImage source, Getty Images

    How Manchester City ruthlessly exposed Arsenal’s centre-backs in possession is a theme that has dominated the internet since Sunday's Carabao Cup final.

    Clips shared on X show the City attackers standing off the Arsenal back four, with Arsenal's back-line seemingly unable to find clever ways to progress the ball forward.

    One City fan on X said, external: "When the pivot is screened and the wide lanes are controlled, the centre-backs are pushed towards safer, more vertical/more forced passes.

    "The centre-backs have to be extremely comfortable enough on the ball to outplay the press, otherwise the ball can be locked to one side and the team can get trapped into sterile build-up."

    Another one, external talked about how Guardiola showed "how toothless Arsenal are with the ball."

    "He’s not even pressing their CBs. Cut off the passing lanes into the midfield and they have no clue what to do," they said.

  12. Arsenal outfoxed by Man City in Wembley showdownpublished at 10:49 GMT

    Arsenal 0-2 Man City

    Gabriel and William Saliba of Arsenal look onImage source, Getty Images

    Mikel Arteta’s Arsenal pride themselves on playing out from the back but at Wembley Manchester City did not let them have it all their own way.

    Pep Guardiola's City deliberately refused to press the Gunners high and instead focused on shutting down passing lanes into Arsenal's midfield.

    It meant that Declan Rice and Martin Zubimendi were starved of supply in the midfield.

    When on the ball, William Saliba, Gabriel Magalhaes and Kepa Arrizabalaga were left passing the ball around without much purpose and looked increasingly uncertain as the final progressed.

    As Arsenal began getting increasingly frustrated, Arteta turned to his bench in search of a spark, bringing on Noni Madueke, Gabriel Martinelli, Gabriel Jesus and Riccardo Calafiori, but none of those changes could loosen City's stranglehold on the game.

  13. Postpublished at 10:46 GMT

    The number 13 had not occurred to me Adam. Lord knows, footballers do tend to be superstitious, don't they?

    And Sarah, you are right, of course. Kepa may have handed Nico O'Reilly the opening goal on a plate, but Manchester City were already knocking at the door.

    The question we have to ask ourselves, I guess, is why?

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    Get Involved - 'All focus on Kepa v Raya but Arsenal were not at it at all'published at 10:43 GMT

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    You play a goalkeeper who has lost in 5 domestic cup finals and give him the number 13 shirt.

    Adam

    All this focus on Kepa v Raya. Bottom line is Arsenal were not at it at all in the second half.

    Sarah

  15. Was Arteta right to stick with Kepa?published at 10:40 GMT

    Arsenal 0-2 Man City

    So what do you think?

    Was Mikel Arteta right to stick with Kepa Arrizabalaga, after playing his reserve goalkeeper in every round leading up to Sunday's Carabao Cup final?

    Thumbs up for yes, down for no...

  16. 'I believe it was the right thing to start Kepa and that's it'published at 10:37 GMT

    Arsenal 0-2 Man City

    Arsenal

    Kepa Arrizabalaga of AFC Bournemouth embraces Arsenal manager Mikel ArtetaImage source, Getty Images

    In case you missed it, here's Arsenal manager Mikel Arteta's explanation on why he started second-choice goalkeeper Kepa Arrizabalaga in Sunday's final: "I have to do what I feel is right, which is honest and which is fair. And I think we have an outstanding keeper in Kepa - he's played all the competition and I think it would have been very, very unfair for him and for the team to do something different.

    "I can never promise a player to play certain competitions, because at the end they have to earn it and they have to do enough like any other position.

    "We are guided by what we've seen and what he's done in the competition, and he helped us to go all the way through here. I believe it's the right thing to do and that's it. Errors are part of football and today it happened, unfortunately, in a crucial moment."

  17. Kepa's nightmare Carabao Cup final run continuespublished at 10:35 GMT

    Arsenal 0-2 Manchester City

    Chelsea goalkeeper Kepa Arrizabalaga argues with manager Maurizio Sarri as he tries to sub him offImage source, Getty Images

    In case you had this nagging thought at the back of your mind, you are right, this is not the first time Kepa Arrizabalaga has found himself at the centre of attention after a Carabao Cup final.

    His troubled relationship with the cup competition goes all the way back to 2019, during his early days in England with Chelsea.

    It was in that year's cup final that he famously refused to be substituted by Blues boss Maurizio Sarri before the penalty shootout, forcing the Italian tactician to almost walk down the tunnel in fury.

    Kepa stayed on the field and did not make an impact during the shootouts as Pep Guardiola's Manchester City lifted the trophy.

    Then came 2022, when he was brought on by Thomas Tuchel for the shootout but blasted his own effort over the goal as Liverpool won 11-10 on penalties against Chelsea.

    Fast forward to 2026 and it's a different club, but Kepa finds himself part of a similarly brutal storyline in another failed attempt to win a Carabao Cup final.

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    Get Involved - 'Arsenal will still win the league' but 'could be in real trouble'published at 10:31 GMT

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    Arsenal will still win the league but if they play anything like they did in the second half yesterday in the FA Cup and UCL games they could be in real trouble.

    Jeuel

  19. 'You play Raya in this game'published at 10:29 GMT

    Arsenal 0-2 Manchester City

    John Murray
    BBC football correspondent on BBC Radio 5 Live at Wembley

    You play David Raya in this game.

    You've got a goalkeeper who makes outstanding match-saving saves virtually every week for Arsenal, he has kept more clean sheets than anyone else this season.

    Raya is your goalkeeper and you are playing in a cup final which feels pivotal that Arsenal win it because it has been such a long time since they've won anything and you don't play him.

    Arsenal fans everywhere are asking this morning, why not just play your best goalkeeper?

    They’ve played 50 matches; Kepa has played 10. He’s a very good goalkeeper in his own right, he’s actually the world’s most expensive goalkeeper. Chelsea paid over £70m for him back in 2018, that is still the record fee for a goalkeeper, but he’s not the first choice at Arsenal — Raya is, and he’s kept the most clean sheets and made the most match winning saves. Yet Raya was on the bench.

    City did the same: Donnarumma benched, Trafford played — and Trafford made a crucial early save.

    Meanwhile, Kepa made the mistake. It’s not an age-old debate, it’s a modern debate. Once upon a time, managers always played their best XI in a final.

    David Raya and KepaImage source, Getty Images
  20. 'I would never have started Kepa...there is no moment for sentiment'published at 10:27 GMT

    Arsenal 0-2 Manchester City

    Julien Laurens
    ESPN journalist on BBC Radio 5 Live at Wembley

    Football is funny, isn't it?

    It looks like Mikel Arteta and his players looked and believed that the second half would start like the first, but Manchester City decided not to.

    I would never have started Kepa today. I understand he started every game up until now in this tournament. In a final like this, at this moment in the Arsenal project, there is no moment for sentiment. Your best team has to play. Kepa instead of David Raya, for me, was the wrong call.

    Also, I would much rather have Bukayo Saka or Leandro Trossard starting in that number 10 position than Kai Havertz today.

    I know it is harsh, but I think Arteta and his players will learn a lot from today because those finals are won on decisions made not just on the pitch but at half-time.