At the start of the second half, Borussia Dortmund immediately ramped up the intensity in midfield.
Lewandowski dropped deeper, and their two holding midfielders pushed forward to support Reus in controlling the tempo. Klopp clearly wanted his side to take charge of the middle of the park.
But Arsenal didn't panic. Wenger had warned them about this exact scenario during the halftime talk, and they were ready.
Kai and Flamini both dropped their positions slightly, refusing to engage in a head-on midfield brawl. Instead, they drew Dortmund deeper into Arsenal's half — inviting pressure.
It completely threw Dortmund off.
They had come out expecting a fierce fight for possession. But Arsenal retreated, absorbing the pressure.
It felt like swinging a powerful punch into thin air — all that energy, wasted.
And with Arsenal's two defensive midfielders dropping back, Dortmund's shape began to stretch. Their forwards were too far up, and the midfield suddenly looked disjointed.
Was this a trap?
It certainly felt like one.
But like Bayern before them, Dortmund had no choice but to keep pressing forward.
They pushed their defensive line high, crowding Arsenal's half with men in yellow shirts, determined to pin the Gunners back.
Arsenal responded by tightening their lines and battling hard down the flanks, keeping a compact shape that denied any space through the middle.
And with Walcott waiting on the wings like a coiled spring, they were always ready to counter.
Martin Taylor:"Dortmund are pressing forward with real urgency, but Arsenal don't look fazed at all. Wenger clearly saw this coming."
Alan Smith: "Exactly, Martin. You can see the plan — Arsenal are dropping deeper, drawing them in. Classic rope-a-dope stuff. Once Dortmund overcommit, Arsenal will hit them on the break."
Wenger stood calmly on the touchline, arms crossed, watching like a chess master admiring his setup.
Klopp, on the other hand, was pacing furiously, jaw tight. His side had all the ball but no way through.
Arsenal's defensive shape was suffocating. Dortmund moved the ball side to side, probing, but every pass forward was met with two red shirts pressing hard.
Minutes ticked away. The crowd's noise began to dip, replaced by a sense of unease.
Then came the breaking point.
Reus received the ball, glanced up, and slipped it toward Lewandowski.
But Kai stepped across the passing lane, blocking it perfectly.
Lewandowski, frustrated, refused to pass back. Instead, he tried to turn and bulldoze through.
Flamini reacted instantly — closing down, shoulders tense, pressing hard.
Lewandowski twisted, trying to shake him off, but Flamini stuck like glue.
And before Lewandowski could even shift his weight, Cazorla slid in from nowhere and nicked the ball clean off his feet.
Cazorla looked up and immediately fed Kai.
Alan Smith:"Oh, that's brilliant pressing from Arsenal! They just swarmed him — Lewandowski had no chance there!"
Martin Taylor: "It's been the story of the game, hasn't it? Arsenal's discipline off the ball — it's been top-notch tonight."
Without hesitation, Kai turned and launched a raking left-footed pass into the space behind Dortmund's defense.
The ball sailed over Erik Durm's head — a perfectly weighted pass.
Durm spun and began to sprint, but Walcott was already level with him — then suddenly, past him.
Durm's arm twitched, instinctively reaching out.
"Careful, you're on a yellow!" Cazorla yelled from behind.
That brief hesitation was enough. Walcott surged ahead, storming toward the goal.
Alan Smith: "Hummels and Friedrich are scrambling back, but Walcott's got the pace! He's twisting... step-over... opens up the angle — shoots!"
Martin Taylor: "Ohhh, just wide! He went for the far corner!"
In the stands, Arsenal fans buried their heads in frustration, groaning as one.
The Dortmund supporters, meanwhile, let out a collective sigh of relief — but it didn't last long.
Because as the noise settled, murmurs of irritation began to spread among them.
Their team looked nothing like the fierce Dortmund they knew.
Erik Durm was struggling badly against Walcott's pace. The once razor-sharp Dortmund press now looked hesitant, second-guessing itself.
For all their energy, they were being toyed with — led around by an Arsenal side that had learned how to dictate not just the ball, but the entire rhythm of the game.
Whether in tactical setup or individual performance, Borussia Dortmund were completely at a disadvantage.
Arsenal, on the other hand, was steadily moving toward victory.
Even now, Dortmund's supporters didn't think Arsenal were particularly spectacular — they just seemed efficient and disciplined, while their own side looked disjointed and uncoordinated.
From a goal kick, Weidenfeller launched the ball long, aiming for Reus.
Reus and Kai both moved toward the dropping ball almost in sync.
But Kai used his body smartly — a firm nudge with his hip — before leaping to win the aerial duel cleanly.
The ball fell neatly to Cazorla.
Cazorla shaped up as if to play it wide to Walcott, but at the last moment, he burst forward himself, gliding past two yellow shirts. Near the edge of the box, he slipped it through to Walcott again.
Walcott darted into the area, pulling defenders out of position and creating chaos once more.
Dortmund were in disarray — anxious, but also helpless.
Arsenal, by contrast, looked more comfortable with every passing minute.
By the 78th minute, both sides had made changes.
Dortmund brought on Aubameyang for Piszczek — Klopp clearly wanted to inject more pace and attacking threat.
Arsenal responded by replacing Flamini with Ramsey, reinforcing their control in midfield. Ramsey's brief was simple: keep Aubameyang quiet.
Both men were fresh, but Ramsey's awareness and timing quickly frustrated the Gabonese forward.
As the clock ticked past 85 minutes, Dortmund's desperation was obvious.
Klopp rolled the dice again — two more attacking substitutions.
Arsenal, though, calmly countered with like-for-like changes in defense to maintain their balance.
By the time the match entered injury time, Dortmund's hopes had faded.
An equalizer seemed a distant dream.
All they could do now was limit the damage and prepare for the next leg.
When the final whistle blew, Arsenal's players erupted in celebration at the Westfalenstadion.
The home fans, meanwhile, filed out quietly, their faces dark and disappointed after such a lackluster display.
From start to finish, Arsenal had been in control.
They'd built their rhythm patiently, seized their moment, and once ahead, never let Dortmund back in.
Every tactical adjustment Klopp attempted was calmly read and neutralized by Arsenal's organization.
It might have been just a 1–0 win, but for Arsenal fans, it was a statement performance.
The match was thrilling — at least from an Arsenal point of view.
Their discipline, structure, and execution were outstanding.
No one switched off. No one lost focus.
Every player did their job and trusted the system.
By contrast, Dortmund's composure eroded as frustration grew.
And that decisive goal from Suarez? It had changed everything — from that moment, Arsenal completely dictated the flow.
Compared to their earlier form, this Arsenal looked even more composed, confident, and tactically mature.
If they maintain this level, Dortmund could be in serious trouble when they come to the Emirates.
...
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