In the penalty shootout, PSG scored four of their five attempts, while Arsenal converted only three of five . The critical moments arrived from Arsenal's second and fifth takers:
In the immediate aftermath of the devastating loss, manager Mikel Arteta addressed multiple angles of the defeat.
Arteta used the loss to deliver a clear message to the Arsenal board. "We will start to make some very important decisions if we want to reach another level," he stated. "We're going to have to show that ambition. We are more than capable of doing it, but it's going to demand us to be very, very ambitious, very fast and very smart" .
His call for reinforcements is already backed by reported interest from the club. Atlético Madrid forward Julián Álvarez and Lorient's young attacker Eli Junior Kroupi have been named among Arsenal's leading summer targets, with formal transfer talks expected to begin now that the season has concluded .
Arteta was also visibly frustrated with a refereeing decision during the match. In the 103rd minute of extra time, substitute Noni Madueke went down in the box under a challenge from Nuno Mendes. Referee Daniel Siebert waved away the appeals, and VAR did not intervene. Arteta, who said he had reviewed every penalty given in the Champions League all season, was incredulous.
"I watch it back and it could easily be a penalty," he argued. "Especially when you see the penalties that were awarded this season in the competition. The referee made one call at one end, but a different one at the other, and that is what frustrates us" .
While Arsenal look to the future, PSG and their manager Luis Enrique celebrated a moment of historical significance. The club became the first since Real Madrid's modern dynasty to successfully defend the Champions League title .
For Luis Enrique, this victory marked his third Champions League title as a manager, adding to his 2015 triumph with Barcelona and his 2025 title with PSG. The achievement cements his status among an elite group of managers, alongside Carlo Ancelotti, Bob Paisley, Zinedine Zidane, and Pep Guardiola, as one of the few coaches to win three or more European Cups .
The defeat is particularly poignant for Arsenal, coming exactly two decades after the club's one and only other Champions League final appearance—a 2-1 loss to Barcelona in Paris in 2006. Despite the pain, the 2026 campaign represented a historic step forward for Arteta's side, who ended a 22-year wait for a Premier League title this season . Yet on this night in Budapest, the ultimate prize in European club football slipped agonizingly from their grasp, extending their wait for a maiden Champions League trophy by at least another year
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