Paris Saint-Germain enter as the defending champions, seeking their second consecutive European crown and second in club history . Arsenal, meanwhile, are appearing in their first final since 2006 and are still chasing a first-ever Champions League trophy
. The Gunners have never won the competition, making this a potentially defining moment for Mikel Arteta's project.
Both sides will be missing key defensive players.
Arsenal
PSG
PSG were monitoring up to six first-team players for fitness concerns entering the final week, with Luis Enrique managing a squad stretched by late-season injuries .
The final is one of the most expensive in Champions League history. According to Transfermarkt estimates, Arsenal's squad is valued at approximately €1.2 billion, while PSG's is worth around €1.1 billion, giving a combined figure of over €2.3 billion . Other valuations differ slightly: Football Benchmark placed PSG's squad at €1.309 billion during the semi-finals, while earlier-season estimates from various sources list Arsenal as high as €1.34 billion and PSG as low as €920 million, reflecting the variability of real-time market data
. Regardless of the exact figure, both squads comfortably exceed the billion-euro mark.
Arsenal have already banked more than £122 million (approximately €142 million / $166 million) in UEFA prize money from this season's campaign . Qualifying for the final alone added roughly €18.5 million (£16 million) to the pot
. Lifting the trophy would bring an additional £10 million (approximately €11.7 million / $13.6 million) on top
. According to financial analyst Swiss Ramble, Arsenal also earned an estimated €37 million (£32 million) through UEFA's "value pillar" payments, which combine a club's national media market value with European performance over the last decade
. PSG's specific prize money figures were not separately reported in the available sources, though as defending champions they have accumulated substantial performance bonuses through the knockout rounds.
Former Arsenal and Manchester City midfielder Samir Nasri withdrew from his punditry role for the final after being targeted by PSG ultras during the Champions League semi-final in Munich . Nasri said PSG supporters chanted insults, including about his mother, telling French outlet Le Parisien: "They insulted my mother!"
. He stepped down from the pitch-side broadcasting team and confirmed he will not travel to Budapest to avoid further mistreatment
.
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