
Daily Cannon
·10 avril 2025
Arsenal’s superior work rate leaves Real Madrid trailing by kilometres

In partnership with
Yahoo sportsDaily Cannon
·10 avril 2025
Photo by Justin Setterfield/Getty Images
Mikel Arteta’s meticulous gameplan exposed Real Madrid’s most telling vulnerability in Arsenal’s historic 3–0 Champions League quarter-final first leg win: their lack of physical intensity.
As revealed by UEFA statistics and reported in Marca, Arsenal covered 12 kilometres more than their Spanish counterparts at the Emirates — a gap too wide to attribute to stylistic differences or tactical nuance alone.
Arteta’s approach was as pragmatic as it was ruthless. While much attention rightly focused on his tactical instructions to avoid errors in central areas — the zone where Jude Bellingham, Kylian Mbappe, and Vinícius Júnior can trigger Madrid’s devastating transitions — it was the relentless tempo demanded by Arsenal’s manager that broke the game open.
His players executed a physical and positional game Madrid couldn’t match.
Photo by Justin Setterfield/Getty Images
“Make it happen,” Arteta told his squad. It was more than a motivational slogan. It was a directive grounded in weeks of analysis, targeting Madrid’s recent patterns of fatigue. His staff had studied Los Blancos’ previous three league matches, noting that Carlo Ancelotti’s team had conceded eight goals across those fixtures.
At the Emirates, they conceded three more, and were outrun 113.56 km to 101.16 km.
While Ancelotti has often insisted that ‘Madrid do not need to run more than the opposition to win in Europe’, the numbers in this case were damning. Marca reported that even in Bayern’s loss to Inter the same night, the difference in distance covered was a mere two kilometres.
The chasm in London was nearly six times that.
“Football is not a race,” the Spanish outlet conceded, “but you have to fight and leave everything on the pitch.”
Photo by Justin Setterfield/Getty Images
The fatigue in Madrid’s midfield was evident. Luka Modrić, a generational maestro, was visibly outpaced by Declan Rice and Thomas Partey, while transitions that had threatened in the first half fizzled in the second.
Arteta repeatedly instructed his players to move the ball “side to side” — a simple but devastatingly effective strategy that pulled the legs out from under Madrid’s ageing midfield.
Modrić “looked his age,” according to the Irish Independent, unable to match the speed and energy of Arsenal’s pressing.
Photo by Justin Setterfield/Getty Images
Madrid’s declining physical output coincides with a more concerning trend: structural fragility. According to UEFA data cited in Marca, Real Madrid have faced more shots in the Champions League this season (79) than any other team remaining in the competition.
By contrast, Arsenal have conceded just 29 attempts — the second-best defensive record.
Madrid’s struggles have also not been mitigated by their usual firepower either. After a 1–0 defeat to Atlético in the group stage, followed by the 3–0 loss at Arsenal, this marks the first time since 2009 the club has gone two consecutive Champions League matches without scoring.
Photo by Justin Setterfield/Getty Images
Arteta’s plan worked not just because of superior ideas, but because Arsenal could execute them at a physical level Madrid could not live with.
The three words he repeated — “make it happen” — were no abstraction. They were a surgical exploitation of Madrid’s most vulnerable pressure point.
It was not just one of the best European nights for Arsenal. It was also one of their most intelligent.