Arsenal reach Champions League group stage as Beth Mead inspires Häcken rout | Women’s Champions League


After the first leg it had looked far from certain, but Arsenal ensured there will be three Women’s Super League teams in the Champions League group stage for the first time with a comfortable victory over Häcken.

With Chelsea having secured a place as WSL champions and Manchester City having earned an 8-0 aggregate win over Paris FC, the pressure was on Arsenal to deliver, with Jonas Eidevall’s side needing to overturn a 1-0 deficit in the second round of qualifying.

Beforehand Eidevall twice had said Arsenal needed to be in the group stage, adding that it would be a failure if they did not qualify. Arsenal do need the group stage if they are to continue their progress on and off the pitch, with the club committed to playing all such games at the Emirates Stadium, but the head coach needed it too. Had his team failed to qualify, it would have been inevitable that his future would have been questioned.

These are the fine margins coaches are forced to operate within. But instead of talk of heads rolling, there were four goals, happy fans and now packed-out Champions League nights under the lights to look ­forward to. Arsenal go into Friday’s draw at noon.

Eidevall made three changes to the team that earned a point in a 2-2 draw with Manchester City on Sunday, with Lia Wälti, Alessia Russo and Beth Mead returning to the starting XI in place of Frida Maanum, Caitlin Foord and Kyra Cooney-Cross. Arsenal had been profligate against City, and were left ruing missed chances and two dropped points having taken an early lead. There could be no room for the same wastefulness at Meadow Park for the visit of Häcken. The Swedish side had already punished Arsenal for making that mistake against a ­resilient low block in Gothenburg.

Mak Lind made one change to the side that secured a huge 1-0 home win in the first leg, with Hikaru ­Kitagawa replacing the forward Alice Bergström.

Lia Wälti’s first-time strike from distance put Arsenal 1-0 ahead in the 23rd minute. Photograph: Dave Shopland/Shutterstock

Eidevall had called the trip to Gothenburg a “step backwards”. At Meadow Park Häcken were keen to turn that step into a slide, attacking early on with the intensity that they had finished the opening leg with.

Arsenal carved out their first big chance in the eighth minute, but Mead’s effort was straight at ­Jennifer Falk, who then prevented the forward from leaping on the rebound. Häcken should have extended their lead in the tie minutes later, when they wriggled the ball in from the right, but Anna Anvegård’s effort after it was pulled back to her slipped wide of the far post.

The visitors were having a lot of joy down Arsenal’s left side, with Katie McCabe’s advanced position leaving space in behind, but it was Arsenal who got the goal that levelled the tie rather than Häcken extending their advantage, with Wälti’s first-time strike from distance in the 23rd minute coming down off the bar and off the back of Falk and in.

The goal seemed to relax the shoulders of the players in red, who laboured hard in the relentless rain, and the momentum started to swing their way more definitively.

The goal that put them in front was messy but hard earned. Mead’s effort was blocked, Häcken cleared but only as far as Mariona Caldentey, who arrived from the left and her strike was clipped up and over Falk by the foot of Emma Östlund.

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Häcken instantly tested Arsenal after the break after Caldentey gifted the ball to Tabitha Tindell, who cut past Lotte Wubben-Moy but her shot did not trouble Manuela Zinsberger.

The goal that gave Arsenal breathing room came moments later. McCabe’s cross was headed back to her by Emily Fox and the Republic of Ireland captain put it into the middle for Mead, who flicked the ball over a defender and sent a vicious strike in as she spun.

With the tie stretching beyond them, Häcken had to go for it, leaving room for Arsenal to manoeuvre in the final third. The home side had the ball in the back of the net again, but Stina Blackstenius was judged to have been offside in the buildup.

Arsenal’s fourth goal arrived after the changes, as the substitutes Foord and Maanum combined, with the former sending in the cross that the Norwegian forward turned in.

In the end it was a routine victory, but Arsenal need to do better at ­lifting the pressure off themselves far sooner.



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