Arsenal’s Kepa Arrizabalaga eager for more League Cup heroics against Chelsea

Arsenal’s Spanish goalkeeper Kepa Arrizabalaga has set his sights on eliminating former club Chelsea from the League Cup following his decisive performance in Tuesday’s quarter-final victory against Crystal Palace. The Gunners secured their semi-final berth through an intense 8-7 penalty shootout triumph after regulation time ended 1-1 at Emirates Stadium, with Kepa’s crucial save against Maxence Lacroix’s spot-kick proving the difference.

The 31-year-old shot-stopper, who spent seven seasons with Chelsea before transferring to North London during the preseason, now stands to potentially deny his former team a place in the campaign’s first major final. Having made all three of his Arsenal appearances exclusively in the League Cup, Kepa emphasized the team’s trophy ambitions: “Right now, if you want a trophy, and that’s something that we want, we have to fight against good teams. Both semi-finals are big games, and it’s going to be tough, but we’ll prepare well.”

Arsenal’s path to Wembley will feature a two-legged confrontation with Chelsea, commencing at Stamford Bridge on January 14th followed by the return fixture at Emirates Stadium on February 3rd. The Gunners nearly secured victory in regulation time before Marc Guehi’s late equalizer—marking the third instance in Arsenal’s last five matches where their defense conceded during or beyond the 90th minute.

Kepa, currently deputizing for first-choice keeper David Raya, acknowledged the concerning pattern: “We’ve conceded in a couple of games in the last minute so it’s something that we have to look at.” Reflecting on the match dynamics, the Spanish international noted, “We made a huge effort. We should have scored a couple in the first half. We played so well. Then the second half was more like 50-50.”

The goalkeeper praised his teammates’ composure during the shootout, stating: “Credit to the guys, they took amazing penalties. They kept us in the game, and they gave me an opportunity to make a save.” He elaborated on the mental transition required after the late equalizer: “Emotionally, you have to be focused, be strong, because obviously when you concede in the last minute and then you have to go to penalties, you need to 100 percent be focused on your penalty takers. It was a change of mindset, and it worked.”