Gabriel Batistuta scored the winner for Fiorentina at Wembley in 1999
For the first time
in 16 years, Arsenal could miss out on the last 16 of the Champions
League. We look back on the previous exit and how the latest
disappointment could affect the mentality of the club this time
around...
Arsenal's elimination from the Champions League in November
1999 was a blow. The Gunners had been three points clear of the team in
third at the halfway stage of the group but back-to-back defeats at
their temporary European home of Wembley did for them. At least there
was comfort in the identity of their vanquishers.Rivaldo and Luis Figo were among Barcelona's goalscorers in a 4-2 win that heaped the pressure on Arsene Wenger's side for their home tie against Fiorentina. Gabriel Batistuta - far more than just the Jamie Vardy of his day - blasted home the game's only goal to put the Italian team on course for qualification and a win over AIK on the final matchday was not enough for Arsenal.
AIK v Arsenal, Nov '99
Manninger; Dixon, Luzhny (Vivas), Upson, Winterburn; Ljungberg, Vieira, Petit (Hughes), Overmars; Kanu, Suker (Malz).
Playing at Wembley was seen as a mitigating factor, inspiring the visitors as much as the nominal hosts, but 16 years on there can be no excuses. Not having faced a Dinamo Zagreb that had picked up one point in six Champions League games prior to beating Arsenal. Not when Alfred Finnbogason of Olympiakos was their conqueror at the Emirates Stadium. Barcelona and Batigol, this was not.
Arsenal's record
| Champions League season | Round of elimination |
|---|---|
| 2014/15 | Last 16 |
| 2013/14 | Last 16 |
| 2012/13 | Last 16 |
| 2011/12 | Last 16 |
| 2010/11 | Last 16 |
| 2009/10 | Quarter-final |
| 2008/09 | Semi-final |
| 2007/08 | Quarter-final |
| 2006/07 | Last 16 |
| 2005/06 | Final |
| 2004/05 | Last 16 |
| 2003/04 | Quarter-final |
| 2002/03 | Second group stage |
| 2001/02 | Second group stage |
| 2000/01 | Quarter-final |
Arsene Wenger's team suffered a disappointing defeat in Zagreb
Per Mertesacker is dejected as Arsenal concede a critical third goal to Olympiakos
Nicholas predicts exit
Charlie Nicholas is tipping Arsenal to fail to qualify for the knockout stages.
Problems in Piraeus would represent a disturbance to this status quo. For Wenger's critics, it's evidence of further fallibility. Even for Wenger's supporters, it's a reminder that these runs cannot go on indefinitely. A side on the slide or a welcome wake-up call? Arsenal's second-place finish in 1999/2000 - and their journey to the final of that season's UEFA Cup - at least offers hope that the rest of their season need not go in the same direction.
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