UEFA Europa League Official Live football scores & stats
Get
UEFA.com works better on other browsers
For the best possible experience, we recommend using Chrome, Firefox or Microsoft Edge.

Arsenal vs Sporting CP facts

Previous meetings, form guides, links and trivia ahead of the first leg of the Europa League round of 16 second leg.

Arsenal defender Oleksandr Zinchenko vies with Marcus Edwards of Sporting CP
Arsenal defender Oleksandr Zinchenko vies with Marcus Edwards of Sporting CP Arsenal FC via Getty Images

Premier League leaders Arsenal have their sights set on a fourth UEFA Europa League quarter-final in six seasons as they host Sporting CP with the teams level at 2-2 after an eventful round of 16 first leg in Lisbon.

Arsenal gained direct access to the round of 16 with a first-place finish in UEFA Europa League Group A, winning five of their matches to pip PSV Eindhoven to top spot by two points. It was the fifth time the Gunners had won their UEFA Europa League section, equalling Salzburg's competition record.

Sporting kicked off their 2022/23 European campaign in the UEFA Champions League and made a strong start in Group D before falling away after two matches and only just snatching the consolation of third place in the final minute of Matchday 6. They then overcame Midtjylland in the UEFA Europa League knockout play-offs, equalising late in the first leg to draw 1-1 at home before a 4-0 win against their ten-man hosts in Denmark, Pedro Gonçalves scoring twice after captain Sebastián Coates – who is suspended for this match – had opened the scoring with his second goal of the tie.

Previous meetings

An unfortunate Hidemasa Morita own goal allowed Arsenal to draw 2-2 at the Estádio José Alvalade on 9 March, Sporting having recovered from conceding a header at a corner to William Saliba (22) by scoring one of their own through Gonçalo Inácio (34) then taking the lead with a close-range strike from Paulinho – his fourth in Europe against English opposition.

The clubs had never met in UEFA competition before being drawn together in the 2018/19 UEFA Europa League group stage, where Arsenal were 1-0 winners on Matchday 3 in Lisbon with a late Danny Welbeck goal before the sides drew the return 0-0 in London a fortnight later. The Gunners would go on to top the group – and later reach the final – while Sporting finished second having, like Arsenal, done the double over both Qarabağ and Vorskla Poltava.

The clubs did also meet in the non-UEFA 1969/70 Inter-Cities Fairs Cup second round, Arsenal winning 3-0 on aggregate (0-0 a, 3-0 h) en route to lifting the trophy.

The Gunners have won the last two of their three two-legged UEFA ties against Portuguese clubs, the most recent a 4-3 aggregate success against Benfica in the 2020/21 UEFA Europa League round of 32, when, with both legs played at neutral venues, they followed a 1-1 draw in Rome with a 3-2 win in Piraeus.

Arsenal’s record in London against Portuguese clubs is W5 D1 L1. They had not conceded in five successive fixtures against visitors from the country (W4 D1) until the most recent such encounter, a last-gasp 3-2 win against Vitória SC in the group stage of the 2019/20 UEFA Europa League in which current Sporting forward Marcus Edwards opened the scoring for the visitors.

Sporting's 28 UEFA fixtures against English clubs have yielded ten wins and 11 defeats. They have won only two of their 14 games away to English sides (D5 L7), the most recent success a 3-2 victory at Middlesbrough in the 2004/05 UEFA Cup round of 16 first leg. Their record in England since then is D4 L5, their last three matches there having all resulted in draws, most recently 1-1 against Tottenham on Matchday 5 of this season’s UEFA Champions League.

The Lisbon club suffered their joint heaviest European home defeat in the first leg of last season's UEFA Champions League round of 16, 0-5 against Manchester City, which, with a goalless draw in the return, led to their first aggregate defeat in nine two-legged UEFA ties against English opposition.

Form guide

Arsenal

Absent from Europe in 2021/22 for the first time in 26 years, Arsenal are participating in their fifth UEFA Europa League campaign in six seasons, Mikel Arteta's side having qualified by finishing fifth in last term's Premier League, 24 points behind champions Manchester City.

The Gunners' fifth involvement in the UEFA Europa League group stage this season produced the same result as the previous four as they finished top of their section, doing the double over both FC Zürich (2-1 a, 1-0 h) and Bodø/Glimt (3-0 h, 1-0 a) and trading home wins with PSV (1-0 h, 0-2 a). They finished runners-up to London rivals Chelsea in the 2018/19 final and reached the last four in both 2017/18 and last time out in 2020/21, when, having won all six games in the group stage, they were ultimately knocked out by eventual winners Villarreal (1-2 a, 0-0 h). Arsenal's only UEFA trophy success was the 1993/94 UEFA Cup Winners' Cup.

Having lost seven successive round of 16 ties in the UEFA Champions League from 2010/11 to 2016/17, the Gunners have subsequently won all three at the same stage of the UEFA Europa League, eliminating AC Milan in 2017/18 (2-0 a, 3-1 h), Rennes in 2018/19 (1-3 a, 3-0 h) and Olympiacos in 2020/21 (3-1 a, 0-1 h).

While the Gunners' overall UEFA Europa League home record, including the win against Benfica in neutral Piraeus in the 2020/21 round of 32, is W19 D5 L4, they have failed to win any of their last four knockout phase matches at the Arsenal Stadium, losing twice to Olympiacos before draws against Slavia Praha and Villarreal.

Arsenal have won five of the seven UEFA ties in which they have drawn the away leg first, including the three most recent, the last of which was that contest with Benfica two seasons ago. This is the first time they have drawn the opening away leg 2-2.

Sporting

Champions of Portugal in 2020/21 – their first league title in 19 years – Sporting finished second to Porto last season while retaining the Portuguese League Cup. Led by title-winning boss Rúben Amorim, the Lions also reached the UEFA Champions League knockout phase for the first time in 13 years before going out to Manchester City.

Sporting made it back-to-back UEFA Champions League group campaigns for only the fourth time this season and looked set to repeat their 2021/22 feat when they won their first two games – 3-0 at Eintracht Frankfurt and 2-0 at home to Spurs – but successive defeats by Marseille (1-4 a, 0-2 h) put a brake on their progress. Although all options were open going into Matchday 6, they lost 1-2 at home to Frankfurt and only edged Marseille into third spot, thus prolonging their European season, thanks to a last-gasp winner from Tottenham at the Stade Vélodrome.

Having seen off Midtjylland, Sporting are participating in the UEFA Europa League round of 16 for the fourth time. They have won two of their three previous ties at this juncture, all of them closely contested. After losing to Atlético de Madrid on away goals in the inaugural 2009/10 competition (0-0 a, 2-2 h), they overcame Manchester City, also on away goals, in 2011/12 (1-0 h, 2-3 a) and Viktoria Plzeň after extra time in 2017/18 (2-0 h, 1-2 a). Their best run in the competition was to the semi-finals in 2011/12, and they were also UEFA Cup runners-up in 2005, losing the final 3-1 to CSKA Moskva in their home stadium.

Sporting's record on the road in the UEFA Europa League knockout phase is W2 D5 L8, that knockout play-off victory in Denmark ending a four-match winless sequence (D1 L3). They have lost just two of their last seven European away fixtures (W3 D2), scoring 11 goals in the three victories.

The Lisbon side have lost ten of the 13 previous UEFA ties in which they drew the first leg at home, though their three aggregate successes have come in the last four such contests, most recently last month's comprehensive turnaround against Midtjylland. Their last aggregate defeat came in their only previous tie with a 2-2 first-leg scoreline – on away goals against Fiorentina in the 2009/10 UEFA Champions League play-offs (1-1 a).

UEFA Europa League squad changes

Arsenal

In: Jorginho (Chelsea), Jakub Kiwior (Spezia), Leandro Trossard (Brighton)
Out: Cédric Soares (Fulham, loan), Marquinhos (Norwich, loan), Albert Sambi Lokonga (Crystal Palace, loan)

Sporting

In: Héctor Bellerín (Barcelona), Ousmane Diomande (Midtjylland), Mateo Tanlongo (Rosario Central)
Out:
Jesús Alcántar (Necaxa, end loan), José Marsà (Sporting Gijón, loan), Pedro Porro (Tottenham, loan)

Links and trivia 

Sent on loan to Sporting by Barcelona in January, Héctor Bellerín joined Arsenal from the Blaugrana at 16 in July 2011. He made 239 first-team appearances and scored nine goals for the Gunners, winning the FA Cup three times, before returning to Barça last summer after a 2021/22 season on loan at Real Betis. He also had a brief loan spell at Watford in 2013/14.

North London-born Edwards joined Arsenal's arch-rivals Tottenham in 2006 aged eight, signing his first professional contract ten years later. He made only one first-team appearance, however, and left Spurs for Vitória SC three years later. The former England youth international also had a loan spell at Norwich in 2018.

Edwards scored Sporting's goal in the 1-1 draw at Tottenham in this season's UEFA Champions League group stage.

Other Sporting players who have played in England are Coates (Liverpool 2011–13, Sunderland 2014–16), Pedro Gonçalves (Wolves 2017–19), Francisco Trincão (Wolves 2021/22 loan) and Rochinha (Bolton 2015 loan)

Brazilian Arthur Gomes came off the bench on his Sporting and European debut to score the second goal in a 2-0 home win against Spurs on Matchday 2 of this season's UEFA Champions League. He was assisted by Paulinho, who had scored Sporting's opener.

Paulinho also scored for Braga in 3-3 home draws against Wolves and Leicester City in the UEFA Europa League group stage.

Fábio Vieira made 76 appearances for Porto, registering ten goals and 18 assists over three seasons (2019/20–2021/22) before joining Arsenal last summer. During that period he featured seven times against Sporting with the record W3 D3 L1, scoring past Antonio Adán and setting up another goal in a 2-2 home Liga draw in February 2022.

Arsenal's Takehiro Tomiyasu and Sporting's Morita are Japan team-mates, as are Thomas Partey (Arsenal) and Fatawu Issahaku (Sporting) for Ghana. All four players were in their respective nations' 2022 FIFA World Cup squad.

Arsenal maintained their five-point lead at the top of the Premier League with a 3-0 win at Fulham on Sunday, while Sporting registered a fourth successive victory in the Portuguese Liga, beating Boavista 3-0 in Lisbon.

Penalty shoot-outs

Arsenal's record in four UEFA penalty shoot-outs is W2 L2:
4-5 v Valencia, 1979/80 European Cup Winners' Cup final
3-2 v Sampdoria, 1994/95 UEFA Cup Winners' Cup semi-final
1-4 v Galatasaray, 1999/2000 UEFA Cup final
7-6 v Roma, 2008/09 UEFA Champions League round of 16

Sporting's record in two UEFA penalty shoot-outs is W0 L2:
3-5 v Dinamo Minsk, 1984/85 UEFA Cup second round
3-4 v Napoli, 1989/90 UEFA Cup first round