LONDON - The Premier League will be guaranteed at least five teams in the 2025-26 Champions League edition following Arsenal's stunning 3-0 win over Real Madrid in the first leg of their Champions League quarter-final tie on Tuesday.
The English top flight needed just one win from its clubs in any of the three European competitions to secure one of two extra berths - on top of the four granted to the top four in the table - awarded to the highest-ranked countries in the UEFA coefficient ranking.
In this system, teams earn two points for a win and one for a draw, adding up all the points obtained by each club and dividing by the number of clubs from that league participating in Europe.
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England could have up to seven teams in the upcoming Champions League if Aston Villa win this year's edition without qualifying through the Premier League table, and if either Manchester United or Tottenham Hotspur are crowned in the Europa League.
Italy lead the race for the second additional place, with Spain and Germany trailing behind.
Premier League leaders Liverpool and second-placed Arsenal look set to claim two of the five available berths, while Nottingham Forest hold a strong third position.
Chelsea, Newcastle United, Manchester City, Aston Villa, Brighton & Hove Albion, and 10th-place Bournemouth remain within eight points of each other.
Making history
Arsenal's Declan Rice struck two sublime free kicks to help secure a 3-0 win over Real Madrid in the Champions League quarter-final first leg on Tuesday.
When Arsenal winger Bukayo Saka was fouled in a central position 30 meters from goal just before the hour mark at The Emirates Stadium with the score 0-0, Rice consulted with skipper Martin Odegaard who told him to chip in a cross.
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That was also the message coming from coach Nicolas Jover on the touchline and, considering Rice had never scored a direct free kick in well over 300 senior career games, it seemed like good advice in a game of such high stakes.
But the 26-year-old Rice had other ideas and dispatched a right-footed shot that curled around the wall and back inside the post to beat goalkeeper Thibaut Courtois -- an effort that would have done watching Brazilian great Roberto Carlos proud.
Twelve minutes later, from a similar position, Rice was at it again, dipping another unstoppable effort into the top corner to become the first player to score two direct free kicks in the knockout rounds of the Champions League.
"I'm a bit speechless to honest with you. I'm so happy that I've scored those two goals for the club and to beat Real Madrid, such a historic club in this competition, it's such a big night for us," Rice said in a pitch-side interview.
Asked what was being said in the huddle before his first goal, Rice said the original plan was to cross the ball into the danger area as he is so adept at doing.
"We lined up with three at the back (post) for a reverse cross but Bukayo said if you feel it, and I thought 'you know what I'm going to take this', and when it went in it was the best feeling in the world.
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"It didn't make sense from that angle to cross the ball, it would have had to have been such a delicate pass so I just thought go for it.
"(Jover's) claiming it but he's told me to cross it! You have to make the most of these moments in games. I'm happy I took it because it was a magic moment.
"Then after the first one I just had the confidence (for the second one) and had nothing to lose."
Arsenal manager Mikel Arteta also looked stunned when Rice's first sizzler struck the net.
"That's the beauty of whoever invented this sport. We hadn't scored a (direct) free kick since September 2021. And tonight, against Real Madrid at home in the Champions League, we scored two in 13 minutes," the Spaniard said.
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"If there's a player who can do it, how clean he strikes it, it's Declan."
The third goal by Mikel Merino means Arsenal have one foot in the semi-finals for the first time since 2009 but Rice says nothing is decided yet against the record 15-times winners.
"Even though we're 3-0 up, the individual quality that they have and what they can produce is scary. And also it's the Bernabeu and in the Champions League, special things happen there for them. We're ready to go there and give it everything."