Key events
1 min: Saints are on the front foot immediately, Fellows romping into space down the right. He takes one touch too many, though, allowing Lewis-Skelly to put a stop to his gallop. An early statement of intent from the hosts.
Arsenal get the ball rolling. Plenty of noise, the St Mary’s faithful marching in.
The teams are out! Saints in Bobby Stokes yellow and blue, Arsenal in Ted Drake red and white. Smoke billows across the pitch, the remnants of a pre-match pyro party. It’ll clear soon enough, and we’ll be off in a couple of minutes.
Mikel Arteta speaks to TNT Sports. “The boys really wanted to play immediately after the [Carabao Cup] final … today we have another opportunity … that is the beauty of football … we are looking forward to it … you have to adapt … full trust in the team … it is great to have [Martin Odegaard] back … [Kepa] deserves to play … he has been exceptional … [Southampton] are in a great run … we are desperate to go back to Wembley.”
Some more on that 1976 FA Cup win. The memories of Southampton’s manager that day are very much worth revisiting …
… as is this from Philip Millard: “Fun fact: my mum and Auntie Sadie were at some fancy hotel in London for a Masonic ladies night. Southampton were there, celebrating that cup win. In the days before ‘selfies’ and all that, they followed Mick Channon, who was hanging onto the cup, into the gents’ toilets so they get their hands on it. The cup, that is.”
Southampton’s 33-year-old boss Tonda Eckert cuts a calm figure as he talks to TNT Sports. “It is a big game for us … we had the whole week to prepare … we are up for it … we are confident that we have found some ways to bring our game onto the pitch … [Arsenal] is a good team … a lot of quality … not easy to press them … we need to stay switched on … to suffer some moments … to be brave … have the courage to play … find some moments on the ball … make it an open game.”
Arsenal get to wear their first-choice red and white this evening. This is because Southampton will be dressed in yellow and blue, commemorating the 50th anniversary of their victory in the 1976 FA Cup final. Those are the colours they sported at Wembley as Bobby Stokes scored late on for Lawrie McMenemy’s second-division side, shocking hot favourites Manchester United. The commemorative shirt has the signatures of all the players in the cup-winning team woven into the fabric, and only 1,976 individually numbered replica shirts have been produced. Fans have been encouraged to follow suit with the retro colour scheme tonight, so let’s see if they comply.
Southampton make five changes after the 2-0 Championship win over Oxford United. Nathan Wood, Cam Bragg, Caspar Jander, Léo Scienza and Ross Stewart come in for Cameron Archer, Shea Charles and Cyle Larin, who are benched, and Flynn Downes and captain Jack Stephens, who miss out altogether.
Arsenal make seven changes following the Carabao Cup final, the most eye-catching of which is a start for 16-year-old Max Dowman. Cristhian Mosquera, Myles Lewis-Skelly, Christian Nørgaard, Gabriel Martinelli, Gabriel Jesus and captain Martin Ødegaard also step up; William Saliba, Viktor Gyökeres and Martín Zubimendi are on the bench, while Declan Rice, Bukayo Saka, Piero Hincapié and Leandro Trossard are all absent.
The teams
Southampton: Peretz, Bree, Harwood-Bellis, Wood-Gordon, Manning, Bragg, Jander, Fellows, Azaz, Scienza, Stewart.
Subs: Long, Quarshie, Romeu, Charles, Edozie, Robinson, Archer, Oyekunle, Larin.
Arsenal: Arrizabalaga, White, Mosquera, Gabriel, Lewis-Skelly, Odegaard, Norgaard, Dowman, Havertz, Martinelli, Gabriel Jesus.
Subs: Raya, Saliba, Gyokeres, Madueke, Calafiori, Zubimendi, Harriman-Annous, O’Neill, Salmon.
Referee: Sam Barrott (West Yorkshire).
Preamble
Their unfortunate no-show at the League Cup final apart, Arsenal have taken some stopping this season. Liverpool, Aston Villa and Manchester United required dramatic late goals to best them in the Premier League and … er … that’s it. So on the face of thing, this should be a shoo-in for the leading club in England against second-tier opposition. Especially as Arsenal have won 45 of their last 48 FA Cup ties against teams from lower divisions; they’ve won 14 of their last 16 quarter-finals; tonight’s opponents Southampton have lost all of their last five quarter-finals against top-flight opposition; and Arsenal are four from five against the Saints in the FA Cup, a record that includes victory in the 2003 final.
But nothing’s ever that simple in the FA Cup. Arsenal may have that 80 percent record against Southampton in this competition, but it’s Saints who won the last meeting, 1-0 in January 2021. And while Arsenal are this season’s form team in England, Saints aren’t on a bad roll either, unbeaten in 14 games, having won six of their last seven. Fold in the fact that Arsenal’s victory at St Mary’s on the final day of last season was only their seventh win in 18 visits, at a venue where they’ve tasted defeat six times, and suddenly things aren’t quite so crystal clear.
You’d still expect the quadruple- treble-chasing Premier League leaders to prevail tonight; of course you would. But the FA Cup is fond of the odd surprise, and Arsenal have a crucial trip to Sporting Club coming up in three days’ time, so you just never know how this will pan out. The story begins at 8pm BST. It’s on!
Source: https://www.theguardian.com/football/live/2026/apr/04/southampton-v-arsenal-fa-cup-quarter-final-live