Manchester City and Arsenal will go head to head in the Carabao Cup final at Wembley on Sunday.
It promises to be a fascinating contest on the pitch between the Premier League’s current top two, while all eyes will also be on the battle on the touchline between Pep Guardiola and Mikel Arteta.
Here, the Press Association focuses on the two managers as they prepare to battle it out for major silverware this weekend.
Experience
Sunday’s clash pits the master in Guardiola, widely regarded as one of the greatest managers in football history, against one of his former apprentices.
Arteta spent three years as Guardiola’s assistant at City before taking over at Arsenal in late 2019.
Guardiola, 55 and in his 19th year in management, has vast experience with 39 trophies to his name, 18 of them since arriving at City in 2016.
Arteta, 43, is still to add to the FA Cup he won in his first season but has three Premier League runners-up finishes, and his team are in pole position to finally end their title drought this season.
Head-to-head record
Guardiola has the clear edge in past meetings between the pair, with eight victories from their 15 encounters in all competitions, alongside four defeats and three draws.
Arteta, however, has shaded their most recent encounters, with City having not beaten the Gunners for almost three years.
Of their last six clashes, Arsenal have won three (including the 2023 Community Shield, which was settled on penalties) with the other three being drawn.

Tactics
Guardiola’s style is well established and much imitated, having become a template for managers around the world.
Aspects have varied over the years as Guardiola has adapted to the players at his disposal and approach of the opposition but the core philosophy of dominating possession, building fluid attacks and pressing opponents remains.
Arteta has taken much from Guardiola and their shared Barcelona influences but has diverged in areas, playing a more direct game and – notably – exploiting his players’ strength at set-pieces.

Key battles
Erling Haaland remains Guardiola’s chief weapon despite a drop in his goalscoring output since the turn of the year.
Defences have handled him better of late but he can be a handful for the likes of William Saliba and Gabriel.
Bukayo Saka has also gone off the boil for Arsenal but Arteta will hope he can trouble City’s inconsistent defence.
In midfield, Rodri’s form has been steadily improving after he overcame last season’s serious knee injury and other fitness issues, and his battle with Declan Rice will be intriguing.

Wider implications
With the two clubs also competing for the Premier League title, the final potentially has significance beyond the silverware on offer.
Arsenal have led the race for much of the season and, having opened up a nine-point lead last weekend, victory would provide Arteta with another statement result against his former mentor ahead of next month’s crucial league meeting.
For Guardiola, lifting the trophy would offer further evidence that City remain capable of challenging on multiple fronts and could deliver a psychological boost in the title race.



