The Carabao Cup semifinals are upon us as Arsenal take on Newcastle United on Tuesday, before Tottenham Hotspur host Liverpool on Wednesday. But with the two-legged ties completed on Feb. 3 and Feb. 4, and the final set to take place on March 16 at Wembley, which team wants the trophy most?
We have ranked the four teams in order of needing to win it and looked at the reasons why.
Liverpool‘s love affair with the Carabao Cup dates back to the 1980s, with the Anfield club’s haul of 10 titles rendering them the most successful team in the competition’s history.
That said, winning the trophy ranks pretty low on the club’s list of priorities. Arne Slot’s side are top of the Premier League by six points with a game in hand and also lead the way in the new 36-team Champions League table, with designs on both trophies.
Far from encountering a decline following Jürgen Klopp’s departure in the summer, Liverpool have hit new heights under Slot and are in a strong position to win at least one major honour this season.
Should Liverpool fail to lift either the Premier League or Champions League this term, winning the Carabao Cup would be scant consolation. However, last season’s final was one of the most memorable days of the Klopp era as a youthful, injury-ravaged Liverpool team toppled Chelsea at Wembley thanks to an extra-time winner from captain Virgil van Dijk.
Going on to retain the trophy this season could prove to be the extra spark Slot’s side need to propel them to further honours. — Lindop
Arsenal have done almost everything under Mikel Arteta … except win trophies on a regular basis. They have pushed Manchester City all the way in the Premier League for two years and reached the Champions League quarterfinals last season for the first time in 14 years.
Arteta won the 2020 FA Cup, but of the starting XI that beat Chelsea at Wembley in August that year, only one player (Kieran Tierney) is still at the club and he is now a peripheral figure who could leave this month. And so, Arteta’s Arsenal as we know it today have really won nothing as a group.
There is no denying that despite this, the Carabao Cup is bottom on their list of priorities, a reality reflected in the regularly rotated lineup Arteta selects as he focuses on the Premier League title he truly craves. But only last month, Arteta underlined how transformative a victory in this competition could be for his young squad.
“Touching the cup, and being in the semifinal and beating somebody in the final, it is that energy and it creates the right path to go and do something else, particularly because of the timing and when the competition is played in this country,” he said. “It gets that momentum going.” — Olley