UEFA CHAMPIONS LEAGUE - 2013/14 SEASON MATCH PRESS KITS - London Tuesday 22 October 2013 20.45CET (19.45 local time) Arsenal FC Group F - Matchday 3 Last updated 03/09/2014 16:58CET

UEFA CHAMPIONS LEAGUE OFFICIAL SPONSORS

Previous meetings 2 Match background 3 Match facts 5 Squad list 6 Head coach 7 Match officials 8 Fixtures and results 10 Match-by-match lineups 11 Group Standings 12 Competition facts 13 Team facts 15 Legend 18

1 Arsenal FC - Borussia Dortmund Tuesday 22 October 2013 - 20.45CET (19.45 local time) Match press kit Arsenal Stadium, London

Previous meetings

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2 Arsenal FC - Borussia Dortmund Tuesday 22 October 2013 - 20.45CET (19.45 local time) Match press kit Arsenal Stadium, London Match background

Arsenal FC put their perfect record in Group F on the line against last year's runners-up Borussia Dortmund, the second time the sides have been paired together in the UEFA Champions League in three seasons. • The London side followed up their win at Olympique de Marseille by beating SSC Napoli on matchday two. The Italian club had overcome Dortmund in their first fixture, the German club bouncing back by beating Marseille. Previous meetings • The teams last met in 2011/12 when two Robin van Persie goals gave Arsenal the points at home despite Shinji Kagawa's added-time response. • The teams at the Arsenal Stadium on 23 November 2011 were: Arsenal: Szczęsny, Koscielny (Djourou 83), Mertesacker, Vermaelen, André Santos, Song, Arteta, Ramsey, Walcott (Diaby 85), Van Persie, (Benayoun 74). Dortmund: Weidenfeller, Piszczek, Felipe Santana, Hummels, Schmelzer, Kehl (Barrios 64), Bender (Leitner 25), Götze (Perišić 29), Grosskreutz, Kagawa, Lewandowski. • Van Persie had also pointed the Gunners towards a matchday one victory at the BVB Stadion Dortmund before Ivan Perišić volleyed a superb late equaliser. • The teams crossed swords in the 2002/03 first group stage, Arsenal winning 2-0 in London and Dortmund turning the tables with a 2-1 win in Germany. • Arsenal faced two sides last season, losing 2-0 at home to FC Schalke 04 before drawing 2-2 away. That defeat ended the Gunners' run of six successive home wins against German visitors and also a sequence of 45 home games unbeaten when facing non-English opponents. • That was followed by another home reverse as FC Bayern München won 3-1 in the round of 16. Arsène Wenger's team – in the knockout rounds for the 13th successive time – rallied to win 2-0 in Munich but went out on away goals. • Arsenal's home record against German clubs is W9 D1 L3; overall it is W13 D5 L8. • Dortmund drew 1-1 at Manchester City FC on their way to winning Group D last season and progressed to the final which took them back to England to face domestic rivals Bayern at Wembley Stadium. They lost 2-1 however, to Arjen Robben's late goal. • Dortmund beat Liverpool FC 2-1 in the final of the 1965/66 European Cup Winners' Cup having disposed of West Ham United FC 5-2 on aggregate in the semi-finals. Match background • The Gunners are in the group stage for the 16th season in a row. For the sixth time in eight campaigns they had to negotiate a qualifying round, dispatching Fenerbahçe SK 5-0 on aggregate in the play-offs with Aaron Ramsey scoring three times. • Dortmund are in their ninth UEFA Champions League campaign. They were victorious in the 1997 edition and last season was their most successful campaign since then, remaining unbeaten until the semi-final second leg when they lost 2-0 at Real Madrid CF. They still won the tie 4-3 on aggregate after Robert Lewandowski scored all four in a 4-1 first-leg win in Dortmund. • An earlier visit to Santiago Bernabéu in last season's group stage had ended 2-2 while apart from the draw at Manchester City they also won 4-1 at AFC Ajax in the group stage. In the knockout rounds they drew 2-2 at FC Shakhtar Donetsk and 0-0 at Málaga CF, although this season's matchday one defeat in Naples means they have lost their last two UEFA Champions League away matches and are without a win in their last four. Team ties • Tomáš Rosický played for Dortmund between 2000 and 2006, scoring 19 goals in 149 Bundesliga games. • Per Mertesacker, Mesut Özil and Lukas Podolski are team-mates with , Marcel Schmelzer, Kevin Grosskreutz, Sebastian Kehl, İlkay Gündoğan and Marco Reus in the German national side. • Arsenal goalkeepers Łukasz Fabiański and Wojciech Szczęsny play for Poland along with Jakub Błaszczykowski, Robert Lewandowski and Łukasz Piszczek. • Jack Wilshere appeared as a second-half substitute in England's 2-0 win over Poland in a FIFA 2014 World Cup qualifier at Wembley on 15 October. Błaszczykowski and Szczęsny played the full game for the visitors, Lewandowski was replaced at half-time, and Kieran Gibbs was an unused substitute for the hosts. • Podolski won the 2007/08 DFB-Pokal with Bayern in a 2-1 win against Dortmund after extra time. He scored twice against Dortmund in 14 encounters during his eight years with 1. FC Köln and Bayern between 2004 and 2012 with

3 Arsenal FC - Borussia Dortmund Tuesday 22 October 2013 - 20.45CET (19.45 local time) Match press kit Arsenal Stadium, London the record W3 D3 L8. • Özil played for Schalke and SV Werder Bremen from 2006 to 2010. He made eight appearances against Dortmund (W3 D2 L3) and scored for Bremen in a 1-1 draw on 8 November 2009. • Özil faced Dortmund four times for Real Madrid in last season's UEFA Champions League. In the group stage his 89th minute free-kick earned a 2-2 draw. • Mertesacker scored two goals in 16 appearances against Dortmund during his career with Hannover 96 and SV Werder Bremen between 2003 and 2011. His record was W5 D3 L8. • Oliver Giroud scored France's opening goal in their 2-1 friendly win against Germany in Bremen on 29 February 2012. The home team included Hummels and Reus, with Schmelzer on the bench. • Szczęsny played for Poland in a 2-2 draw – Błaszczykowski and Lewandowski scoring the goals – with Schmelzer's Germany in a September 2011 friendly in Gdansk. Hummels was on the German bench.

4 Arsenal FC - Borussia Dortmund Tuesday 22 October 2013 - 20.45CET (19.45 local time) Match press kit Arsenal Stadium, London Match facts

Arsenal UEFA milestones and competition statistics • This is Arsenal's 16th successive UEFA Champions League campaign. General information • Santi Cazorla (ankle, out since 1 September) and Bacary Sagna (hamstring, 1 October) returned on Saturday as Arsenal beat Norwich City FC 4-1. Mathieu Flamini went off before half-time after a clash of heads. • Arsenal have collected more points (59) and wins (18) in the in 2013 than any other side. • Aaron Ramsey has scored nine goals in 12 games for Arsenal this season (and two in four for Wales); he managed five in 91 club appearances in the previous two campaigns. • Arsenal's ten-match winning run ended with a 1-1 draw at West Bromwich Albion FC on 6 October, though the London side needed penalties to edge out West Brom in the League Cup 11 days earlier. Before the West Brom draw, Arsenal had won a club record equalling eight successive Premier League away games. • Theo Walcott has not played since having surgery on his abdomen on 25 September. Abou Diaby has been sidelined since March with a knee injury; Lukas Podolski (hamstring) and Alex Oxlade-Chamberlain (knee) are also out. International duty • Thirteen Arsenal players were on senior international duty last week: Jack Wilshere, Kieran Gibbs (England), Mesut Özil, Per Mertesacker (Germany), Nacho Monreal (Spain), Thomas Vermaelen (Belgium), Ramsey (Wales), Wojciech Szczęsny, Łukasz Fabiański (Poland), Olivier Giroud, Laurent Koscielny (France), Nicklas Bendtner (Denmark), Emmanuel Frimpong (Ghana). • Özil scored as a Germany team also including Mertesacker beat the Republic of Ireland 3-0 on 11 October to seal a FIFA World Cup place. He was on target again four days later – on his 25th birthday – in a 5-3 victory over Sweden. • Wilshere and Szczęsny (England 2-0 Poland) and Ramsey and Vermaelen (Belgium 1-1 Wales) faced each other last Tuesday, Ramsey scoring a late equaliser against a Belgium side that had already sealed a spot at Brazil 2014. • Bendtner scored twice in Denmark's 2-2 draw with Italy on 11 October, Giroud matching that personal tally in France's 6-0 friendly victory over Australia. Dortmund UEFA milestones and competition statistics • Jürgen Klopp serves the second of his two-match touchline ban but Roman Weidenfeller is available after serving his suspension on matchday two following his red card at SSC Napoli. General information • Marcel Schmelzer (thigh) was an unused substitute on Saturday and Sven Bender (groin, back), Marco Reus (ankle) and Nuri Şahin (ankle) all returned following knocks in a 1-0 win against Hannover 96. • Mats Hummels was sent off as Dortmund suffered their first league defeat of the season on 5 October, going down 2-0 at VfL Borussia Mönchengladbach. Sokratis Papastathopoulos missed the game with an adductor strain. Dortmund had broken the deadlock in a club record 15 successive league outings before then. • Sebastian Kehl has been out since suffering an ankle ligament injury in training on 15 September. Łukasz Piszczek, out until at least the end of November, had hip and groin surgery during the summer. İlkay Gündoğan has been sidelined since mid-August due to compression of the spine. • Dortmund began the season with four successive Bundesliga wins for the first time since 2001/02, when they went on to secure the title. They stretched the winning start to five, a club record, before a 1-1 draw at 1. FC Nürnberg. International duty • Six Dortmund players were on senior duty during the international break: Hummels (Germany), Jakub Błaszczykowski, Robert Lewandowski (Poland), Henrikh Mkhitaryan (Armenia), Papastathopoulos (Greece), Mitchell Langerak (Australia). Bender, Reus and Nuri Şahin (ankle) all pulled out through injury. • Hummels started as Germany, already through to the 2014 FIFA World Cup, won 5-3 against Sweden last Tuesday. Mkhitaryan scored Armenia's second goal in a 2-2 draw with Italy in Naples. • Langerak, who has not been breached in five Dortmund appearances this term, conceded six goals on his debut for Australia on 11 October. Olivier Giroud scored twice in a 6-0 friendly win for France in Paris.

5 Arsenal FC - Borussia Dortmund Tuesday 22 October 2013 - 20.45CET (19.45 local time) Match press kit Arsenal Stadium, London Squad list

6 Arsenal FC - Borussia Dortmund Tuesday 22 October 2013 - 20.45CET (19.45 local time) Match press kit Arsenal Stadium, London Head coach Arsenal FC: Arsène Wenger Date of birth: 22 October 1949 Nationality: French Playing career: AS Mutzig, FC Mulhouse, AS Vauban, RC Strasbourg Coaching career: RC Strasbourg (assistant coach), AS Cannes (assistant coach), AS Nancy-Lorraine, AS Monaco FC, Nagoya Grampus Eight, Arsenal FC • Not the most successful of players, Arsène Wenger has more than made up for that as a coach, turning Arsenal into one of Europe's top teams. • Born in Strasbourg, Wenger worked at Strasbourg and Cannes before Nancy-Lorraine offered him his big break. He impressed sufficiently to be offered the job as coach of Monaco in 1987. • Within a year Monaco scooped the French title and Wenger the Coach of the Year award. He led the side to 1991 French Cup glory, then the 1992 European Cup Winners' Cup final where they lost to SV Werder Bremen. After reportedly turning down France and FC Bayern München, he moved on to Japan and enjoyed huge success with Grampus Eight. • Appointed by Arsenal in September 1996, Wenger became the first non-Briton to win the Premier League, in 1998, adding the first of four FA Cup triumphs. The Gunners lost the 2000 UEFA Cup final to Galatasaray AŞ but claimed another domestic double in 2002, and in 2003/04 played some thrilling attacking football en route to becoming the first team since 1889 to negotiate an English top-flight season unbeaten. • Wenger nearly topped all his achievements by taking Arsenal to the 2006 UEFA Champions League final, only for FC Barcelona to come from behind to win 2-1. Arsenal's move to their new stadium later that year was also instigated by Wenger. Borussia Dortmund: Jürgen Klopp Date of birth: 16 June 1967 Nationality: German Playing career: SV Glatten, TuS Ergenzingen, 1. FC Pforzheim, , Viktoria Sindlingen, Rot-Weiss Frankfurt, 1. FSV Mainz 05 Coaching career: 1. FSV Mainz 05, Borussia Dortmund • Having spent his early career in the lower leagues and failed to break into Eintracht's first team, Klopp turned professional with Mainz, starting off as a striker before becoming a no-nonsense defender. Never played in the top flight but made 325 second-division appearances from 1990 to 2001, setting a club record by scoring 52 goals. • 'Kloppo', as he is known in Germany, was appointed Mainz's caretaker coach on 28 February 2001, helping the club avoid relegation to the third tier. Duly won a permanent contract and built Mainz into one of the strongest clubs in the 2. Bundesliga; narrowly missed out on promotion in 2002 and 2003, Mainz losing out to Eintracht by a single goal in the latter campaign. • Finally took Mainz into the top flight for the first time in 2004 and kept them in the Bundesliga until 2007, taking them into the 2005/06 UEFA Cup via the UEFA Fair Play ranking – they lost to eventual winners Sevilla FC in the first round. • After another promotion near-miss in 2007/08 Klopp – whose enthusiasm and passion, plus work as a TV pundit, have made him popular all over Germany – left for Dortmund. Took them to sixth in his first season, led them into the UEFA Europa League the next year and then, with a squad full of exciting young talent, oversaw league title wins in 2010/11 and 2011/12, adding the German Cup in the latter campaign. • Earned even greater admiration in the 2012/13 season as he steered Dortmund all the way to the UEFA Champions League final at Wembley, where they lost to FC Bayern München.

7 Arsenal FC - Borussia Dortmund Tuesday 22 October 2013 - 20.45CET (19.45 local time) Match press kit Arsenal Stadium, London Match officials

Referee Jonas Eriksson (SWE) Assistant referees Mathias Klasenius (SWE) , Daniel Wärnmark (SWE) Additional assistant referees Stefan Johannesson (SWE) , Markus Strömbergsson (SWE) Fourth official Daniel Gustavsson (SWE) UEFA Delegate Nebojša Ivkovic (SRB) UEFA Referee observer Oguz Sarvan (TUR)

Referee UEFA Champions Name Date of birth UEFA matches League matches Jonas Eriksson 28/03/1974 19 84

Jonas Eriksson Referee since: 1988 First division: 2000 FIFA badge: 2002

Tournaments: 2014 FIFA World Cup, 2013 FIFA U-20 World Cup, UEFA EURO 2012, 2006 UEFA European Under- 19 Championship, 2003 UEFA-CAF Meridian Cup, 2002 UEFA European Under-17 Championship

Finals N/A

UEFA Champions League matches involving teams from the two countries involved in this match Date Competition Stage Home Away Result Venue 25/11/2009 UCL GS FC Porto Chelsea FC 0-1 Porto 09/03/2011 UCL R16 FC Schalke 04 Valencia CF 3-1 Gelsenkirchen 14/09/2011 UCL GS Manchester City FC SSC Napoli 1-1 Manchester 28/09/2011 UCL GS Olympique de Marseille Borussia Dortmund 3-0 Marseille 01/11/2011 UCL GS Valencia CF 3-1 Valencia 24/10/2012 UCL GS Arsenal FC FC Schalke 04 0-2 London 12/03/2013 UCL R16 FC Schalke 04 Galatasaray AŞ 2-3 Gelsenkirchen 03/04/2013 UCL QF Málaga CF Borussia Dortmund 0-0 Malaga

Other matches involving teams from either of the two countries involved in this match Date Competition Stage Home Away Result Venue 30/04/2002 U17 GS-FT Germany Hungary 6-2 Slagelse 07/05/2002 U17 SF England Switzerland 0-3 Herfolge 23/05/2004 U19 2QR Germany Slovakia 2-1 Trnava 16/11/2004 U21 QR Germany Poland 1-1 Cottbus 11/11/2005 U21 PO England France 1-1 London 28/09/2006 UEL R1 Bayer 04 Leverkusen FC Sion 3-1 Leverkusen 25/10/2007 UEL GS Bayer 04 Leverkusen Toulouse FC 1-0 Leverkusen 29/11/2007 UEL GS SC Braga FC Bayern München 1-1 Braga

8 Arsenal FC - Borussia Dortmund Tuesday 22 October 2013 - 20.45CET (19.45 local time) Match press kit Arsenal Stadium, London

Date Competition Stage Home Away Result Venue 21/02/2008 UEL R32 Tottenham Hotspur FC SK Slavia Praha 1-1 London 06/11/2008 UEL GS VfL Wolfsburg sc Heerenveen 5-1 Wolfsburg 26/02/2009 UEL R32 AC Milan SV Werder Bremen 2-2 Milan 18/03/2010 UEL R16 VfL Wolfsburg FC Rubin Kazan 2-1 Wolfsburg 01/04/2010 UEL QF SL Benfica Liverpool FC 2-1 Lisbon 21/10/2010 UEL GS Borussia Dortmund Paris Saint-Germain 1-1 Dortmund 13/06/2012 EURO GS-FT Netherlands Germany 1-2 Kharkiv 15/08/2012 FRIE. R1 Germany Argentina 1-3 21/02/2013 UEL R32 Hannover 96 FC Anji Makhachkala 1-1 Hannover 26/03/2013 WC QR Montenegro England 1-1 Podgorica 02/05/2013 UEL SF Chelsea FC FC Basel 1893 3-1 London 30/08/2013 SCUP Final FC Bayern München Chelsea FC 2-2 Prague

9 Arsenal FC - Borussia Dortmund Tuesday 22 October 2013 - 20.45CET (19.45 local time) Match press kit Arsenal Stadium, London Fixtures and results

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10 Arsenal FC - Borussia Dortmund Tuesday 22 October 2013 - 20.45CET (19.45 local time) Match press kit Arsenal Stadium, London Match-by-match lineups

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11 Arsenal FC - Borussia Dortmund Tuesday 22 October 2013 - 20.45CET (19.45 local time) Match press kit Arsenal Stadium, London Group Standings

12 Arsenal FC - Borussia Dortmund Tuesday 22 October 2013 - 20.45CET (19.45 local time) Match press kit Arsenal Stadium, London Competition facts

UEFA Champions League final: Did you know? • Spain are the most successful nation with seven triumphs, one more than Italy. Spain's wins – 1998, 2000, 2002, 2006, 2009, 2011 and 2014 – came from 11 final dates while Italy were victorious in 1994, 1996, 2003, 2007 and 2010 from their 11 appearances. England emerged victorious in 1999, 2005, 2008 and 2012 and were losing finalists in 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009 and 2011 while Germany were winners in 1997, 2001 and 2013 and runners-up in 1999, 2002, 2010, 2012 and 2013. • No team has played in more finals than AC Milan, who made their sixth appearance in 2007. Real Madrid CF, however have four final victories (1998, 2000, 2002, 2014), one more than both AC Milan (1994, 2003, 2007) and FC Barcelona (2006, 2009, 2011). • With 26, Italy has the most appearances per nation in all-time European Cup finals – of those 12 have ended in victory and 14 in defeat. Spain has recorded 14 wins from 24 final appearances; England has 12 wins from 19 final appearances, with Germany on 17 appearances, (seven wins), Portugal nine (four wins) and the Netherlands eight (six wins). • There have been five finals between teams from the same country. In 2000 Real Madrid beat Valencia CF 3-0 at the Stade de France; three years later Milan defeated Juventus on penalties at Old Trafford; in 2008 Manchester United overcame Chelsea FC in Moscow, also on spot kicks; in 2013 FC Bayern München beat Borussia Dortmund 2-1 at Wembley and in 2014 Real Madrid overcame Club Atlético de Madrid 4-1 after extra time in Lisbon in the first European final between teams from the same city. • In the previous 22 UEFA Champions League finals, there have been 16 outright wins and six matches decided on shoot-outs. A total of 59 goals have been scored with the most common results being 2-1, which has happened on five occasions; there have been four 1-1 draws, and three finals have finished 1-0. • Sixteen European Cup finals have gone to extra time, including the 2014 decider. The finals of 1958, 1968, 1970, 1992 and 2014 were decided in the additional period, while the 1974 showpiece between Bayern and Club Atlético de Madrid ended 1-1 after 120 minutes with Bayern winning a replay. The other ten finals were settled by a penalty shoot-out after extra time: in 1984, 1986, 1988, 1991, 1996, 2001, 2003, 2005, 2008 and 2012 when Chelsea defeated Bayern 4-3 in the shoot-out after a 1-1 draw. • Milan's 4-0 win against FC Barcelona in the 1994 final remains the biggest winning margin and the Rossoneri were also involved in the highest scoring showpiece when they shared six goals with Liverpool in 2005 before penalties. In terms of the European Cup, Madrid's 7-3 defeat of Eintracht Frankfurt in 1960 remains the most impressive while Bayern (1974 v Club Atlético de Madrid) and Milan (1989 v FC Steaua Bucureşti) also recorded 4-0 successes. • No player has scored a hat-trick in a UEFA Champions League final. Daniele Massaro (Milan 1994), Karl-Heinz Riedle (Borussia Dortmund 1997), Hernán Crespo (Milan 2005), (Milan 2007) and Diego Milito (FC Internazionale Milano 2010) all struck twice. In European Cup terms, Ferenc Puskás scored four goals in Madrid's 7-3 defeat of Eintracht Frankfurt in 1960, when Alfredo di Stéfano found the net three times; Puskás scored another final hat-trick in 1962 with Pierino Prati (Milan 1969) the only other player to have managed a final hat-trick. • Only Raúl González (Madrid 2000 and 2002), Samuel Eto'o (Barcelona 2006 and 2009), Lionel Messi (Barcelona 2009 and 2011) and (Manchester United FC 2008, Real Madrid CF 2014) have scored in two UEFA Champions League finals – part of an exclusive club of 17 players to have found the net in more than one European Cup showpiece. Di Stéfano and Puskás lead the list having each scored seven goals for Madrid. • Paolo Maldini's goal 51 seconds into the 2005 showpiece is the fastest in a UEFA Champions League final. • Jens Lehmann (2006) and Didier Drogba (2008) are the only players to be dismissed in a European Cup final. • Clarence Seedorf is the only player to win the European Cup with three clubs (AFC Ajax 1995, Real Madrid 1998, Milan 2003, 2007). (Liverpool 1977, 1978, 1981) was the first coach to win three times, a feat Carlo Ancelotti (Milan 2003, 2007, Real Madrid 2014) equalled. • In 2014 Ancelotti also became the fifth coach to win the trophy with two clubs; Ottmar Hitzfeld (Dortmund 1997, Bayern 2001), Ernst Happel (Feyenoord 1970, Hamburger SV 1983), José Mourinho (FC Porto 2004, FC Internazionale Milano 2010) and Jupp Heynckes (Real Madrid 1998, Bayern 2013) had previously achieved the feat. • Only two teams have ever won the UEFA Champions League on home soil: Dortmund (1997, final in Munich) and Juventus (1996, final in Rome), while Manchester United lost the 2011 final in London and 12 months later Bayern were beaten in the showpiece in their own stadium, the Fußball Arena München. • No team has successfully defended the UEFA Champions League trophy with Milan (1989, 1990) the last club to win consecutive European Cups. Milan (1994, 1995), Ajax (1995, 1996), Juventus (1996, 1997) and Manchester United

13 Arsenal FC - Borussia Dortmund Tuesday 22 October 2013 - 20.45CET (19.45 local time) Match press kit Arsenal Stadium, London

(2008, 2009) have all returned to the final as holders only to lose.

14 Arsenal FC - Borussia Dortmund Tuesday 22 October 2013 - 20.45CET (19.45 local time) Match press kit Arsenal Stadium, London Team facts

Arsenal FC Formed: 1886 Nickname: The Gunners UEFA club competition honours (runners-up in brackets) • UEFA Champions League: (2006) • UEFA Cup: (2000) • UEFA Cup Winners' Cup (1): (1980), 1994, (1995) • UEFA Super Cup: (1994) Domestic honours (most recent triumph in brackets) League title: 13 (2004) FA Cup: 10 (2005) League Cup: 2 (1993) Ten-year European record (UEFA Champions League unless indicated otherwise) 2012/13: round of 16 2011/12: round of 16 2010/11: round of 16 2009/10: quarter-finals 2008/09: semi-finals 2007/08: quarter-finals 2006/07: round of 16 2005/06: runners-up 2004/05: round of 16 2003/04: quarter-finals Records UEFA club competition • Biggest home win 7-0: Arsenal v SK Slavia Praha 23/10/07, UEFA Champions League group stage • Biggest away win 0-7: R. Standard de Liège v Arsenal 03/11/93, UEFA Cup Winners' Cup second round second leg • Heaviest home defeat 2-5: Arsenal v FC Spartak Moskva 29/09/82, UEFA Cup first round second leg 0-3: Arsenal v FC Internazionale Milano 17/09/03, UEFA Champions League group stage • Heaviest away defeat 4-0: AC Milan v Arsenal 15/02/12, UEFA Champions League round of 16 first leg UEFA Champions League (group stage to final only) • Biggest home win 7-0: Arsenal v SK Slavia Praha (see above for details) • Biggest away win 1-5: FC Internazionale Milano v Arsenal 25/11/03, group stage 0-4: PSV Eindhoven v Arsenal 25/09/02, first group stage • Heaviest home defeat 0-3: Arsenal v FC Internazionale Milano (see above for details) • Heaviest away defeat 4-0: AC Milan v Arsenal (see above for details)

Borussia Dortmund

15 Arsenal FC - Borussia Dortmund Tuesday 22 October 2013 - 20.45CET (19.45 local time) Match press kit Arsenal Stadium, London

Formed: 1909 Nickname: BVB UEFA club competition honours (runners-up in brackets) • UEFA Champions League (1): 1997, (2013) • UEFA Cup: (1993), (2002) • UEFA Cup Winners' Cup (1): 1966 • UEFA Super Cup: (1997) • European/South American Cup (1): 1997 Domestic honours (most recent triumph in brackets) League title: 8 (2012) German Cup: 3 (2012) Ten-year European record (UEFA Champions League unless indicated otherwise) 2012/13: runners-up 2011/12: group stage 2010/11: UEFA Europa League group stage 2009/10: did not take part in UEFA club competition 2008/09: UEFA Cup first round 2007/08: did not take part in UEFA club competition 2006/07: did not take part in UEFA club competition 2005/06: UEFA Intertoto Cup finals 2004/05: UEFA Intertoto Cup finals 2003/04: UEFA Cup second round (having transferred from UEFA Champions League third qualifying round) Records UEFA club competition • Biggest home win 8-0: Dortmund v Floriana FC 10/10/65, European Cup Winners' Cup preliminary round second leg • Biggest away win 1-5: Floriana FC v Dortmund 29/09/65, European Cup Winners' Cup preliminary round first leg 0-4: 1. FK Příbram v Dortmund 04/03/64, European Champion Clubs' Cup quarter-final first leg • Heaviest home defeat 1-3 on four occasions, most recently v Juventus 13/09/95, UEFA Champions League group stage 0-2 on three occasions, most recently v 18/09/08, UEFA Cup first round • Heaviest away defeat 5-0 (aet): Club Brugge KV v Dortmund 09/12/87, UEFA Cup third round second leg UEFA Champions League (group stage to final) • Biggest home win 4-1 three time, most recently v Real Madrid CF 24/04/13, semi-final first leg 3-0 three times, most recently v Olympique de Marseille 01/10/13, group stage • Biggest away win 1-4: AFC Ajax v Dortmund 21/11/12, group stage 0-3 twice, most recently v FC Steaua Bucureşti 25/09/96, group stage • Heaviest home defeat 1-3: Dortmund v Juventus (see above for details) 0-2: Dortmund v AFC Ajax 06/03/96, quarter-finals first leg

16 Arsenal FC - Borussia Dortmund Tuesday 22 October 2013 - 20.45CET (19.45 local time) Match press kit Arsenal Stadium, London

• Heaviest away defeat 3-0: Real Madrid CF v Dortmund 02/04/14, quarter-finals first leg 3-0: Olympique de Marseille v Dortmund 28/09/11, group stage

17 Arsenal FC - Borussia Dortmund Tuesday 22 October 2013 - 20.45CET (19.45 local time) Match press kit Arsenal Stadium, London Legend

ALL-TIME STATISTICS The all-time record of the competing clubs in UEFA club competition. UEFA club competition: These are the official statistics considered valid for communicating official records in UEFA club competition defined as European Champion Clubs' Cup, UEFA Champions League, UEFA Europa League, UEFA Cup Winner's Cup UEFA Super Cup, UEFA Intertoto Cup and European/South American Cup. Matches in the Inter-Cities Fairs Cup and the 1972 Super Cup are not included as they were not held under UEFA auspices, while the FIFA Club World Cup is excluded. Match officials

UCL: Total matches officiated in the UEFA Champions League from 1992/93 season, group stage to final only. Matches where the official has acted as the fourth official are not included in these statistics. These are the official statistics considered valid for communicating official records.

UEFA: Total matches officiated in UEFA club competition including all qualifying round matches. Matches where the official has acted as the fourth official are not included in these statistics. These are the official statistics considered valid for communicating official records. Competitions

Club competitions National team competitions UCL: UEFA Champions League EURO: UEFA European Football Championship ECCC: European Champion Clubs' Cup WC: FIFA World Cup UEL: UEFA Europa League CONFCUP: FIFA Confederations Cup UCUP: UEFA Cup FRIE: Friendly internationals UCWC: UEFA Cup Winners' Cup U21FRIE: Under-21 friendly internationals SCUP: UEFA Super Cup U21: UEFA European Under-21 Championship UIC: UEFA Intertoto Cup U17: UEFA Under-17 Championship ICF: Inter-Cities Fairs Cup U16: UEFA European Under-16 Championship U19: UEFA Under-19 Championship U18: UEFA European Under-18 Championship WWC: FIFA Women's World Cup WEURO: UEFA European Women's Championship Competition stages Other abbreviations F: Final GS: Group stage (aet): After extra time pens: Penalties GS1: First group stage GS2: Second group stage No.: Number og: Own goal 3QR: Third qualifying round R1: First round ag: Match decided on away P: Penalty R2: Second round R3: Third round goals agg: Aggregate R4: Fourth round PR: Preliminary round Pld: Matches played AP: Appearances SF: Semi-finals QF: Quarter-finals Pos.: Position Comp.: Competition R16: round of 16 QR: Qualifying round Pts: Points D: Drawn R32: Round of 32 1QR: First qualifying round R: Sent off (straight red card) DoB: Date of birth 1st: first leg 2QR: Second qualifying Res.: Result ET: Extra Time round sg: Match decided by silver GA: Goals against 2nd: second leg FT: Final tournament goal t: Match decided by toss of a PO: Play-off ELITE: Elite round coin Rep: Replay 3rdPO: Third-place play-off GF: Goals for W: Won PO - FT: Play-off for Final GS-FT: Group stage – final gg: Match decided by golden Y: Booked Tournament tournament goal L: Lost Y/R: Sent off (two yellow Nat.: Nationality cards) N/A: Not applicable f: Match forfeited Statistics -: Denotes player substituted +: Denotes player introduced *: Denotes player sent off +/-: Denotes player introduced and substituted

18 Arsenal FC - Borussia Dortmund Tuesday 22 October 2013 - 20.45CET (19.45 local time) Match press kit Arsenal Stadium, London Squad list D: Disciplinary *: Misses next match if booked S: Suspended UCLQ: Current season total UEFA Champions League appearances in the qualifying rounds and play-offs only UCL: Current season total UEFA Champions League appearances from group stage onwards prior to current matchday UCL: Total appearances in the UEFA Champions League from 1992/93 season, group stage to final only UEFA: All-time total appearances in UEFA club competition including qualifying Disclaimer: Although UEFA has taken all reasonable care that the information contained within this document is accurate at the time of publication, no representation or guarantee (including liability towards third parties), expressed or implied, is made as to its accuracy, reliability or completeness. Therefore, UEFA assumes no liability for the use or interpretation of information contained herein. More information can be found in the competition regulations available on UEFA.com.

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