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This was Total Lyon, a realisation of the vision Michele Kang has spent millions creating

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The Athletic
2026/05/03 - 04:08 501 مشاهدة
Melchie Dumornay played a starring role for Lyon against Arsenal Sara Cavallini - UEFA via Getty Images Share articleMelchie Dumornay is being swarmed, the Haiti forward smothered in a pile of limbs and gratitude. The final whistle is still 12 minutes from being blown, a meagre goal separating OL Lyonnes from Arsenal in a match that has been anything but straightforward. But it is a goal all of Dumornay’s making. And even team-mates lose all sense of task, of time and space, when placed in such proximity to someone operating in a dimension all of their own. The goal that made it 3-1 to the French side in the second leg of the Women’s Champions League semi-final — and, crucially, won the tie — was a portrait of the game’s central protagonist: Dumornay in the 86th minute lifting a ball over the top of the Arsenal defence that perfectly found the run of Jule Brand, a pass that was a photocopy of the one Dumornay attempted 20 minutes earlier but that eluded Kadidiatou Diani by inches. No problem. Reset. Retry. Eventually, Dumornay will come good. Overturning a 2-1 first-leg deficit, Lyonnes deserved their victory. Their intensity, physicality and technical play were superior from the start, the type of performance expected from a superteam built loudly and with no expense spared by owner Michele Kang, who brought in France forward Marie-Antoinette Katoto and USWNT midfielder Lily Yohannes in the summer. And if there is a message to be taken from this semi-final victory, it is the ongoing reinstatement of Lyonnes at Europe’s top table. The Champions League has historically been their playground, their eight titles an unrivalled point of pride, but the recent seasons have tested their pedigree. Lyonnes’ last Champions League triumph was in 2022. They had reached one final in three seasons. As other women’s teams have stepped up, Lyonnes’ position has come under increasing threat. This season, they have arguably looked closest to that former, indomitable vintage, and Saturday’s performance was conducted with the vindictive fury of a team seeking to correct their below-par first-leg performance at the Emirates Stadium. Without Dumornay and right-back Selma Bacha, both of whom were injury absentees last week, Lyonnes lacked the easy swagger they have flaunted this season. The quality they boast is great enough that they should function just fine without Dumornay and Bacha — but ‘fine’ does not cut it against the reigning European champions, not in the Champions League semi-finals. In the opening two minutes of the second leg, Lyonnes showed their intent. Dumornay received the ball unmarked in midfield, turned and sent Diani into attack mode. The French forward’s cross just evaded an onrushing Ada Hegerberg. The message became even clearer five minutes later, when Lindsey Heaps rose highest to head home from a corner that was ultimately ruled out for offside. But at this point, Arsenal were already at risk of being swallowed whole by the pure energy of Total Lyon, the industrial swagger complex that Kang has spent millions constructing and that finally feels to have found its feet. Dumornay was taken down in the 18-yard box following a challenge from Lotte Wubben-Moy, with the VAR ruling in Lyonnes’ favour. And despite captain Wendie Renard fluffing the initial penalty, she was afforded a second chance because Arsenal goalkeeper Daphne van Domselaar had stepped off her line. The 35-year-old did not repeat the same mistake, instead converting her fourth penalty of the campaign, the joint-most in the competition this season. From there, Lyonnes shifted into a kind of taunt. Yohannes pirouetted around Arsenal’s defenders not once, not twice but three times before the half-time whistle. Bacha reduced Olivia Smith, the first leg’s best player, to whatever exists below an asterisk. Brand switched play without even looking up. Dumornay did not so much take the ball off Arsenal’s full-backs so much as request it through pure aura. Lyonnes’ second goal came via another corner, this time without any threat of a VAR intervention, as Diani converted deftly at the back post from Brand’s cross. Arsenal are advertising for a set-piece coach next season, a hire that feels slightly belated. In the past two seasons in the Women’s Super League (WSL) and Champions League, they have conceded 19 set-piece goals (11 in 2024-25, eight in 2025-26). Comparatively, Chelsea, whom Arsenal defeated in the quarter-finals, have conceded nine (five this season, four last season). It was telling that, shortly after half-time, Dumornay did not force a shot so much as a ricochet out for a corner, knowing it was a weakness to exploit. Lyonnes should have done more with their chances, something that has often proved their undoing this season. Lyonnes registered 13 shots (six more than Arsenal), with six on target (four more than Arsenal), while managing 35 touches in Arsenal’s box to Arsenal’s 19. Yet they were very nearly punished as Arsenal striker Alessia Russo broke through Heaps and Ashley Lawrence to force an Arsenal goal in the 75th minute that levelled the tie on aggregate. It was a show of clinical edge that Lyonnes have often lacked, despite all their attacking quality. But that is why you have Dumornay, a mobile player with the brain and ability to make a difference. A record ninth European crown this month would be their first under Kang’s ownership. If the feat is to be accomplished, it will have Dumornay’s prints all over it. Spot the pattern. Connect the terms Find the hidden link between sports terms
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