Arsenal Fans Use 'Trains, Planes and Automobiles' to Reach Champions League Final in Budapest
Arsenal Fans Race to Budapest for Champions League Final

Since Arsenal’s euphoric Premier League win last week, it has been a never-ending party in much of north London. And with Arsenal poised to play in the Uefa Champions League final on Saturday, Gooner fever is about to spread to the continent. At Stansted’s departure lounge, about 30 miles north-east of central London, the team’s iconic red-and-white shirts were an unmissable sight on Friday morning.

Indirect Journeys to Budapest

Most Gunners were preparing to embark on indirect journeys to Budapest, where Arsenal will face Paris Saint-Germain. “We’ll get there by train, plane and automobiles,” said Darren Cornish, a 53-year-old IT manager from Hemel Hempstead. Arsenal fans the Guardian spoke to plan on trekking to the Hungarian capital via overnight buses and trains from surrounding countries after flights to Budapest spiked following their Premier League victory.

All 13 of Wizz Air’s Budapest-bound flights from London had sold out by Friday. According to Skyscanner, the last available price for a ticket was £407 one way. To avoid the hefty price jump, Cornish booked his travel after the semi-final, securing return flights to Linz, Austria, for £150 return. He will take a three-and-a-half-hour train to Budapest on Saturday morning. Most of his friends are traveling indirectly, including through Vienna, Bratislava, and even Rome. “A very minimal amount of people I know are going direct,” he said.

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Fan Stories from Stansted

Cornish was in Highbury, north London, on Sunday after Arsenal’s final Premier League match against Crystal Palace. “I’ve never seen scenes like that at the Emirates and I’ve seen Arsenal win at Anfield, Old Trafford, White Hart Lane and Highbury,” he said. “The amount of people and the sheer scene of relief on the streets. I don’t think it’d be matched by any other London club.”

Arsenal have made it to the Champions League final for the first time in 20 years. With euphoria still in the air, Cornish is in a forgiving mood. “This game is a free hit,” he said. “If we lose, we’ve still got the premiership. If we win, it’ll be the best thing ever. There’s no pressure on these boys.”

Ben Boxhall is flying to Kraków with two friends. The trio from Essex were babies when Arsenal last won the Premier League. “We were 18 months old when they won the league in 2004. This is the first one that we remember and celebrating with our parents and friends,” said the 23-year-old who works in marketing. They plan to catch a bus from Kraków to Budapest at 5am on Saturday. “We’ll get there for about midday,” said Adam Wares, 23, who works in finance. The trio have not got a hotel booked in Budapest and, after joining the thousands of fans at the Uefa meeting point, plan to pull an all-nighter before catching the first bus back to Kraków.

“We were looking at flying to Budapest but it was about £500 to £600 on Wizz Air,” said Wares. Instead they paid £170 for their return flights. Ollie Laurence, 23, who works in construction, said he knew “people who are paying north of a grand” on flights. But the prospect of a second Arsenal victory could make it worth it. “It could be the perfect season. If we win the double it would be unbelievable,” he said.

More Fans Share Their Travel Plans

Also flying to Linz was Sonny Living, a 21-year-old graduate from Hertfordshire who is looking forward to a “great time with some great people.” He paid just under £200 return for his flights. He was about a month old when Arsenal last won the Premier League. He said stakes for Saturday’s game “won’t be as high because we’ve had a successful season regardless,” though he anticipates the squad may be more “fearless” on the pitch. He has not secured tickets yet but is on the lookout. “They’re floating around for about £2,500,” he said, a sum he would be willing to pay.

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Some slightly older fans are just as excited. Neil Roberts has been going to home and away matches for the past 25 years. “When you haven’t had success for so long, when it does come around it’s magical,” said the 43-year-old, who owns a landscaping business. Though he was not openly declaring his support for the Gunners in the airport, he insisted he had an Arsenal shirt in his suitcase. He was traveling with Jeff Steward, 60, an electrical engineer. He took the risk after the first leg of the Champions League semi-final and snagged flights to Linz for £60. He hedged his bets last year too but did not fly out in the end. “It’s only the flights you lose out on,” he said.

Paul Dawson, 48, an IT manager from Aylesbury, said he looked at return flights to Budapest after the semi-final. “Within two hours of full time, they’d gone up by 10 times,” he said. But for many fans, their long-winded and costly journeys are all worth it. “Memories are worth more than money,” said Roberts.