As Atletico Madrid prepare to host Arsenal in the first leg of their Champions League semi-final, manager Diego Simeone insists his side must "take the match to a place where we can hurt them" as they chase long-awaited European glory.
For all the Argentine's success during a transformative 14-year spell in Madrid, the Champions League remains the glaring omission. Atletico have reached three finals - including painful defeats to Real Madrid in 2014 and 2016 - and now find themselves back in the last four for the first time in nine years, driven by a renewed belief that this could finally be their moment.
"It's extraordinary to be here again," Simeone said. "There is excitement, responsibility, and the feeling of being close to something the club has never achieved. Dreaming is good, but reality is what happens on the pitch - and that depends on what we do."
Their route to the semi-finals has only reinforced that belief. After navigating past Club Brugge and Tottenham Hotspur, Atletico stunned La Liga leaders Barcelona with a 3-2 aggregate victory in the quarter-finals, sparking wild celebrations and reigniting hopes of a first European crown in the club's 123rd year.
Yet the mood has not been without turbulence. A crushing Copa del Rey final defeat earlier this month left scars, and a patchy run of form - just two wins in nine games before the weekend - briefly cooled the atmosphere around the Metropolitano. Simeone was blunt in the aftermath: "The fans don't need messages, they need wins."
A 3-2 victory over Athletic Bilbao helped steady nerves, and by the final whistle the sense of occasion had returned. "We have to get up from that blow and give everything to reach the final," said Julian Alvarez, who is expected to spearhead the attack.
What remains constant in Simeone's philosophy is not a rigid tactical identity but an obsession with competitiveness. He rejects simplistic labels of defensive or attacking football, instead emphasising balance and collective strength. "To win you need to defend well and score goals," he explained. "The team that best combines both is the one that succeeds."
That balance will be tested against an Arsenal side chasing a historic double and brimming with confidence. Mikel Arteta's team, beaten semi-finalists last season, arrive in Madrid having already recorded a commanding 4-0 victory over Atletico earlier in the campaign and boasting one of Europe's most dangerous set-piece threats.