UCL: In Line To Retain Ballon d’Or, Dembélé Ends Bayern Hopes, Sends PSG Into Final Against Arsenal


*Final Is Scheduled For Saturday 30 May

By Nick Ames, at the Allianz Arena

It cannot always be a laugh a minute. Paris Saint-Germain (PSG) will play Arsenal in the Champions League final and they made sure of that by getting serious, nullifying an off-key Bayern Munich on Wednesday night and rarely wobbling after adding to their first-leg lead.

Luis Enrique’s team should have won by more in a match that did not, and probably never could, hit the previous week’s heights, but their triumph was underpinned by an aptitude for the dirtier work that would serve them well in the Budapest final Saturday, 30 May this year.

Ballon d’Or current holder Ousmane Dembélé’s emphatic third-minute finish seemed to have ended this semi-final’s goalfest, after the 5-4 Paris first leg, and the regret for Vincent Kompany will be that Bayern were a yard short of their sharpest all night.

It could have been different if one of their openings before the break, Jamal Musiala spurning the best, had gone in but Harry Kane’s added-time goal came far too late.

Kompany’s Fanbase Advice Pre-Match , Electric Atmosphere In Munich

Kompany had urged any Bayern fans feeling less than fighting fit, following the first leg narrow defeat, to hand their ticket to somebody capable of making a din.

A raging red fever had spread at Allianz Arena nonetheless, the Südkurve in situ 45 minutes before kick-off and bouncing to the repertoire of club anthems, each rendition headier than the last and not a scarf permitted to sag.

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There had been an electricity around Munich, a city perfectly given to the big event, all day and it was not confined to those declaring an interest.

For neutrals entering Allianz Arena felt akin to crossing the threshold to mythical and fantasy Narnia; a prostration to whichever means might this time be deployed to test the limits of possibility.

According to Luis Enrique, PSG would need at least three goals to go through. Perhaps he had been caught up in the first leg’s wide-eyed thrill, or maybe the continent’s two star turns really would serve up more of the same.

Early Minutes Of The Match , Early Goal

It took 140 seconds to dispel any concerns that circumspection might be preferred.

Michael Olise had just spoiled a slalom past PSG’s Khvicha Kvaratskhelia by diving when, with the Bayern right-back Konrad Laimer stranded, Fabián Ruiz played the Georgian into gaping space and the hosts were in trouble.

Kvaratskhelia drew parallel with the six-yard box and there was a chilling certainty to what followed.

Dembélé, meeting the cutback unmarked while Bayern’s defenders floundered, thrashed left-footed above a helpless goalie Manuel Neuer. Goal number one, aggregating PSG 6 Bayern 4.

Bayern had conceded even earlier at home to Real Madrid before righting themselves.

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This time there was no swift response, although a Kane shot was charged down and Nuno Mendes blocked crucially from Olise.

It was already a game of near-constant counter-press, both sides stretching and scratching without asserting control.

Another rapier counter would take PSG, who had the run of that left flank, to the brink and Kvaratskhelia marauded again before Neuer gathered his deflected drive.

Olise, in the mood if yet to fire, scooped a 20-yarder marginally too high.

Then Bayern screamed for a penalty after a hurried Vitinha clearance smashed into the extended arm of João Neves; nothing was awarded and, coming after a similar appeal for Mendes to be shown a second yellow card for handball was rejected, a sense of home injustice ran as hot as that earlier optimism.

It needed channelling. Neuer made a sensational one-handed stop from João Neves’ downward header after Bayern switched off at a free-kick, subsequently pleading with the fans behind him to keep possessions in their pockets as PSG prepared the resulting corner.

Nobody required an explanation of the next goal’s importance but Musiala, letting Matvey Safonov parry after space had opened up, could not find it and by half-time PSG were sitting in some kind of comfort.

Bayern’s Second Half Response

Surely Bayern would not go quietly. They needed more from players like Luis Díaz, who had nibbled at the deputy right-back Warren Zaïre-Emery without joy.

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Aleksandar Pavlovic sliced wastefully wide after 10 minutes of a slow-burning start to the second half, an early stoppage for treatment to Willian Pacho doing nothing to aid the flow.

Neuer batted Désiré Doué’s angled effort away and, almost immediately, blocked from Kvaratskhelia as PSG sensed their chance to settle matters.

At the other end, Zaïre-Emery earned a handshake from his captain, Marquinhos, for thwarting a link-up between Díaz and Musiala.

It was of a piece with the way they were smothering a tentative Bayern, who were camped in their half as the hour ticked past but showed little sign of sculpting the opening that could transform everything.

Doué, rampant whenever PSG broke, made Neuer keep Bayern in the tie once again. When Safonov repelled an effort from Díaz, Kompany was left holding out for a late miracle.

Doué shot narrowly wide twice, the real wonder by now being that he had not managed to score.

Then Kvaratskhelia, after a mindboggling spin and run, could not quite connect when a goal for the ages looked on.

Bayern, battling but beaten, had nothing until Kane’s inconsequential blast in the 94th minute. About two minutes later, the final whistle sounded. PSG are into the final, Bayern left to try and figure out what went wrong this second leg.
*PHOTO CAPTION: Dembele (jersey number 10) scores PSG’s early goal.


By Felix Duru Mbah

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