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Barcelona on the brink after red card and Alvarez stunner sparks Atlético victory | Champions League
When the final whistle went, the man in black quietly disappeared out of sight and set off running up the tunnel. For the first time since he took over at Atlético Madrid 15 long years ago, Diego Simeone had led his team to a victory at the Camp Nou, keeping alive his dream of taking them back to a European Cup final. In 2014 and 2016 Atlético knocked out Barcelona en route to Lisbon and Milan and while there is much to be done in at the Metropolitano in six days’ time, they have put themselves in a superb position to do so again.
Sometimes, everything feels like it turns on a single moment and this was one of those times. A run from Simeone’s son, Giuliano, just before half-time was that moment. Barcelona had been on top at that point but now he was away, heading towards the area, only to be tripped by Pau Cubarsí, earning the defender a red card and Atletico a free-kick from which Julián Alvarez curled in a wonderful strike. A goal down and a man down, there was no way back for Barcelona, although they gave everything, Lamine Yamal especially; instead, there was a second for Alexander Sørloth, the advantage theirs.
It is some advantage too and it hadn’t looked likely during a first half which was breathless from the start: the first shot came on 80 seconds and both sides could, and should, have scored inside five minutes, pursuing each other to each end of the pitch. Everything was done at speed, intent to go with the intensity.
Marcus Rashford had Barcelona’s first effort, saved by Juan Musso, and that was to become a familiar face-off. The English winger, tearing into Nahuel Molina, repeatedly flying into the space beyond, had four efforts inside the first half an hour – and a goal ruled out for offside. Atlético’s first had come from Alvarez and his impact too was immense, the movement sharp and subtle, often undetectable for Barcelona. On that occasion he had chased a ball up the left, cut back from the byline, beyond Gerard Martin and Cubarsí only for his shot to be saved by Musso.
This was fun: Ademola Lookman shot wide, João Cancelo was stopped by Musso, Giuliano Simeone struck past the far post, and Rashford’s volley from Eric García’s clipped cross skidded wide. All that inside fifteen minutes, and soon after Rashford had the ball in the net. The flag though was up; Lamine Yamal, who had reached Pedri’s pass to set Rashford up was just offside. Next Rashford dived in, meeting a Dani Olmo ball with the outside of his boot, doing superbly to guide it goalwards. Again, Musso was there with a strong right hand.
Barcelona had loaded the right side where Cancelo and Rashford were running free, but it was soon Lamine Yamal’s turn. Surrounded by four players, turning out of the area and back in again, he produced an outrageous act of escapology to fire off a shot that was blocked.
The balance was tilting yet if Barcelona had begun to exercise something like control, Atlético had worked out a way out, always dangerous when they ran, keen to invade the space at the slightest invitation. Which was how they took the lead, Alvarez delivering a superb ball for Simeone, ahead of Cubarsí and dashing towards the area. The defender clipped the attacker’s thigh and although Istvan Kovacs initially pulled out a yellow card, he was called to the screen to take another look and returned with a red instead. From the free-kick, 20 yards out, Alvarez curled a glorious shot into the net.
Rashford was moved inside and if that surprised given how much damage he had done from wide, and how rarely Hansi Flick has used him there, the second half started with him escaping through the middle. Running on to a superb Lamine Yamal pass, the keeper coming towards him, he hit he side-netting. He had been offside anyway, but it was a statement of intent: Barcelona were going to go for this, forcing Atlético back, despite being a man down.
A Rashford free-kick from almost the same spot as Alvarez almost put them level early in the second half: again though, that recurring battle was won by Musso, with a fantastic reach to push the ball on to the bar. It was Rashford’s seventh shot. Barcelona’s task though was not an easy one and although Atlético initially found themselves under pressure they did find the patience they needed too, particularly when Antoine Griezmann, a glorious footballer, came in contact with the ball.
He it was, in fact, that started the move that led to Atlético scoring a superb worked second, although you may not find a reply that goes back that far. He did so deep inside his own area, combining with the centre-backs and carrying it out into the space beyond the press. There, Atlético could exercise a little more control, some calm. The ball went to Simeone who found Álex Baena, who put his foot on the ball. It was worked round to the other side where Griezmann released Matteo Ruggeri, whose cross was volleyed in by Sørloth, who had only been on the pitch nine minutes.
It was Atlético’s fifth shot; Barcelona were soon on 20, Musso saving from Lamine Yamal. In truth though, there were few really clear opportunities, Atlético were close now and as they final whistle came, Simeone slipped away, job half done.
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Barcelona v Atlético Madrid: Champions League quarter-final, first leg | Champions League
Key events
31 min: Koke is booked for a clumsy foul on Olmo. Hancko is off injured (sorry for doubting you) and Marc Pubill is on.
30 min: Now Olmo hits a cultured, searching cross from right to left looking for Rashford at the far post. The Manchester United alumni manages to stab it goalwards despite a tight angle, and Musso does well to save, even if the ball nearly squirts under his body.
29 min: Hancko is down injured after that cross by Kounde. He’s gone off the pitch for treatment, behind the goal. There was a stoppage of a couple of minutes, a cynic might suggest it was a good time for a breather for the visiting defence.
27 min: Kounde bends a cross over looking for Lewandowski after receiving an intricate little ball to feet on the edge of the box. Molina does well to flick it clear with his head, with the Poland international lurking.
Pedri of Barcelona has been booked, for what, I am not sure.
25 min: Atléti enjoy a spell of possession, pinging passes around impressively, starving Barcelona of the ball and probing for an opening themselves. Cancelo hauls Simeone to the deck around halfway. Simeone demands a card. Amazingly, he doesn’t change the ref’s mind. There are some robust challenges flying around, it’s physical as well as skilful.
24 min: Atletico were advertised playing 4-4-2, but it looked more like a back five just then. Still no bus-parking mind you.
21 min: Llorente plays a poor pass from a position in central defensive midfield, trying to spray it out left, but overhits it. He wants a free-kick, but the officials aren’t having it.
20 min: The noise from the fans is deafening. They are seeing both teams play some impressively progressive football here, both going for it every time they get the ball. Tim’s pre-match prediction, that the visitors will not park the bus, was quite correct.
17 min: Atléti want a penalty for handball. Nothing doing.
In the next installment of this end-to-end thriller, Pedri slides a fantastic defence-splitting pass for Yamal on the Barça right, who wastes no time in squaring for Rashford, who tucks it into the gaping net! But the flag is up. Yamal was offside from Pedri’s fine pass. No goal.
15 min: Lookman and Griezmann link for Atléti, but Barca snuff out the danger. Needless to say, Barcelona immediately go for the jugular again. Rashford uses his exceptional pace and has Molina on toast down the left wing. He tries to cut back from the byline for Lewandowski, but his attempted low cross is blocked.
14 min: There’s a beautiful tempo to this. High, high quality stuff. Now Eric Garcia builds down the Barcelona right. He floats a cross to Rashford in space at the far post, inside the area but a little way out. The England international hits a businesslike volley that bounces wide of a post. It was close enough to draw a gasp from the crowd with Musso scrambling across his goal.
10 min: No one has had a shot for at least a minute, which is unusual. Here comes Lookman for Atlético, though! He finds Simeone with a fantastic pass out wide after coming up against a well-positioned Barcelona backline. Simeone cracks one powerfully but it’s neither on target nor in reach of a teammate.
9 min: Now Cancelo, looking like a footballing Rolls-Royce as per usual, cuts in and hammers a low shot at Musso from an angle. The goalie makes a tidy save.
8 min: Koke cynically takes out Olmo with Barça ready to break at pace. The ref has a strong word. But no card.
7 min: This is more open than a school-playground lunchtime kickabout at 1.58pm.
Yamal looks for Rashford, in space on the left, but gets it wrong. Then the visitors stream down to the other end and Lookman has a shot blocked. Corner.
5 min: The pace is hot! Hot! Hot! The visitors fashion one chance at the other end after Rashford’s early opening, with Griezmann being crowded out near the six-yard box … then seconds later, Alvarez powers in from the right wing, along the byline, cuts back and hits a shot straight at Garcia. He should have scored! It should be 1-1!
4 min: Huge chance for Rashford! Atlético’s Molina gives it away in a defensive area with a pass inside, a horrible error, and Rashford is suddenly one-on-one. He hits an unconvincing effort at Musso and the keeper is able to save with a foot. That should be 1-0.
2 min: A niggly little foul by Griezmann early doors, on Pedri. The crowd wails before Gerard Martín takes the free-kick.
Flick paces the touchline in a comfy-looking black jumper and Nike trainers.
Rashford has an early go, cutting in from the Barcelona left and hitting a shot straight at Musso.
First-half kick-off!
Vamos!
A moment to honour the memory of Mircea Lucescu.
I hereby designate Dani Olmo, playing in the middle of a forward three behind Lewandowski and with pace either side, in the “schemer” role.
Marcus Rashford appears from the tunnel, and raises both hands to the heavens.
It feels like there’s a special energy to this tie already.
We are literally less than five minutes away from kick-off!
The atmosphere in the stadium looks sensational. FC Barcelona flags are held aloft everywhere. The players are assembled in the tunnel.
Vamos!
Rob Smyth has Paris Saint-Germain v crisis club Liverpool over on Channel 1:
“What he’s done for that club is absolutely astronomical,” Cole says of Griezmann, soon to depart Atletico for Orlando City FC. There’s a decent Nasa link in there somewhere.
“I don’t think Atlético will do a smash and grab etc.,” opines Tim on email.
“They are an excellent team on the break and will outplay Barca in my opinion for significant stretches.”
Was it really May 2024 when Lookman banged in that hat-trick for Atalanta in the Europa League final v Leverkusen?
You bet it was:
Lookman signed for the Spanish club in February, a piece of transfer news that had hitherto escaped me.
Luis Garcia is on duty in the stadium, evoking those days when it seemed like Chelsea and Liverpool played each other every three minutes.
Atlético and Barça will play thrice in the space of nine days, starting with the match on Saturday, when Lewandowski won it. This is their fifth meeting of the current season, to boot.
“Diego Simeone has never won at Camp Nou,” says Karen Carney, alongside Cole on pundit duty. And there you have it. No time like the present, that’s what I say.
“It’s beauty and the beast,” says Joe Cole on TNT Sports of the contest that awaits. We know what Atlético are going to do tonight, they’ll “bank in”, make it nasty, they’ll be aggressive, and there’ll be all sorts of shenenigans going on.”
Alvarez, leading the line for the visitors, has scored 14 goals in his last 17 Champions League matches. #Prolific
“A smash and grab would be great,” emails Andres. “But look up Simeone’s record at Barcelona.”
Would you mind doing it? Much appreciated.
I’d also take a sparkling attacking masterclass from Flick’s side as well of course. I’m pretty flexible on the issue.
Barça may be favourites and deservedly so but personally I’d like to see a classic European smash-and-grab by Simeone’s side tonight, with a healthy dose of naughty defending and shithousery in the mix.
Araujo stuck in one hell of a reducer on Phil Foden the other week at Wembley during England 1-1 Uruguay. I saw it with my own eyes and it was the most violent tackle in a top-level game I’ve seen for a good while.
Teams
Lewandowski came off the bench on Saturday to score the winner but starts tonight, with fit-again Jules Kounde the other change. Raphinha is out with a hamstring injury and will miss the second leg, too. Ronald Araujo limped out of the La Liga match on Saturday but is on the bench tonight.
Marcos Llorente is one of five changes to Simeone’s Atlético team from the weekend: David Hancko, Matteo Ruggeri, Ademola Lookman and Julian Alvarez are the others.
Barcelona (4-2-3-1): Joan Garcia; Kounde, Cubarsi, Gerard, Joao Cancelo; Eric Garcia, Pedri; Yamal, Olmo, Rashford; Lewandowski. Substitutes: Szczesny, Kochen, Balde, Araujo, Gavi, Torres, Lopez, Casado, Bardghji, Cortes, Espart, Marques.
Atlético Madrid (4-4-2): Musso; Molina, Le Normand, Hancko, Ruggeri; Simeone, Llorente, Koke, Lookman; Griezmann, Alvarez. Substitutes: Esquivel, de Luis, Mendoza, Sorloth, Baena, Almada, Lenglet, Pubill, Vargas, Gonzalez, Diaz.
Referee: Istvan Kovacs (Romania)
And how good is the weather, by the way? Answer: very. With another seemingly interminable league phase (and winter) out the way we can now enjoy some decent knockout ties. Sunshine + meaningful Champions League encounters (beyond the recent round of 16): it’s a heady mix.
Team news will be coming up soon, meanwhile, why not send me an email?
Preamble
How good are Barcelona, really? How good is Robert Lewandowski when push comes to shove? And how good are Atlético nearly 15 years into the reign of the sharp-suited Diego Simeone?
There are some recent clues. The seasoned Poland striker Lewandowski had the last word in La Liga on Saturday, his 87th-minute winner added to Marcus Rashford’s opener giving Barça a 2-1 comeback win away from home.
Hansi Flick’s side are closing in on the league title, leading second-placed Real Madrid by seven points, with a 19-point chasm separating Barcelona and tonight’s opponents.
And yet. In February Diego Simeone’s side thrashed Barcelona 4-0 in the first leg of their Copa del Rey semi-final. “This will remain in the memory however the tie ends,” Simeone said that night. They progressed, despite losing 3-0 the following week.
History is also on Atlético’s side: these two faced each other in the quarter-finals of the Champions League in 2013/14 and 2015/16, and Simeone’s side prevailed on both occasions, their only previous meetings in the competition.
More recently the last nine encounters have produced 35 goals between them, and there will be an embarrassment of attacking riches on show this evening. “We are ready to compete and we believe we can hurt them,” said Simeone. This could be quite good …
Kick-off: 8pm UK time.
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