Real Madrid v Manchester City: Champions League playoff round, second leg – live | Champions League


Key events

Stones injured!

7 min: City must reset but they must do so without John Stones! After a faint coming together with Vini Jr, England defender looks like he’s pulled something and has to come off. Aké comes on to replace Stones.

Share

5 min: The camera pans to Guardiola, who has his head in his hands. He knows how crucial the first goal was.

Share

GOAL! Real Madrid 1-0 Manchester City (Mbappé 4, 4-2 agg)

Madrid score with their first attack! Asencio lobs a long ball forward, Stones misses his header and Mbappé is onto it straight away. Ederson half-comes out for the ball but is in no-man’s land as Mbappé lets the ball bounce once before lifting an easy lob into the net!

Share

3 min: It takes a full three minutes for Real Madrid to gain possession of the ball, as City hog it (without creating anything). Gvardiol nutmegs Rodrygo.

Share

2 min: It’s Khusanov at right back for City! The Uzbekistan international has plenty of pace, and he’ll need that against Vini Jr.

Share

Updated at 

Peeeeeeeeeep!

City get us underway in Madrid.

Share

Some confusion as to whether Stones or Khusanov will play at right back for City, such a crucial position tonight. I guess we’ll find out very shortly.

Share

The teams are out at the Bernabéu! Real Madrid in their resplendent white strip, City in their maroon away number. The away side are booed during the Champions League anthem.

Share

A check on tonight’s other scores/games. In the early Champions League playoff kick-off: Borussia Dortmund held firm at home to Sporting, secure a 0-0 draw that protected their 3-0 first-leg win.

There are two other second legs kicking off at 8pm: PSG v Brest (3-0 agg) and PSV v Juventus (1-2 agg).

We’re around half-way through the first half in the Premier League clash between Villa and Liverpool.

Elsewhere, there is a relegation megamatch in the Championship between the two bottom-placed clubs: Luton v Plymouth.

Share

I bet Michael Owen is sitting at home, watching the TNT Sports pundits on telly, and wondering how he gets on that sweet, sweet Steve McManaman gravy train.

Share

Updated at 

The first leg was a belter of a game. Here’s what our writers made of it, in the immediate aftermath.

Sid Lowe on Real Madrid:

Barney Ronay on Manchester City:

Jamie Jackson’s player ratings:

Share

Updated at 

For Real Madrid, there’s a big boost with the return of Antonio Rüdiger in central defence. The German hasn’t played in nearly three weeks, since the defeat to Espanyol on 1 February. I wonder how fit he is.

Just as he did in Manchester, Dani Ceballos is selected in central midfield. Camavinga, Guler and Modric on the bench.

Share

Pep Guardiola, Manchester City manager, speaks:

Erling trained a bit yesterday but we spoke and he said he didn’t feel good. He is massively important to us but it is what it is. Hopefully we will stay in the game for many, many, many minutes. We know what we have to do in terms of courage.

Asked if Marmoush will play centrally as a striker, Guardiola simply responds: “you will see”.

Share

Bloody Norah! Pep Guardiola always like to mix things up in crucial Champions League ties and he hasn’t let us down tonight. No Haaland in the starting XI – remember the striker hobbled off in the weekend win over Newcastle. No De Bruyne, although that was perhaps more predictable, even if the Belgian remains City’s best creator. Stones gets the nod at right back over Lewis and Matheus Nunes, it’s the Englishman that will have to deal with Vini Jr (and Mbappé when he drops out to the left wing).

Share

The teams! Haaland on the City bench!

Real Madrid: Courtois, Valverde, Asencio, Rudiger, Mendy, Tchouameni, Ceballos, Rodrygo, Bellingham, Vinicius Junior, Mbappe.
Subs: Lunin, Mestre, Alaba, Camavinga, Modric, Guler, Endrick, Lucas, Vallejo, Garcia, Diaz.

Manchester City: Ederson, Stones, Khusanov, Dias, Gvardiol, Savinho, Gonzalez, Gundogan, Foden, Silva, Marmoush.
Subs: Ortega, Carson, Ake, Kovacic, Haaland, Grealish, Doku, De Bruyne, Matheus Nunes, Lewis, McAtee.

Share

Updated at 

The Bernabéu roof is closed for this game. Woof.

The scene is set. Photograph: Matthew Childs/Action Images/Reuters
Phil Foden (left) and Rico Lewis take in the stadium. Photograph: Matthew Childs/Action Images/Reuters
Erling Haaland arrives. Photograph: Florencia Tan Jun/Uefa/Getty Images
The tunnel. Photograph: Florencia Tan Jun/Uefa/Getty Images
Fans outside the stadium. Photograph: Ángel Martínez/Getty Images
Share

Updated at 

As ever, Sid Lowe has done a fine job of setting up this Real Madrid clash. And as ever, Madrid have given him something to write about.

A bit more background here:

Share

Updated at 

There’s also a tasty Premier League clash starting shortly, featuring the league leaders as Liverpool travel to Aston Villa. Marcus Rashford v Trent Alexander-Arnold, if you will.

You can follow that one live right here, it’s a 7.30pm GMT kick-off.

Share

Preamble

This game doesn’t need too much of a sell. It’s Real Madrid v Manchester City, for goodness sake. It’s Pep Guardiola, Barcelona legend, at the Bernabéu. Carlo Ancelotti’s eyebrow is tantalisingly poised. Aside from Real and City, no other club has laid their hands on Ol’ Big Ears, the Champions League trophy, in four years. YOU WANT NARRATIVE? YOU GOT IT.

It really doesn’t get any bigger than this, particularly at the playoff round stage. It seems bizarre that this is effectively a qualifier for the round of 16, rather than a semi-final (remember this?) or a final. But that’s these two get for an underwhelming league phase.

Of course, Real Madrid are favourites. They practically own this competition, having claimed six of the past 11 titles on offer. They are at home and hold a 3-2 first-leg lead, which helps. But nobody thinks City are out of it. It might only takes one moment from Erling Haaland, one ridiculous cross from Kevin De Bruyne, one mazy Phil Foden dribble and shot and the whole tie could turn.

As a coach at the Bernabéu, Guardiola’s Barcelona team defeated Real Madrid in the 2011 Champions League semi-final and put six past them in their most resonant victory in La Liga. However, having lost the first leg 3-2 at home last week, none of the results he has secured here as City manager would be sufficient to see them through and after the first leg he said they had only a 1% chance. Carlo Ancelotti said he did not buy that, dismissing suggestions that Madrid’s chances stood at 99%, and claiming he would ask Guardiola if he really believed that his hopes were so small.

The mind games are well underway. It promises to be an absolutely delicious night of association football.

Kick-off: 8pm GMT, 9pm in Madrid.

Share



Source link

Leave a Reply

Back To Top