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Jamie Jackson was at the Estadio Santiago Bernabéu. Here’s his verdict. Thanks for reading this MBM.
Pep Guardiola, in a philosophical mood, speaks to TNT. “I had the feeling it was a good game … Madrid have the ability and quality … it is what it is … [the performance] was better than the result … we have one week … they defend so well … eight players … 11 players … unfortunately we could not do it … we tried to score a goal … now we recover mentally … go to West Ham in London will be tough … we will see [next week at home] with our people … I am sure they will come … with football you never know … we find something … we will try … we will recover and think of the next one.”
Trent Alexander-Arnold speaks to TNT Sports. “Massive, massive performance … the way we’ve been playing and the results we’ve had, a lot of people expected us to half get battered tonight! … we showed the mentality … this competition means a lot to the club, and as players we understand that … we executed the game-plan perfectly in the first half … when you get to knockout football in the Champions League, anyone can beat anyone … we scored our goals ruthlessly … no matter who is in front of us, we want to win … I’m running out of words for [Federico Valverde] as a player … even as a Liverpool player I admired him … he’s the most under-rated footballer on the planet … he covers every blade of grass .. gives his all … he never lets us down … maybe people will start taking about it now … I’m loving it here … it’s a dream come true to be playing in a stadium like this at a club like this … I’m trying to embrace the culture … the lads, fans and city have accepted me with open arms … we hope to have a successful season … we focus on the second leg next week.”
… Vinícius Júnior’s overly casual second-half penalty has given Manchester City a smidgen of hope. Three-goal first-leg deficits have been recovered before in the modern era, by Deportivo La Coruña in the 2003-04 quarters against Milan, Roma in the 2017-18 quarters against Barcelona, and Liverpool in the 2018-19 semis against Barcelona. So it’s not without precedent. But City will have to seriously improve if they’re to complete a comeback for the ages next Tuesday, because after that bright start, they were put in their place tonight by Real, who schooled them for the rest of the game, and weren’t flattered in any way by the final result. A lot for Pep to think about. Perhaps start with those big gaps in midfield?
Easy to forget now, that Manchester City started really well. They were the better team for the first 20 minutes. But then Thibaut Courtois went long, Federico Valverde, skipped around Nico O’Reilly and Gianluigi Donnarumma, and City’s fate was sealed. Just over 20 minutes later, Valverde was completing his hat-trick with one of the great Champions League goals, collecting Brahim Díaz’s scooped pass down the inside-right channel by cushioning a volley over the head of Marc Guéhi and flicking the dropping ball into the bottom left. Outstanding, outrageously good … and probably enough to put Manchester City out of this season’s Champions League. Having said that …
ShareFULL TIME: Real Madrid 3-0 Manchester City
Just as well for City that Gianluigi Donnarumma saved Vinícius Júnior’s penalty.
90 min +4: O’Reilly barges his way down the middle and finds Marmoush on the edge of the D. But Huijsen sticks out a leg to avert any danger. And that will be that.
90 min +3: Ait-Nouri brings down Tchouaméni, and wants to watch himself, having already been booked. But the referee shows mercy. Meanwhile Justin Kavanagh would like to continue his Titanic metaphor of 52 minutes: “I can’t see City turning this around a la Liverpool v Barclelona in 2019. No matter what team Pep picks in Manchester, I think he’ll just be rearranging the deckchairs. But his heart will go on, no doubt.”
90 min +2: Doku has been City’s one bright light in attack tonight. His dribble down the left wins a corner, but nothing comes of it.
90 min +1: A reminder that Manchester City went into this game as odds-on bookies’ favourites. At the Bernabeu? In the knockout stage of the Champions League? You know how Real roll. What was everyone thinking?!
90 min: There will be four additional minutes.
89 min: Marmoush advances down the left and draws a clumsy foul from Mastantuono. The free-kick, just to the left of the Real box, is tapped short and Cherki pings it straight at Courtois.
87 min: On the touchline, Pep holds one of his shoulders. A classic coping technique for high-stress situations writes A. Barstool Quack.
86 min: City pass. City probe. City find there’s no way through.
84 min: Cherki zigs while Real zag on the left, then slips a cute ball down the channel for Marmoush … but the newly arrived Carvajal shepherds it out for a goal kick.
83 min: Alexander-Arnold, who has quietly impressed tonight, is replaced by Carvajal.
82 min: Angel takes down a high ball and prepares to make off down the right. Ait-Nouri skittles him from behind, and that’s a yellow card all day long. Meanwhile Haaland, who has fed off scraps tonight, is replaced by Marmoush.
80 min: Doku zigs and zags his way down the inside-right channel but doesn’t know whether to shoot or give the ball to Cherki. He does neither, and Cherki isn’t completely pleased about it. “Pep is a genius,” begins Matt Turner. “Everyone agrees. But I sometimes get the odd feeling that he really doesn’t know what he’s doing with defenders. Take Khusanov. His faith in the young center/right back is endearing, I guess, and he may someday be an amazing player. But is he ready for a test like this right now?”
79 min: Goodness knows how Courtois saved that. An other-worldly reaction save with his outstretched leg. Pep Guardiola now knows how Jurgen Klopp felt in Paris in 2022.
77 min: That’s Pitarch’s last contribution. He, along with Brahim Diaz, makes way for Mastantuono and Angel.
Updated at 17.36 EDT
75 min: This is absurd! Pitarch, facing his own goal on the penalty spot, tries to dribble his way out of trouble. He shows too much of the ball to O’Reilly, who telescopes a leg and flicks hard towards the goal. He’s surely scored … but Courtois somehow reacts and deflects clear! That is an astonishing cock-up, followed by a brilliant piece of opportunism, nixed by an outrageous reaction stop!
Nico O’Reilly must score! Photograph: Thomas Coex/AFP/Getty ImagesShare
Updated at 17.39 EDT
74 min: … and sends it straight down Courtois’s throat. Too easy for the keeper.
73 min: Reijnders takes a whack from the edge of the D, but the fully recovered Tchouaméni extends a leg to deflect over the bar. Cherki to take over corner duties from the departed Silva …
71 min: Dias takes a heavy touch on the edge of the City six-yard box and nearly allows Brahim Diaz to steal away with the ball. He lunges to block Diaz’s attempt to shoot. What a recovery! And it had to be perfectly timed, too, otherwise it was red-card-and-penalty territory.
70 min: Real respond by replacing Guler with Camavinga. Alvaro Arbeloa reacting to Pep’s aggressive subs with a more defence-minded one.
69 min: City make a double change. Cherki and Ait-Nouri come on for Silva and Semenyo.
68 min: Rodri chips a lovely defence-splitter down the right. Semenyo hooks it in the middle, low and hard. Haaland prepares to trundle it home from a couple of yards, only for Rudiger, sliding in front, to deflect away from danger. City have to make do with a corner, that comes to nothing. So close for City. Great play all round.
66 min: Vinicius Junior runs at Khusanov down the left, enters the box, uses the defender as a shield, and curls towards the top right. Inches wide. Donnarumma wasn’t getting to it. Real are after number four.
65 min: Tchouaméni is fine to continue.
64 min: Tchouaméni is down, having been caught by Rodri’s high-kick. Nothing sinister in it, but that’ll be a sore one. On comes the physio with his magic sponge.
62 min: There are huge gaps in the City midfield. Brahim Diaz powers through one. Vinicius Junior jinks through another and shoots. Donnarumma saves. Finally Guler peals a low diagonal inches wide of the right-hand post. The penalty miss seems to have reinvigorated Real into further action.
60 min: … and it nearly is a properly pivotal moment, Doku jinking in from the left, his low cross nearly steered into his own net by Rudiger. Nothing comes of the resulting corner. But still. A potential four-goal deficit could have been reduced to two in the blink of an eye. Once again, the small margins.
ShareVinicius misses the penalty!
58 min: … and Vinicius Junior misses it! A casual meander of a run-up. He rolls towards the bottom right. Donnarumma guesses correctly and blocks. City clear their lines. A potential pivotal moment? Vinicius Junior raises his hand to the crowd by way of apology, the other hand on the club crest. That was a wee bit too relaxed.
Gianluigi Donnarumma saves an easy save from the penalty. Photograph: Matthew Childs/Action Images/ReutersShare
Updated at 17.19 EDT
57 min: Just a booking for Donnarumma, who was making an effort to play the ball and not the man. On to the penalty, then.
SharePenalty for Real Madrid
56 min: Silva takes, but Huijsen heads clear easily enough. Alexnader-Arnold, from his right-back berth, creams one long pass down the middle. Vinicius Junior is clear! He’s got the better of Khusanov, and reaches the box ahead of the defender. He then tries to dribble around Donnarumma, who tries to grab the ball but catches his man instead. The referee points to the spot.
Gianluigi Donnarumma concedes the penalty against Vinicius Junior. Photograph: Matthew Childs/Action Images/ReutersShare
Updated at 17.17 EDT
55 min: … so having said that, Silva slips a cute pass down the inside-right channel for Semenyo, who whips a first-time shot towards the near post. Courtois turns around for a corner.
54 min: City are enjoying more possession and territory now. But there are no gaps appearing in the final third.
52 min: Reijnders has looked lively since coming on, and Silva continues to buzz around in his relentless way. But otherwise City are looking, perhaps understandably, ragged. “That ship on the City crest is looking more and more like the Titanic tonight,” observes Justin Kavanagh. “But even the doomed liner stayed afloat til April.”
50 min: Real smell blood, though. Pitarch steams after a ball down the right but can’t get the better of Guehi. He’d have been through on goal had he won the duel. Meanwhile here’s Ian Copestake with some succour for City: “If European footer history has taught us anything, it’s that not all 3-0 half-time leads are secure.” It’s probably not the best week to be referencing past Liverpool glories, is it. Or maybe it’s exactly the time to do it. Oh I don’t know.
48 min: … then City go up the other end, win a corner down the left, hit it long … and O’Reilly somehow sends the ball wide right off his thigh from a couple of yards! Not a banner evening for the young man so far, though the flag goes up for a not particularly obvious foul, so blushes are saved.
Nico O’Reilly shoots into the side netting. Photograph: Javier García/ShutterstockShare
Updated at 17.12 EDT
47 min: Braham Diaz dribbles hard down the right and enters the City box. He chops past the flailing Guehi and shoots. Donnarumma parries with a strong arm. Vini Jr tries to knock in the rebound, but Dias sticks out a leg to block brilliantly. So close to number four.
Real Madrid get the second half underway. They’ve replaced Mendy with Fran Garcia, while City have sent on Reijnders for Savinho, a move that strongly suggests damage-limitation.
Half-time postbag. “Up there with the best half of football I’ve seen from an individual player in my lifetime. The first was super, the second excellent, the third exquisite” – Matthew Stratford
“I think we might have just witnessed – albeit for one half – one of the all-time great individual displays. I remember plenty of strikers but from a wing back, especially the way he joined forces on the left side for his second goal, Valverde has conveyed supreme game know-how and tremendous passion and commitment” – K Sangha
“Has Pep Guardiola underestimated Madrid tonight? 4-2-4 with Bernardo Silva as one of the two now looks … ambitious” – Joshua Keeling
“Premier League clubs whomped the group stage, or whatever they’re called now, but have been thoroughly unimpressive in knock-outs so far. Is English football in irrevocable decline?” – Hugh Collins
“Does this put Spurs’ travails last night into some sort of context? City even have the advantage of wearing the right shoes” – Tom Hopkins
ShareHALF TIME: Real Madrid 3-0 Manchester City
Federico Valverde, take a bow. One of the great Champions League hat-tricks. The first two goals weren’t half bad; the hat-trick goal was out of this world. A captain’s performance all right. Pep needs to pull something quite big out of the bag during the break.
Federico Valverde has been unstoppable in the opening 45 minutes. Photograph: Bradley Collyer/PAShare
Updated at 16.55 EDT
45 min: There will be one additional first-half minute. My goodness, how Manchester City need to hear that half-time whistle.
44 min: What a sensational goal. Vinicius Jr started it all with a power dribble down the left, but the move looked to have petered out when he couldn’t decide whether to pass or shoot. But his team-mates salvaged the situation with some outrageous link-up play and ball-juggling on the other flank! A 22-minute hat-trick!
ShareGOAL! Real Madrid 3-0 Manchester City (Valverde 42)
Valverde completes the first hat-trick of his career! Brahim Diaz wedges a delicate pass into the City box down the inside-right channel. Valverde meets the dropping ball, cushioning a soft volley over Guehi’s head, then slotting it into the bottom left! That’s outrageously good!
What a goal from Federico Valverde! Wow! Photograph: Ángel Martínez/Getty ImagesShare
Updated at 16.47 EDT
40 min: The corner comes in. Guehi skittles Mendy and the whistle goes for a foul. Alexander-Arnold was also grappling with Semenyo, mind, so City are within their rights to wonder what’s going on. It’s strangely comforting to realise that referees on the continent are making it all up as they go along as well.
39 min: Rodri shovels a pass down the inside-left channel for Silva, forcing Valverde into the concession of a corner. Silva sends the ball all the way through a crowded box. Nobody touches it. But Doku retrieves the ball on the right touchline and wins another corner. Silva to take.
37 min: Another City free kick, another chance for Silva to loop it into the box. This time from the left. This time headed clear by Guler.
36 min: … but he plays it short to Semenyo instead. Semenyo makes it to the byline, but his cross is flicked clear by Mendy. “Does the City crest chip have a ‘Restart game’ feature?” Andy Gordon, ladies and gentlemen! He’s here all week. Try the Pac-Man power pellets.
35 min: Savinho hasn’t had much of a sniff, but he draws a foul here from Tchouaméni with a sharp turn down the right. A chance for Silva to swing a free kick onto Haaland’s head.
33 min: On the touchline, Pep Guardiola tries very hard to maintain his supercool. The eyes give him away. A concerned look as he stares into the middle distance. “I think it’s safe to say that Pep’s experiment to convert Nico O’Reilly into a full-back has gone extremely well,” begins Kári Tulinius, and you know a but is coming, “but I feel like someone more used to playing with the pitch in front of him wouldn’t have misjudged the flight of the ball like that.”
Could Nico O’Reilly have done better with the second goal? Photograph: Pierre-Philippe Marcou/AFP/Getty ImagesShare
Updated at 16.42 EDT