A wild Champions League quarterfinal night ends with a controversial call at Arsenal – MASHAHER

ISLAM GAMAL9 April 2024Last Update :
A wild Champions League quarterfinal night ends with a controversial call at Arsenal – MASHAHER


There were 10 total goals and countless twists. Dozens of world-class players and four fantastic teams. Night No. 1 of the 2024 Champions League quarterfinals delivered as only the Champions League can — and it ended with Arsenal’s Bukayo Saka bearing down on Bayern Munich’s goal, with one last dramatic turn at the tip of his deft left foot.

It was the fifth of five minutes of stoppage time in London. While Manchester City and Real Madrid were dueling to a 3-3 draw in Spain, Arsenal and Bayern were tied, 2-2. A pass slipped through into Saka’s path, and goalkeeper Manuel Neuer clattered into him … or did he?

The entire Emirates Stadium roared, almost expecting to hear a whistle.

But referee Glenn Nyberg waved away the expectant appeals.

And after he blew his whistle to end a frantic first leg 30 seconds later, replays showed that he might just have been correct.

Saka had attempted to sidestep Neuer. His right leg clattered into Neuer’s. The question — one without a straightforward answer — was which of the two initiated the contact.

Multiple angles appeared to suggest that Saka had. He’d pushed the ball to his left, but flailed his right leg back to the right, while Neuer had actually attempted to bring his own right leg away from Saka, back in toward his own body.

The contrasting view is that Saka’s leg kick was unintentional. His body’s momentum had carried him toward Neuer. The goalkeeper’s wide base had, arguably, been the primary reason for the contact, and impeded Saka as the Arsenal winger tried to cut back to the ball.

It was smack-dab in every gray area. Saka fumed. Arsenal fans howled. But video assistant referees saw no “clear and obvious error.”

And so, one blockbuster quarterfinal tie will go to Munich next week, for the second leg, level at 2-2.

The other, remarkably, was even more topsy-turvy.

Manchester City needed only two minutes to take a lead in Madrid. Bernando Silva caught the Estadio Santiago Bernabéu off guard with a clever free kick that surprised Real Madrid goalkeeper Andriy Lunin.

Madrid answered with two goals in two minutes. A deflection enabled the first. Rodrygo scored the second, by finishing off a lightning-quick counterattack.

For an hour thereafter, City labored in search of an equalizer. Erling Haaland was largely invisible.

But in the 66th minute, City’s latest superstar, homegrown midfielder Phil Foden, blasted a 20-yard rocket into the top corner.

And five minutes later, Josko Gvardiol one-upped him. The Croatian defender put City ahead, 3-2, with his very first goal for the club since signing last summer.

Real Madrid’s Federico Valverde, though, saved the best of the bunch for last. With 3-2 deficit and a difficult second leg in Manchester staring Los Blancos in the face, Valverde pinged an unstoppable volley into the side-netting.

And so it ended, 3-3, jaws on the floor.

The Champions League is regularly billed as the world’s best soccer competition. And yet again, it proved that, if anything, “best” might be an understatement.




Source Agencies

Leave a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *


Comments Rules :

Breaking News