Wednesday’s first leg of theother Champions League semifinal, between Borussia Dortmund and Paris Saint-German, had every ounce of action that Tuesday’s dynamic duel between Bayern Munich and Real Madrid did. It had 27 total shots. It had an awe-inspiring atmosphere. It had action at both ends.
But it didn’t have the precision nor the firepower.
It ended, somehow, with only one goal.
Borussia Dortmund will take a 1-0 lead to Paris for next Tuesday’s second leg. And at the final whistle, neither side was quite sure how to feel about it.
Dortmund, as the home team and underdog, playing in front of its famed Yellow Wall, really needed to win — and it did. Niclas Füllkrug scored a fine goal to put BVB ahead in the 36th minute.
DORTMUND STRIKE FIRST ⚡
Schlotterbeck sends a perfect ball over to the top 👌 Füllkrug makes no mistake 🎯 pic.twitter.com/GJ2jytxpbd
— CBS Sports Golazo ⚽️ (@CBSSportsGolazo) May 1, 2024
At the time, and over a frantic hour that followed, Füllkrug’s strike felt like the first goal of many. But a second never materialized.
PSG struck both posts in a span of nine seconds.
Füllkrug probably could’ve had a hat trick. PSG’s Fabián Ruiz could’ve scored twice with his head. Both sides created countless chances. Ousmane Dembélé blazed one of the best over the crossbar, with half of the net begging.
So the semifinal tie will pause for six days, then resume at the Parc des Princes, with the outcome firmly in the balance.
You can re-live the first leg as it happened below.
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Full time: Dortmund 1, PSG 0
The final whistle sounds.
Both teams will rue missed chances.
Dortmund will take a 1-0 lead to Paris next Tuesday.
PSG will likely still feel confident.
Entertaining game. No one’s quite sure how it ended with only one goal.
🟡⚫️ Fifth Champions League spot for Germany is an excellent news for Borussia Dortmund.
BVB are currently 5th in Bundesliga and the access to next UCL is crucial their budget.
❗️ Understand BVB will really try to keep both Ian Maatsen and Jadon Sancho with UCL fresh funds. pic.twitter.com/xQL8FONPuQ
Both teams lacking precision in and around the box.
Still 1-0 Dortmund with three minutes plus stoppage time remaining.
Marquinhos to the rescue for PSG
No, he didn’t score. He saved PSG, from what surely would’ve been a 2-0 deficit, with a sliding block on Julian Brandt.
Jadon Sancho slipped Brandt into the box with a clever little pass, and Brandt, for a fleeting moment, looked more likely to score than not. But Marquinhos came flying in from the blind side, stretched out his left foot, and foiled Brandt.
Dembélé miss!
What a miss. PSG created perhaps its best chance of the game. The ball rolled into the lap of Ousmane Dembélé at the penalty spot. His blazed his right-footed shot a few feet over the bar.
Yikes.
After a pretty frantic 30 minutes, the game has now calmed down a bit.
PSG, finally, enjoys a sustained spell of possession. Then Dortmund gets a turn.
0-0, approaching the 80-minute mark.
Mbappé’s positioning
PSG just brought on Randal Kolo Muani, who has spent most of his career so far playing as a central striker.
Mbappé, meanwhile, is often most effective on the left wing.
But Mbappé is still playing as the central striker, and Kolo Muani is out on the left.
We’d love to hear Luis Enrique’s reasoning for that.
(Update: As we were writing, Mbappé floated out to the left, and very nearly created a goal.)
Will Dortmund regret these misses?
The hosts were clinging to their lead between Minute 46 and 58 or so.
Now they have been all over PSG for a good 10 minutes, and created multiple high-quality chances. No more goals, though.
Dortmund robbed of a penalty?
Ooooh boy.
Julian Brandt floated a cross to the far post. Füllkrug, it seemed, was about to rise to meet it — and then he got a nudge in the back from Nuno Mendes.
It was the type of contact that, in a vacuum, wasn’t all that forceful. But it absolutely put Füllkrug off, and it absolutely was not an attempt to play the ball.
That, in my opinion, should’ve been a penalty. But the referee and VAR say no.
And now a Dortmund chance!
Füllkrug misses this time.
Created, against the run of play, by an electric burst down the right from Jadon Sancho.
Still 1-0, with 30 minutes plus stoppage time to go in this first leg.
Mbappé with the near-equalizer. Ouch.
Another PSG chance
Marquinhos just hit the pass of the night. An exquisitely shaped cross — somehow, from the right center back position — that hopped onto the head of Fabién Ruiz.
Ruiz couldn’t quite direct the header on goal. And to be fair to him, the height of the ball and the angle were awkward. But still, big chance.
Jadon Sancho completed more dribbles in his first half display against PSG in the Champions League than he did in his ENTIRE time at Manchester United 🤯
Kylian Mbappé rattles the right post. Ten seconds later, Achraf Hakimi strikes the inside of the left post.
Both shots caromed back across the face of goal, but stayed out.
Incredible. Dortmund’s lead holds firm — by a matter of inches.
Second half underway
It’ll be fascinating to see how much PSG chases this game. Do they play as if they’re behind? Or would they be perfectly happy going back to Paris with a 1-0 deficit?
Mbappé not at his best
Admittedly, “his best” is an impossibly high standard, but that was subpar half from Kylian Mbappé.
Some credit goes to Dortmund. Defenders have crowded him out a few times.
But on the few occasions he’s found space, he hasn’t been sharp. One sequence, around the 33rd minute, stood out. He received the ball in a central position, in transition, with runners to both his left and right and a numerical advantage. He overhit his pass out to the left, and spoiled the break.