Deutsche Welle (English edition)

Champions League: Mahrez sends Man City into final as dream dies for outclassed PSG

Manchester City reached their first ever Champions League final after victory over PSG. Both goals came from Riyad Mahrez as City coach Pep Guardiola moved closer to regaining the trophy he's chased for a decade,

-

Manchester City 2-0 Paris Saint-Germain, EtihadStad­ium (Mahrez 11', 63') City win 4-1 on aggregate

The Manchester City Project broke new ground on Tuesday night after another stylish victory over Paris Saint-Germain secured a place in their first ever final of Europe’s elite competitio­n. The hero was Riyad Mahrez, but the effort was collective.

Like in last season’s Champions League final defeat by Bayern Munich, PSG were undone by a player born in Paris. This time it was Mahrez who pounced just as he did last week in the city of his birth to elevate Manchester City to a plane they haven’t occupied before. His first goal back in freezing Manchester tilted the tie in City’s favor, his second sent them to Istanbul.

For Pep Guardiola’s side, a first ever Champions League final beckons – a chance to engrave City's name into history and reclaim a trophy that has been his Holy Grail for a decade, and one that eluded him during his time in Bavaria and, thus far, in England. And it’s not just one trophy that City are chasing – a treble is still on for them. PSG’s treble hopes have been downgraded to a double.

"We are in the final of the Champions League, they're nice words," said Guardiola, who won the Champions League twice with Barcelona, in 2009 and 2011. "People believed what happened in the past means I should arrive in the final every year.''

Foden and Mahrez dazzle

Like City, PSG’s new money is gradually sidelining the dominance of the old money giants of Real Madrid and Barcelona, among others. PSG will be challengin­g again next year, even if their coach Mauricio Pochettino’s rallying cry for his team to be “clinical and aggressive” was ultimately not realized in this second leg. Not by PSG, anyway.

The French champions were without the injured Kylian Mbappe in Manchester, and it showed. The Frenchman had been so key to the victory over Bayern and the less said about the abject performanc­e of his replacemen­t, Mauro Icardi, the better.

Instead it was City who defended with a resilience that is not always associated with Guardiola teams — Ruben Dias and Oleksandr Zinchenko were outstandin­g — and attacked with freedom, pace and guile.

Kevin de Bruyne was of course City’s driving force and the architect of victory, but this felt like another coming-of-age performanc­e by Phil Foden. The 20-year-old local lad underlined his status as one of the game’s greatest prospects, producing an electric performanc­e and the key assist for Mahrez, who capped a scintillat­ing counter-attack with a consummate finish into the roof of the net for City’s second – the killer blow.

PSG lost their discipline after that, with Angel di Maria sent off for a mindless stamp on Fernandinh­o and Marco Verratti fortunate that the referee took mercy on him. PSG were well beaten and that reality was starting to bite as much as the Manchester air.

Whether City meet Real Madrid or Chelsea for an all-English final, Guardiola’s team are going to take some stopping. The Catalan has finally broken the glass ceiling with City, who will take their place in a European final for the first time since 1970, the year PSG were formed. While PSG are still evolving into the force they believe they can be, City are already there.

 ??  ??
 ??  ?? City have won their last seven UCL games; the longest ever winning run by an English team in the competitio­n
City have won their last seven UCL games; the longest ever winning run by an English team in the competitio­n
 ??  ?? Neymar's ambitions of lifting the European Cup again are over for another year
Neymar's ambitions of lifting the European Cup again are over for another year

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Germany