Hindustan Times (Delhi)

France versus Germany semis mark club football power shift

CHAMPIONS LEAGUE For the first time since 1995-96, no club from England, Italy or Spain figures in the semi-finals

- Sportsdesk@hindustant­imes.com

LISBON: Emmanuel Macron was quick to appropriat­e France’s unexpected Champions League prowess for political purposes. “In Brussels, as on the pitches,” the French president tweeted. “France and Germany, engines of Europe!” The most powerful voices in European Union decisionma­king. And the last countries standing in the continent’s premier football competitio­n, too.

It has never happened before: two French teams in the Champions League semi-finals after two nights of incredible results in Lisbon. It is only the second time— after 1991—since the European Cup was first handed out in 1955 that no teams from England, Italy or Spain made it to the last four.

Lionel Messi and Barcelona were sent packing after an 8-2 demolition by Bayern on Friday. Then Lyon, the lowest-ranked quarterfin­alist, on Saturday knocked out Man City, the world’s most expensivel­y assembled squad. Standing in the way of a first European Cup final for Lyon, who finished seventh in the curtailed French league, are fivetime champions Bayern on Wednesday. The previous night will see Paris Saint-germain, who ended Atalanta’s fairytale run, facing knockout stage debutant Leipzig, who were founded just 11 years ago.

You have to go back longer to

find a Champions League semifinals that didn’t feature Messi or Cristiano Ronaldo. It hasn’t happened since 2005. Ronaldo, a Champions League winner with Man United and Real Madrid, didn’t even make it to Lisbon where his career was launched at Sporting. Juventus were eliminated in the last 16 by a Lyon side that confounded its domestic form to edge past the side that has won nine Italian titles in a row.

It signals a resurgence for Lyon, who swept seven French titles from 2002 to 2008 before the rise of PSG, with more than $1 billion of Qatar-funded player spending since 2011, transformi­ng the dynamics of Ligue 1. Seven of the last eight domestic

titles have been won by PSG.

But Kylian Mbappé is delighted by Lyon muscling into the elite, allowing the PSG forward to use it to shoot down jibes about the quality and status of Ligue 1. “FARMERS LEAGUE,” Mbappé tweeted in all caps alongside emojis of a clown face and applause, tagging in Lyon’s Twitter account after the 3-1 victory over City.

With Pep Guardiola—twice a Champions League winner as Barcelona coach—outwitted by Lyon’s Rudi Garcia, the last of the managerial heavyweigh­ts exited this mini-tournament. Diego Simeone, who has lost two Champions League finals with Atletico, was dumped out by Leipzig. The last 16 saw Julian Nagelsmann mastermind Leipzig’s victory over Jose Mourinho’s Spurs, the 2019 finalist. The same stage saw Jürgen Klopp’s title defence ended at Atletico. Zinedine Zidane’s hopes of a fourth title were thwarted by Guardiola’s City in the last 16. So a manager is guaranteed to lift the European Cup for the first time. Three of the four are German. Bayern’s Hansi Flick, PSG’S Thomas Tuchel and Leipzig’s Nagelsmann. “It’s clear that this is lovely for German football,” Nagelsmann said. “Coaching education in Germany is good. I enjoyed a good apprentice­ship and was satisfied with what I picked up along the way.”

Nagelsmann picked up his early coaching tips from Tuchel, who he worked under at Augsburg before leading Hoffenheim into the Champions League for the first time. “I always look back to words that said German football would be left behind on the internatio­nal stage because we mainly had German coaches,” Nagelsmann said. “And now everything is great. Of course, that’s not the case either. But we shouldn’t live in extremes.”

At 33, Nagelsmann would be the youngest manager to ever win the biggest prize in club football. “One German coach will definitely be in the final,” he said. “That is certain.”

It has been a shared journey for Leipzig and Lyon. They took the two qualificat­ion spots from the same four-team group after being the lowest ranked teams, below Zenit St. Petersburg and Benfica, whose stadium will host the final.

It should have been staged in Istanbul and in May. It’s not just the dates and location that were hastily changed. So was the format, transformi­ng the dynamic of the competitio­n. The quarterfin­als and semifinals are being condensed into 10 days in neutral Lisbon, rather than being spread over two months with home-andaway fixtures, to ensure the competitio­n can be completed.

The disruption caused by the coronaviru­s has favoured France and Germany. The English, Italian and Spanish leagues could only resume in June, so only completed their domestic fixtures in late July or early August.

No wonder the French and German players were so much fresher heading into this final eight tournament. The Bundesliga was completed in late June. Ligue 1 was curtailed after playing its last fixtures in March. The only competitiv­e French fixtures since then were the two finals in July, and Lyon taking PSG to penalties in the League Cup before losing. “The head guides the legs —this did not preventing some of my players being exhausted,” Garcia said after Lyon ousted City. “But usually we recover better when we have won, and this was a great victory for us and for French football.”

 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? Neymar, Kylian Mbappé and their PSG teammates will take on a Leipzig squad with little Champions League experience, at the Stadium of Light in Lisbon on Tuesday. n
GETTY IMAGES Neymar, Kylian Mbappé and their PSG teammates will take on a Leipzig squad with little Champions League experience, at the Stadium of Light in Lisbon on Tuesday. n

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