The Southland Times

United complete stunning comeback

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Ole Gunnar Solskjaer showed he’s still a specialist in delivering last-minute victories for Manchester United in the Champions League.

Paris Saint-Germain, however, remain a specialist in failure on Europe’s biggest stage.

Marcus Rashford’s injury-time penalty sent Solskjaer’s revitalise­d side through to the Champions League quarterfin­als yesterday, securing a 3-1 win at PSG to overturn a two-goal deficit from the first leg.

Solskjaer, who scored an injury-time winner in the final to cap a late comeback for United in 1999, oversaw more late drama 20 years later. It was the first time in Champions League history a team lost the first leg at home by a two-goal margin and still went through.

United have yet to confirm whether Solskjaer will get the job on a full-time basis, despite the former Norway striker having completely transforme­d the side after replacing Jose Mourinho.

This win will have strengthen­ed his chances considerab­ly, but Solskjaer isn’t taking anything for granted. ‘‘It’s been a fantastic time with the players and staff I’ve got,’’ Solskjaer said.

‘‘I’m going to enjoy my job as long as I’ve got it.’’ For PSG, there was only reason for despair.

The big-spending French club again fell apart in a favourable position, two years after also making history in the last 16 by throwing away a 4-0 lead against Barcelona and losing 6-1 in the return leg.

Coach Thomas Tuchel clung hopefully to the idea his side played better over the two legs in what he described as a ‘‘crazy’’ match. ‘‘It’s very hard to lose and very hard to accept,’’ he said. ‘‘We didn’t deserve to go out after 180 minutes.’’

Referee Damir Skomina awarded United’s penalty after a lengthy video review that showed defender Presnel Kimpembe jumping up to block Diogo Dalot’s shot with his elbow.

Rashford kept his nerve for the spot kick, blasting the ball past PSG goalkeeper Gianluigi Buffon. Tuchel refused to blame VAR. ‘‘I’m a big supporter of VAR and I stay a big supporter. With the hand it’s a super difficult thing because there are too many points: do we punish it or not punish it?’’ he said. ‘‘It’s a 50-50 decision, it’s difficult. There are reasons why you can give this penalty.’’

PSG’s Brazilian star Neymar, who is recovering from injury and watched on in horror from the sideline as the penalty was taken, disagreed. He blasted the officials angrily on his Instagram account.

‘‘This is a disgrace!’’ he wrote. ‘‘And they put four guys that do not understand football to watch it in slow motion.’’

VAR played a key part in yesterday’s other match. Alex Telles scored a penalty in extra time to send Porto into the quarterfin­als with a 3-1 victory over Roma, overturnin­g a one-goal deficit from the first leg. He converted the spot kick after Alessandro Florenzi had been penalised following a review.

That sent Porto through 4-3 on aggregate.

 ??  ?? Referee Damir Skomina studies the screen before awarding United’s controvers­ial late penalty.
Referee Damir Skomina studies the screen before awarding United’s controvers­ial late penalty.

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