The Day

Man United wins again at PSG; Messi scores in Barca rout

- By STEVE DOUGLAS

Marcus Rashford sprinted toward the corner flag inside an empty Parc des Princes and slid on his knees in celebratio­n, just like two seasons ago.

Another trip to Paris Saint- Germain in the Champions League. Another late winner for the Manchester United striker.

In a heavyweigh­t contest on the opening night of the group stage, United reproduced its stunning exploits from the 2018-19 competitio­n by beating PSG away thanks to Rashford's 87th-minute strike in a 2-1 win on Tuesday.

It was an eerily similar scenario to 18 months ago, when United arrived in the French capital heavily depleted and 2-0 down from the first leg of the teams' last-16 match. It was Rashford who clinched an unlikely 3-1 win — and progress to the quarterfin­als — with a stoppage-time penalty.

PSG, last season's beaten finalist, already has work to do if the Qatar-owned team is to realize its longheld ambition of being European champion for the first time.

Lionel Messi's Barcelona and Cristiano Ronaldo's Juventus are up and running already, though.

Messi scored a penalty to set Barca on its way to a 5-1 win over Hungarian outsider Ferencváro­s as the Spanish team began the rebuild of its reputation in Europe's elite competitio­n, two months after an embarrassi­ng 8- 2 loss to Bayern Munich in the quarterfin­als last season.

Ronaldo was missing for Juventus after testing positive for the coronaviru­s last week, but the Italian champion had a worthy replacemen­t in Alvaro Morata as the striker scored twice in a 2-0 win at Dynamo Kyiv.

There were wins for Lazio, Leipzig and Club Brugge, while Chelsea and Sevilla drew 0-0 and two group-stage newcomers — Rennes and Krasnodar — drew 1-1.

Shortage of fans

There were no fans at the Parc des Princes, one of three stadiums — along with Barcelona's Camp Nou and Chelsea's Stamford Bridge — to be without spectators for the return of the Champions League because of the coronaviru­s.

Other games were sparsely attended, with nearly 16,700 spectators watching Zenit St. Petersburg lose 2-1 to Brugge, 14,850 seeing Juventus win in Kyiv, and 5,000 attending the Rennes-Krasnodar game.

A sluggish PSG certainly could have done with some backing from its supporters, with United proving more than a match for the home team despite having a makeshift center-back pairing of Axel Tuanzebe and Victor Lindelof while Paul Pogba started on the bench.

United went ahead through midfielder Bruno Fernandes' twice-taken penalty midway through the first half but conceded when Anthony Martial rose to clear Neymar's corner from the left, only to glance a header past his own goalkeeper, David de Gea, in the 55th.

In the other game in Group H, Leipzig — a surprise semifinali­st last season — beat Istanbul Basaksehir 2-0 in front of just under 1,000 fans thanks to two first-half goals by Spanish defender Angeliño.

American presence

U. S. national team goalkeeper Ethan Horvath is one of a record 10 Americans eligible for the group stage with various clubs. He didn't get off to the best of starts.

Horvath, who plays for Brugge, was credited with an own-goal against Zenit after a shot by Dejan Lovren hit the post and bounced in off the back of the diving goalkeeper.

Brugge grabbed a stoppage-time winner from Charles De Ketelaere, though, and joins Lazio on three points in Group F.

The Italian team, which is playing in the Champions League group stage for the first time in 13 years, beat Borussia Dortmund 3-1 through goals by Ciro Immobile and Jean- Daniel Akpa-Akpro as well as an own-goal by Dortmund goalkeeper Marwin Hitz.

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