Sportstar

Barcelona blitz

Having wrapped up the Spanish league title with eight games to spare, Barcelona is now the only franchise whose men’s and women’s sides have both won the top European tournament.

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Two years after losing 41 to Lyon in the nal, Barcelona produced an almost identical performanc­e against Chelsea at the Gamla Ullev in Gothenburg, Sweden, to win the UEFA Women’s Champions League for the rst time in its history.

Caroline Graham Hansen scored Barcelona’s fourth and final goal in the 36th minute, and that’s how the score read at fulltime. The performanc­e was no surprise from Barcelona, which didn’t drop a single point in the Spanish league while scoring 136 goals and conceding just ve in 27 games this season.

Coming into the game full of confidence after winning the Women’s Super League title a week before, Chelsea was on the back foot from the very beginning as Barca’s rapid passing and possession­based game proved too much for the Londoners.

Barcelona got o to the best possible start when Lieke Martens hit the crossbar and Fran Kirby’s attempted clearance bounced o Chelsea midfielder Melanie Leupolz before spinning into the net in the opening minute.

Chelsea struggled to deal with Barca’s punishing press and it went 20 behind in the 14th minute when Leupolz was penalised for fouling Jennifer Hermoso in the box, and Alexia Putellas made no mistake from the spot.

Chelsea did its best to get forward, but it found its path blocked by a defence that has conceded only ve goals in 26 Primera Division games this season.

Aitana Bonmati made it 30 seven minutes later, rounding o a superb passing move from a Barca throwin with a confident leftfoot nish, prompting an emergency meeting of the Chelsea players on the edge of their box as the Catalans celebrated.

That discussion failed to resolve Chelsea’s defensive woes as Lieke Martens skipped past Niamh Charles on the left wing and centred for Norwegian winger Caroline Graham Hansen to steer home a fourth in the 36th minute.

Chelsea’s switch to a more direct style produced an improvemen­t in the second

half, but it wasn’t enough to stop the Catalan club from coasting to victory, with the Barca bench exploding in celebratio­n as the nal whistle sounded to confirm the side’s status as Europe’s best club side.

Having wrapped up the Spanish league title with eight games to spare, Barcelona is now the only franchise whose men’s and women’s sides have both won the top European tournament.

Having trailed by four goals in its rst nal two years ago — going on to lose 41 to Lyon — Barcelona wrapped up the biggest winning margin in a nal since the Women’s Champions League era began 20 years ago. The result also ended Lyon’s reign of dominance in the competitio­n, the French side having been knocked out by Paris Saintgerma­in in the quarterfinals after winning ve consecutiv­e titles between 2016 and 2020.

The focus for Chelsea manager Emma Hayes’ side will now turn to trying to capture another domestic trophy as it bids to add the FA Cup to its Women’s Super League and League Cup titles.

“It’s obviously disappoint­ing. We didn’t have the start to the game that we wanted and I think in these types of games against these opponents, you can’t concede sloppy goals… They had four chances in the rst half and put four chances in the back of the net,” Chelsea defender Millie Bright told BT Sport after the game.

Barcelona’s Oshoala makes history

Asisat Oshoala became the rst Nigerian as well as the first African to win the Women’s Champions League. The 26yearold striker was introduced for Spanish midfielder Jennifer Hermoso in the 71st minute as Barcelona craved more goals. She added a fth goal in the closing stages of the game, although her effort was chalked o for her being in an offside position.

Before the nal, the fourtime African Women’s Player of the Year said Barca had learned from its defeat to Lyon in the 2019 nal: “Now, we have the experience of how European football is and also how a top game like this is played. I think we’re going to be better with our tactics this year, how we go out and play and everything. For us, it was good. We played in the nal in 2019, we lost and then we picked up correction­s from there. Come May 16, against Chelsea, I don’t think we’re going to make the same mistakes again, because we already learned from the past. We are a better team now than we were two years ago,” she said then.

Chelsea players make vow to Abramovich

Roman Abramovich, the Russianisr­aeli billionair­e owner of Chelsea, visited the team dressing room following the defeat. “Our owner came in to see us and all the girls were very quick to say we’d be back here,” said Chelsea manager Hayes. “We’ll work hard on the training ground to make sure we do that. I’m just gutted we didn’t have the chance to make a game of it. We’ve had a wonderful season but, at times, we were a bit naive. I was gutted that, after 40 minutes we were 40 down because, for me as a coach, it then became impossible. It’s a diffi cult place to be. I did my best, I tried to change a few things just to give us a little bit of momentum, but it wasn’t to be. It will be difficult for the players, when they reflect on it.”

 ?? AP ?? Rampaging victory: Barcelona wrapped up the biggest winning margin in a nal since the Women’s Champions League era began 20 years ago.
AP Rampaging victory: Barcelona wrapped up the biggest winning margin in a nal since the Women’s Champions League era began 20 years ago.
 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? Sealing the win: Caroline Graham Hansen scored Barcelona’s fourth and nal goal in the 36th minute, and that’s how the score read at fulltime.
GETTY IMAGES Sealing the win: Caroline Graham Hansen scored Barcelona’s fourth and nal goal in the 36th minute, and that’s how the score read at fulltime.

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