Evening Standard

Benzema’s magic touch resurrects Real after City waste their golden chance

- James Robson at the Etihad

SPAIN’S champions-elect were made to look like chumps; the all-time kings of European football reduced to the role of fools.

Real Madrid endured a chastening night at the hands of Manchester

City, as their very place in history was rocked to the core, yet they head to the Bernabeu next week with everything to play for.

This Champions League semi-final should have been over by the half-hour stage, with Real humbled and humiliated by City’s sheer superiorit­y. But Pep Guardiola’s side head to Spain with the slenderest 4-3 advantage after a night when it was impossible to shake the sense that an opportunit­y had been missed.

It was notable the Catalan needed to remind his players after this thrilling, breathless and reckless clash that they had won. It felt like he was trying to convince himself.

“Football is football, the result is the result, but how we performed is exceptiona­l,” said Guardiola.

“Nobody can say the performanc­e was not good.

“I want to convince my players we won and lift their heads up.”

City were irresistib­le at times. They scored four through Kevin De Bruyne, Gabriel Jesus, Phil Foden (right) and Bernardo Silva and could have comfortabl­y doubled that figure.

Even after Karim Benzema’s late Panenka penalty completed the scoring, the home side had at least two more glorious chances to further extend their lead. It was that kind of night, with Real helpless to stop City when they were in full flow.

But Carlo Ancelotti’s side do not know when they are beaten. That weight of history means there is never a lost cause — and with Benzema, Luka Modric and Vinicius Junior, they always have a chance.

“If Real have three chances, they will score five goals,” joked one

Spanish journalist before kick-off. And while that will never be the case, it was remarkable how they made the most of the moments when they came their way.

Benzema’s ageless brilliance was on show again after disposing of Paris

Saint-Germain and Chelsea in the previous two rounds. At the Etihad, he had three shots, two goals, with the other effort blocked. City had done well early on to force Benzema to do much of his work in deep areas to keep him away from the danger zone.

In reality, his composure on the ball only helped to settle Real at the point when the City storm was at its most ferocious.

His first goal served notice to City of the danger of playing with too much abandon — halving the deficit after De Bruyne and Jesus had fired the home side into a 2-0 lead inside 11 minutes. It instilled an uncertaint­y in Guardiola’s rear-guard that remained throughout and is sure live on into next week’s second leg.

Who would be brave enough to predict the outcome of that match, which cannot come soon enough? The expectatio­n would be that both teams would try to tighten up defensivel­y, but the question is whether either can?

Real looked as vulnerable as they did in their quarter-final second leg against Chelsea, when they were blown away in front of their own fans by Thomas Tuchel’s side.

Only the cushion of their 3-1 win at Stamford Bridge — and the brilliance of Modric and Benzema — saw them stumble over the line.

Against City, their tactic appeared to be no more than riding the storm and seizing their own moments.

Guardiola, who was without a recognised right-back last night, will see his team improved by the return of Joao Cancelo from suspension. But how Ruben Dias or Aymeric Laporte recover from such a wounding experience remains to be seen.

“If we play like we did in the second half, we won’t be able to win,” said Guardiola. “If we play like we did at other periods, we will.

“When I became a footballer and a manager, when you go to the Bernabeu there is no option but to win. You have to come through these situations to win the Champions League.”

Ancelotti, meanwhile, warned City they might have missed a golden chance to secure their place in a second successive final.

“It is a defeat that leaves us alive in the second leg,” he said. “We have to be better in our defensive aspect, but we are able to create problems for them also.

“In the second game if we defend better, we will win — but if we defend like today, we will be out of the competitio­n.”

Another classic lies in wait.

 ?? ?? Heading for a win: De Bruyne breaks the deadlock at the Etihad last night
Heading for a win: De Bruyne breaks the deadlock at the Etihad last night

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