FC Barcelona 2–8 FC Bayern Munich

The 2019–20 UEFA Champions League quarter-final match between Barcelona and Bayern Munich was played on 14 August 2020 at the Estádio da Luz in Lisbon, Portugal. Bayern, who later went on to become champions, won the match 8–2, making it the first time Barcelona had conceded eight goals in a game since 1946, when they lost 8–0 to Sevilla in the 1946 Copa del Generalísimo.

Barcelona v Bayern Munich (2020)
The Estádio da Luz in Lisbon
hosted the match
Event
Date14 August 2020 (2020-08-14)
VenueEstádio da Luz, Lisbon
Man of the MatchThomas Müller (Bayern Munich)[1]
RefereeDamir Skomina (Slovenia)[2]
Attendance0[3][note 1]
WeatherClear night
24 °C (75 °F)
54% humidity[2]

Due to the COVID-19 pandemic in Europe, the match was played behind closed doors.[4]

Background

Slovenian referee Damir Skomina officiated the match.

In the 1998–99 UEFA Champions League group stage, Bayern defeated Barcelona in both matches, 1–0 at home[5] and 2–1 away[6] en route to Bayern topping Group D while Barcelona finished third and failed to reach the knockout stage.[7]

Bayern and Barcelona had met in four knockout ties since 2008–09 UEFA Champions League, which yielded 26 goals prior to this game. Each time the eventual winner of the Bayern-Barcelona knockout tie went on not only to win the UEFA Champions League, but also complete the continental treble, which also occurred in 2009, 2013 and 2015.[8]

Barcelona won 5–1 on aggregate in the quarter-finals of 2008–09 edition. Barcelona's 4–0 win at Camp Nou in the first leg, with all goals scored in the first half, led Bayern Munich president Franz Beckenbauer to remark "What I saw in the first half is, without doubt, the worst football in Bayern's history". Barcelona manager Pep Guardiola was sent off in the first leg for protesting a yellow card given to Lionel Messi, and had to watch the second leg from the stands.[9][10][11] This defeat, as well as 0–1 home loss in a Bundesliga match against Schalke 04, eventually led to the sacking of Bayern manager Jürgen Klinsmann.[12]

The semi-finals of the 2012–13 competition saw Arjen Robben and Thomas Müller inspire Bayern to a 7–0 aggregate victory, to become the biggest win of the semi-finals on aggregate,[13] including a 3–0 win at the Camp Nou[14][15] which was Barcelona's last home defeat in European competition until a 3–0 loss on 8 December 2020 to Juventus.

The 2014–15 UEFA Champions League semi-finals saw Lionel Messi and Neymar as the key players in a 5–3 aggregate win over Bayern, a 3–0 win at the Camp Nou and then a 3–2 defeat at the Allianz Arena.[16][17] Bayern's manager at the time was Pep Guardiola, who had previously managed Barcelona from 2008 to 2012.

Road to the quarter-final meeting

Both teams qualified for the knockout phase as winners of their respective groups. Both teams had also changed their coaches during the season, Bayern replaced Niko Kovač with Hansi Flick in November 2019,[18] while Barcelona replaced Ernesto Valverde with Quique Setién in January 2020.[19] Barcelona had faced Borussia Dortmund, Inter Milan and Slavia Prague; while Bayern, who faced Tottenham Hotspur, Olympiacos and Red Star Belgrade, won all six of their group matches, including an emphatic 7–2 win at the Tottenham Hotspur Stadium,[20] scoring 24 goals and conceding just five. Barcelona faced Napoli in the round of 16 and won 4–2 on aggregate; while Bayern Munich beat Chelsea 7–1 on aggregate, with the second leg matches of both teams played behind closed doors due to the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic.[4]

Match

Summary

Thomas Müller won the Man of the Match award.

The match was played on 14 August 2020 at the Estádio da Luz in Lisbon, Portugal, as part of a single-elimination tournament, following UEFA's decision to complete the 2019–20 UEFA Champions League and 2019–20 UEFA Europa League seasons, which had been halted since March due to the COVID-19 pandemic, at neutral venues.[21][22] In the opening 10 minutes, Thomas Müller fired Bayern Munich ahead following a one-two with Robert Lewandowski. Shortly after, David Alaba sliced a cross from Jordi Alba into his own net – with an unsuccessful save attempt from Manuel Neuer – to level the scores. Barcelona themselves missed two opportunities: Luis Suárez was denied by Neuer and Lionel Messi hit the post with a curling cross-shot. The following minutes took the match away from Barcelona, as Ivan Perišić smashed in a deflected shot in the 21st minute for Bayern, fed by a pass from Serge Gnabry, after a passing error from Sergi Roberto. Gnabry himself scored with a half volley straight shot from a chip through-ball by Leon Goretzka in the 27th minute, and Müller quickly added the fourth four minutes later from a cross by Joshua Kimmich.

In the 57th minute, a neat turn and finish from the centre of the box to the bottom-right corner by Suárez gave the Spanish side a glimmer of hope, but that proved premature, as Kimmich's side-footed finish in the 63rd minute, connecting with a delivery from Alphonso Davies – who had beaten his marker, Nélson Semedo, at the edge of the box – made the scoreline 5–2 to the Germans. Bayern scored three goals in the closing 10 minutes of the match as in-form striker Lewandowski, who had been quiet for most of the second half, headed his 14th goal of the campaign from a close-range cross by Philippe Coutinho in the 82nd minute. Then Coutinho, who was on loan to Bayern from Barcelona, made the scoreline 8–2 in the final moments of the match: first by taking advantage of a pass from Müller in the 85th minute with a right-footed shot from the centre of the box to the bottom-left corner, followed by a left-footed shot from very close range to the bottom-left corner from a headed pass by substitute Lucas Hernandez in the 89th minute.[23][24][25]

Details

Barcelona 2–8 Bayern Munich
Report
Barcelona[2]
Bayern Munich[2]
GK1 Marc-André ter Stegen
RB2 Nélson Semedo
CB3 Gerard Piqué
CB15 Clément Lenglet
LB18 Jordi Alba  58'
CM20 Sergi Roberto  46'
CM5 Sergio Busquets  70'
CM21 Frenkie de Jong
AM22 Arturo Vidal  90+2'
CF10 Lionel Messi (c)
CF9 Luis Suárez  54'
Substitutes:
GK13 Neto
GK26 Iñaki Peña
DF24 Junior Firpo
DF33 Ronald Araújo
DF44 Óscar Mingueza
MF4 Ivan Rakitić
MF28 Riqui Puig
MF42 Monchu
MF46 Ludovit Reis
FW11 Ousmane Dembélé
FW17 Antoine Griezmann  46'
FW31 Ansu Fati  70'
Manager:
Quique Setién
GK1 Manuel Neuer (c)
RB32 Joshua Kimmich  85'
CB17 Jérôme Boateng  43'  76'
CB27 David Alaba
LB19 Alphonso Davies  52'  83'
CM18 Leon Goretzka  83'
CM6 Thiago
RW22 Serge Gnabry  76'
AM25 Thomas Müller
LW14 Ivan Perišić  67'
CF9 Robert Lewandowski
Substitutes:
GK26 Sven Ulreich
GK39 Ron-Thorben Hoffmann
DF2 Álvaro Odriozola
DF4 Niklas Süle  76'
DF21 Lucas Hernandez  83'
MF8 Javi Martínez
MF11 Michaël Cuisance
MF24 Corentin Tolisso  83'
MF42 Jamal Musiala
FW10 Philippe Coutinho  76'
FW29 Kingsley Coman  67'
FW35 Joshua Zirkzee
Manager:[note 2]
Hansi Flick

Man of the Match:
Thomas Müller (Bayern Munich)[1]

Assistant referees:[2]
Jure Praprotnik (Slovenia)
Robert Vukan (Slovenia)
Fourth official:[2]
Artur Soares Dias (Portugal)
Video assistant referee:[2]
Massimiliano Irrati (Italy)
Assistant video assistant referee:[2]
Marco Guida (Italy)

Match rules[28]

  • 90 minutes
  • 30 minutes of extra time if necessary
  • Penalty shoot-out if scores still level
  • Twelve named substitutes
  • Maximum of five substitutions, with a sixth allowed in extra time[note 3]

Statistics

Second half[29]
StatisticBarcelonaBayern Munich
Goals scored14
Total shots312
Shots on target26
Saves21
Ball possession47%53%
Corner kicks23
Fouls committed1010
Offsides21
Yellow cards32
Red cards00
Overall[29]
StatisticBarcelonaBayern Munich
Goals scored28
Total shots726
Shots on target513
Saves54
Ball possession49%51%
Corner kicks69
Fouls committed1322
Offsides42
Yellow cards33
Red cards00

Aftermath

Barcelona suffered their heaviest loss in 69 years; this was the first time they had conceded more than five goals in a UEFA Champions League game, and their worst concession since the 8–0 defeat to Sevilla in the round of 16 of the 1946 Copa del Generalísimo.[25] Bayern Munich, on the other hand, continued their run of winning all UEFA Champions League matches they played in the season, and would go on to lift the title.[30] The eight goals Bayern scored was the most a side had scored in a European Cup knockout match since Real Madrid defeated FC Swarovski Tirol 9–1 in the last 16 tie in 1990.

Bayern striker Robert Lewandowski became the first player to score in eight or more consecutive UEFA Champions League matches since Cristiano Ronaldo in April 2018 (eleven games), while Bayern's coach Hansi Flick became only the third manager in Champions League history to win his first six matches in charge, after Fabio Capello in 1992–93 and Luis Fernández in 1994–95.[31][32] The match was also compared to the 2014 FIFA World Cup semi-final match between Brazil and Germany as Thomas Müller opened the scoring in the 7–1 routing of Brazil, which Jérôme Boateng and Manuel Neuer also took part in. Flick had been the assistant coach of Germany in that match as well.[33]

Barcelona defender Gerard Piqué stated that the club needed structural changes on all levels,[34] while club president Josep Maria Bartomeu described it as a "disaster".[35] Three days after the game, Barcelona sacked manager Quique Setién.[36] He was followed the next day by the club's sporting director Eric Abidal.[37] Setién was replaced on 19 August by Ronald Koeman, who had played for the club from 1989 to 1995 and was their assistant manager under Louis van Gaal from 1998 to 2000.[38]

Partly owing to this heavy defeat, Barcelona captain Lionel Messi demanded to leave Barcelona, explained his decision owed to the club's failing to compete for the Champions League title after three previous debacles in the competition (0–3 against Juventus in 2016–17 quarter-finals, 0–3 against Roma in 2017–18 quarter-finals, and 0–4 against Liverpool in 2018–19 semi-finals), by saying: "I looked further afield and I want to compete at the highest level, win titles, compete in the Champions League. You can win or lose in it, because it is very difficult, but you have to compete. At least compete for it and let us not fall apart in Rome, Liverpool and Lisbon. All that led me to think about that decision that I wanted to carry out."[39] Although Messi ended up staying in the summer, the defeat proved to be the final involvement that Ivan Rakitić, Nélson Semedo, Luis Suárez and Arturo Vidal would have with the club, as all four players departed Barcelona during the following transfer window.[40]

Bayern Munich went on to win their sixth title in the competition, overtaking Barcelona's total, following a 3–0 win over Lyon in the semi-finals and a 1–0 victory against Paris Saint-Germain in the final. This win would also secure the club's second continental treble, becoming only the second European side – after Barcelona themselves – to achieve this feat on multiple occasions.[41]

Both teams would meet each other again twice later, first as part of the 2021–22 UEFA Champions League group stage, which saw Bayern Munich emerge victorious again with a 3–0 score in both matches, the second of which ultimately sent Barcelona to the UEFA Europa League for the first time in seventeen years, which further aggravated the perception of a crisis occurring within the team.[42] Marca pointed that Barcelona's relegation to the Europa League was the culmination of "a glorious cycle that was coming to an end," after the team had suffered a total of ten losses by at least a three-goal margin since 2017, calling the 2–8 defeat to Bayern "the worst."[43]

Both the teams went on to meet once again in the 2022–23 UEFA Champions League group stage. Barcelona only saw their misery against Bayern continue after losing 2–0 away from home and 3–0 at home, knocking them out of the Champions League into the Europa League for a second successive season.[44][45] It was the first time that Barcelona were eliminated from the group stage twice in a row in 24 years (in the 1997–98 and 1998–99 seasons respectively, the latter of which also involved Bayern Munich in that season's group stage).

See also

Notes

References