Bayern Munich 8-2 Barcelona: The brilliant Bayern weighs on Barca to win in the Champions League semi-finals

The full and ruthless German champions were at another point in their Spanish rivals, as they have been for almost every single opponent they have faced in Europe this season and in every competition since the resumption of football in June.

They scored 4 times in the first half, added some other quartet in the part at the moment and may have seamlessly scored the opposite of a surprised and chaotic blue team whose defensive mistakes were too much to be counted and which now have a new and shameful ECU competition. record defeat on your behalf.

Bayern were not entirely foolproof, however, with the blue-wingers – inevitably led by Lionel Messi and Luis Suarez – placing back to cause unrest and control Manuel Neuer.

In a dizzying 10-minute opening, Thomas Muller fired Bayern after a double with Robert Lewandowski and David Alaba savagely cut a Jordi Alba centre into his own net to repair parity, before Suarez denied through Neuer and Messi hit the post with a curling center towards a packaged box.

The next 22 minutes took Barca, Ivan Perisic crushed at a deviant moment for Bayern before Serge Gnabry finished a delicious ball over Leon Goretzka, and Muller hit his moment on the first pole.

A good turn and end of Suarez after the break gave hope to the Spanish look, but that certainly suffocated through the variety of purposes: a Finale of Appearance by Joshua Kimmich after an astonishing skill and speed and perfect functionality of Alphonso Davies.

Robert Lewandowski scored his 14th Goal in the Champions League in just eight games before the salt spilled into Barca’s deep wounds, while Philippe Coutinho, on loan from the Spaniards, scored 7th and 8th at close range after leaving the bank.

Bayern are through the top team decorated in the competition, having won the European Cup/Champions League five times, recently high in 2013 and looks comfortably the most powerful left in this season’s tournament.

He will now face Frenchman Lyon, who beat Manchester City 3-1.

There is a threat that the playoff parties between two of Europe’s most decorated groups will turn into a cautious tactical battle, unlike the thrill seekers of the advertising hype.

However, not Barca Bayern. It’s a game that delivers, even in an unbiased and empty stadium.

Four playoff matches since 2009 have now scored 36 goals with an average goals consistent with the game.

That includes the combined 7-0 win through Arjen Robben and Muller for Bayern in the semi-finals in 2013 and a master class from Messi and Neymar in the last 4 years, two years later, when Barca beat the Germans.

But this game is the most sensible of all and will remain in memory for a long time as a boast of two parts that now operate in other stratospheres.

Bayern’s brilliance and the top line dicy, Barcelona’s fragile but still tough attack, all ensured that a purpose choice is never far away and that the ball in the net is the best option for everyone.

Such has been the quality of these groups in the last 3 elimination matches, the winner has won the trophy, and you would not need Bayern to continue this trend.

They broke the competition, scoring 39 goals and awarding only 8 in the process of winning all 10 of their games. The 8 scored the maximum goals scored through a team in a European Cup draw on Friday since Real Madrid beat FC Wacker Innsbruck 9–1 in a final draw in 1990-91.

He adds to the victories after the lockout by claiming an 8th consecutive bundesliga name and the two who gave them the German Cup.

The hiring of Hansi Flick, first of all on an interim but now permanent basis, now seems like a masterstroke of the Bayern hierarchy.

In a short time he built a Bayern that fits perfectly with his impressive predecessors, built around a positivity that makes Jerome Boateng and Alaba the makers of side plays, Davies and Kimmich both extremes as the sides and Lewandowski. . Array Muller et al, an unrivalled transparent attack unit on the continent.

Lyon will have a task to do next Wednesday.

The dismantling of Barcelona in the Lisbon countryside will bring to light paintings of primary restructuring before next season.

It’s not just a defeat, it’s a humiliation. A first loss with a margin of six goals since the 6-0 loss to Espanyol in 1951. His first eight-way concession in an attack since the 8-0 defeat Sevilla in 1946.

The average age of their starting lineup on Friday 29 years and 329 days, the oldest they have ever nominated for a Champions League draw.

Only Messi and goalkeeper Marc-Andre ter Stegen have played at the expected point of a blue player this crusade and the question marks now hang to the fullest of their teammates.

A guy whose time is over is the player Quique Setien, who oversaw the club by giving the name of La Liga to his fierce rival, Real Madrid, and now a European defeat like no other.

His conservative initial lineup, with Antoine Griezmann, Ousmane Dembélé (both nine-digit signings) and Ivan Rakitic, with an offensive spirit, left on the bench, which nearly shouted the magic of Messi or Suarez.

But such a brilliant duo can rescue their boss so often.

Before the match, Arturo Vidal, who in midfield, proclaimed that his former Bayern faced “the most productive team in the world”.

He no longer eats those ill-chosen words, but he drowns with them.

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