UCL: Dembele double ends Liverpool’s european dream as PSG aim to rerun history by defending the title The Bridge Chronicle
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UCL: Dembele double ends Liverpool’s european dream as PSG aim to rerun history by defending the title

Two second-half goals from Ousmane Dembélé and a pivotal VAR penalty reversal ensured the defending champions advanced to the semifinals.

Ashutosh Sahoo

The crown stays firmly on the heads of the kings from Paris. On a night when Anfield’s mythology collided with the cold, clinical efficiency of the European champions, Paris Saint-Germain earned a 2-0 win (4-0 on aggregate) to reach the Champions League semifinals.

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Liverpool battled with a ferocity that unsettled the reigning champions for more than an hour, but in the end they were undone by the brilliance of Ballon d’Or winner Ousmane Dembele. The French forward, heavily criticized for his profligacy in the first leg, ruthlessly converted two second-half chances to quiet the Kop and push Luis Enrique’s team closer to becoming only the second club in the modern era to successfully defend the trophy.

VAR lifeline and the Anfield "what if"

The second half began at full throttle for Liverpool. The atmosphere, already white-hot despite the teeming rain, reached a crescendo when referee Maurizio Mariani pointed to the spot for a foul on Alexis Mac Allister. However, the hope of another "famous European comeback" was clinicaly snatched away by VAR.

Mariani overturned the penalty after a trip to the pitchside monitor, a decision that proved to be the turning point. Seven minutes later, Dembele cut inside and clinicaly swept a shot into the bottom corner, effectively puncturing belief inside the stadium.

StatisticLiverpoolParis Saint-Germain
Score (2nd Leg)02
Aggregate04
ScorersDembélé (72', 90+2')
xG (2nd Leg)1.940.82 (Approx.)
UCL StatusEliminatedSemifinals (vs. Real/Bayern)

Voices of the quarterfinal

The post-match reactions highlighted a contest that was far closer than the aggregate scoreline suggested.

It’s difficult to defend the Champions League, we know that. We are here again and we need to make the most of these opportunities.
Luis Enrique on the defense of the title
It is a real pleasure for me to know that my team is at that level and can play at that level, no matter who they are playing against. You can see what sort of team we are, what players I’ve got. We’ve got confidence and belief. It’s wonderful to be living this experience with this team.
Luis Enrique on his squad’s level
We are very disappointed because I think there were parts in the second half where you could just feel that if we could score now, this was going to become a special night. But the future looks very bright for this team, for this club, because we’ve shown that we can compete with the champions of Europe in our stadium.
Arne Slot on the "Special Night" that almost was

Night of poignant farewells and misfortune

The evening was framed by heavy context away from the scoreline. Before kick-off, a period of silence was observed for the 97 fans killed at Hillsborough, marking the eve of the 37th anniversary.

On the field, Liverpool’s fortunes were just as bleak. Hugo Ekitike, the team’s most energetic presence in the opening stages, was taken off on a stretcher with a suspected Achilles injury, a setback that will likely end his World Cup hopes. This opened the door for Mohamed Salah, who came on for what is expected to be his final European appearance in a Liverpool shirt, offering a downcast farewell to the Kop at the final whistle.

Road to history

  • Retain mission: No team other than Real Madrid has successfully retained the Champions League title since the rebranding in 1992. PSG is now just three games away.

  • Dembele redemption: After wasting chances in Paris, Dembele scored twice at Anfield to seal the tie.

  • Summer gamble: Liverpool’s £320m forward line (Isak, Ekitike, Wirtz) has managed only 117 minutes together this season due to a relentless injury crisis.

  • Defensive heroics: Marquinhos pulled off a last-ditch, brave challenge in the first half to deny Virgil van Dijk a certain tap-in.

Although Liverpool pressed hard and dominated PSG for stretches of the game, the decisive factor was PSG’s ruthless efficiency. The French side showed a cutting edge in front of goal that Arne Slot’s team has been missing all season. For Liverpool, the campaign now hinges on clinching a place in next year’s Champions League. For PSG, winning has become a habit that is steadily shaping their legacy.

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