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Champions League: De Bruyne fluke triggers PSG collapse

April 28, 2021

Manchester City's second-half comeback has put them in pole position in their Champions League semifinal against PSG. Kevin de Bruyne's fluke inspired the fightback as PSG collapsed after dominating the first half.

Champions League - Paris St Germain v Manchester City
Manchester City are the first English side to win six straight Champions League games.Image: Benoit Tessier/REUTERS

PSG 1-2 Manchester City, Parc des Princes
(Marquinhos 15' – De Bruyne 64', Mahrez 71')

Manchester City’s recovery from a goal down in Paris tilted this heavyweight Champions League contest in the favor of the English champions-in-waiting. For PSG, it was a second-half collapse that leaves them needing to deliver something extraordinary next week in England.

Things had been going so well for PSG. The Marquinhos-Kimpembe defensive axis offered PSG stability, while Marco Verratti in midfield and Neymar in attack were both exceptional. Angel di Maria was also purring on another one of his inspired nights where the ball seemed glued to his feet.

Read more: PSG vs Manchester City — More than just a football match

One of Mauricio Pochettino’s trademarks is his ability to galvanize a collective spirit to accompany — or elevate — his players’ individual excellence. And when Marquinhos jumped high to flick in Di Maria’s corner, it was no less than the French champions deserved.

De Bruyne leads fightback

Pep Guardiola’s penchant for going striker-less has served him well, but the instincts of a dedicated striker were glaring in the first half. Their only chance before the break fell to Phil Foden, the exciting English prospect, but his finish lacked the ruthlessness of a Gabriel Jesus or Sergio Aguero.

Kevin de Bruyne, the Manchester City captain and every bit the inspirational leader as his PSG counterpart Marquinhos, had fired a warning shot on the hour when his improvised overhead kick was only a whisker away.

Marquinhos, far right, puts PSG ahead with a glancing header — his fifth goal in his last 12 Champions League games.Image: Dave Winter/BPI/Shutterstock/imago images

That proved to be a precursor to what would follow a few minutes later, but the goal came not from a piece of brilliance, to which we’re accustomed watching De Bruyne, but a complete fluke. His teasing ball into the box evaded everyone and wrong-footed Keylor Navas, who could only watch it flash past him.

City's second-half renaissance came after Pep Guardiola, the City coach, had implored his team to show more personality. "At halftime, I told the players we needed to be ourselves," Guardiola said. "We needed to be more aggressive and we didn't let them breathe after the break."

PSG lose their heads

That goal shifted the dynamic of the game completely. PSG were no longer in control and City, probing for gaps in the PSG defense, won a freekick on the edge of the box. De Bruyne was standing over it again, but Riyad Mahrez surprised everyone, hammering it past a PSG wall that didn’t seem to be completely ready. That mattered little – City had flipped the contest on its head.

A late red card for Idrissa Gana Gueye, whose rash lunge on Ilkay Gündogan left the German in agony, completed a miserable second 45 minutes for PSG. He will now miss the trip to Manchester.

Pochettino and Guardiola have a history of serving up breathtaking footballing spectacles and Pochettino will have to inspire his players to something extraordinary again in Manchester to realize a Champions League dream that is as much theirs as City's. 

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