Barca thrash Bayern in Champions League, Liverpool stay perfect
Manchester City's Norwegian striker #09 Erling Haaland (C) celebrates scoring the team's fourth goal during the UEFA Champions League football match between Manchester City and Sparta Prague at the Etihad Stadium in Manchester, north west England, on October 23, 2024. (Photo by Oli SCARFF / AFP)
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A Raphinha hat-trick handed Barcelona a 4-1 win
against Bayern Munich in the Champions League on Wednesday, while Liverpool
stayed perfect with a 1-0 win at RB Leipzig and Erling Haaland produced another
moment of magic for Manchester City.
In a clash that pitted five-time winners Barca
against six-time champions Bayern, it was the home side that stole the show
thanks to a triple from Brazilian attacker Raphinha and a goal from in-form
veteran Robert Lewandowski.
Harry Kane levelled after Barca's first-minute
opener for his fifth goal of the campaign but was helpless as his team
collapsed to their second defeat in three Champions League outings.
"In my opinion this game could have been a
(Champions League) final, to be able to win it in this way, so well, in front
of our fans, is quite special and I leave here happy," Raphinha told
Movistar.
The result leaves Bayern in the bottom half of the
table, while Barcelona have two wins and are 10th.
Raphinha sent the hosts on their way at the Olympic
Stadium inside 60 seconds, tucking home after rounding goalkeeper Manuel Neuer.
Kane levelled in the 18th minute with an acrobatic
volley from a Serge Gnabry cross.
Ex-Bayern player Lewandowski then restored Barca's
lead in the 36th minute by pouncing on a loose ball after Fermin Lopez had snuck
behind the visiting defence.
Raphinha got his second on the stroke of half-time
with a curling effort off his right side.
The Brazil international's third on 56 minutes
showcased Barca's danger on the counter as he galloped onto a swept pass from
Lamine Yamal before arrowing home a left-footed finish with both centre-halves
trailing in his wake.
Haaland scored a brace as Manchester City thrashed
Sparta Prague 5-0 at home, including a spectacular backheel at shoulder height.
"I saw it when the ball came in. It's
unbelievable. He's a statue. So tall and so flexible," said City boss Pep
Guardiola in admiration of the Norwegian's goal.
It was an effort reminiscent of his strike against
old club Borussia Dortmund two years ago that won Champions League goal of the
season.
The Czechs had contained the hosts to a one-goal
lead at half-time after Phil Foden's early strike.
But the floodgates opened in the second period with
Haaland, John Stones and Matheus Nunes netting.
Leipzig's Lois Openda was twice denied by the
assistant's flag as Liverpool fought to a narrow win in Germany.
Darwin Nunez's 27th-minute tap-in from Mohamed
Salah's cushioned knockdown was enough to give Liverpool their third win in
three matches as they moved to second in the standings.
They and table-toppers Aston Villa are the only
teams with a 100 percent record in the new 36-team format.
"We controlled the game in large parts apart
from the last few minutes," Liverpool manager Arne Slot told TNT Sports.
"We needed Virgil (van Dijk) and Ibou (Konate)
and our goalkeeper. If we left this place with a draw then I would've felt we
lost something."
Irish goalkeeper Caoimhin Kelleher ably deputised
for the injured Alisson Becker and produced several fine saves in the second
half to protect Liverpool's lead.
Lille continued to enjoy life against teams from the
Spanish capital, following up their surprise win at home to Real Madrid last
time out by beating Atletico Madrid 3-1.
The home side took an early lead through Julian
Alvarez, before Edon Zhegrova and a Jonathan David brace turned the game on its
head in the final 30 minutes.
Bayer Leverkusen were held to an entertaining 1-1
draw at Brest, as the French club maintained their unbeaten start to life in
Europe's top club competition.
Florian Wirtz broke the deadlock for Bayer in the
24th minute, before Pierre Lees-Melou thumped home a volleyed equaliser shortly
before the break.
Young Boys looked to have kept Inter Milan at bay in
Bern, with Marko Arnautovic failing to convert a second-half penalty.
But Marcus Thuram struck three minutes into stoppage
time to hand the Italian champions a 1-0 win.
Feyenoord beat Benfica 3-1 away thanks to Ayase Ueda
and an Antoni Milambo double.
Atalanta were held to a frustrating goalless
stalemate at home to Celtic, while Dinamo Zagreb beat 10-man RB Salzburg 2-0.


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