The UEFA Champions League semifinals kicked off with high drama this week. Paris Saint-Germain narrowly beat FC Bayern Munich 5-4 in a goal-filled thriller, while Atlético Madrid drew 1-1 with Arsenal FC amid heated VAR disputes.
Both first legs leave the ties wide open for the return matches. Here is a quick breakdown of the action and key takeaways.
Paris Thriller: PSG 5-4 Bayern Munich
At Parc des Princes, the game turned into a classic. Bayern struck first through Harry Kane‘s penalty, looking sharp early with Michael Olise threatening.
PSG fought back fast. Khvicha Kvaratskhelia and João Neves scored to take control, exploiting Bayern gaps.
- Olise levelled before the break.
- Ousmane Dembélé netted a late penalty for a 3-2 halftime lead.
Second half saw PSG surge to 5-2 with more from Kvaratskhelia and Dembélé. Bayern rallied late: Dayot Upamecano and Luis Díaz made it 5-4.
Despite Bayern’s push, no equalizer came. Joshua Kimmich said:
“It feels strange — we lost, but we came back from three goals down and felt like we could have equalised.”
One goal ahead, PSG heads to Allianz Arena with everything at stake.
Madrid Stalemate: Atlético 1-1 Arsenal
At Riyadh Air Metropolitano, tension ruled. Arsenal led first half, bossing midfield via Declan Rice.
Viktor Gyökeres won and scored a penalty against Dávid Hancko near halftime.
- Diego Simeone tweaked tactics at the interval.
- Julián Álvarez equalized from a VAR handball call on Ben White.
The big flashpoint: 78th minute. Eberechi Eze seemed to earn a penalty vs Hancko, but VAR overturned it. Mikel Arteta fumed over the call.
Late chances fell both ways, with Nahuel Molina close for Atlético. A fair draw, Arsenal strong early, hosts later.
Second Legs Outlook
Ties hang in balance:
- PSG-Bayern: Goals galore, defences leaky—pure firepower awaits.
- Atlético-Arsenal: Even score, VAR anger fuels return clash.
Bayern draws hope from comeback; Arsenal eyes revenge. Home sides PSG and Atlético guard slim edges under pressure.
These matches show football’s range: chaos in Paris, grit in Madrid. Second legs promise more twists.
