The red-hot French star silenced Stamford Bridge with two excellent – and very different – headers in a manic three-minute spell during the first half of Real Madrid’s Champions League quarterfinal first leg against Chelsea on Wednesday.
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Real Madrid went on to claim a 3-1 win after Benzema completed his hat-trick in the second half.
The Champions League quarterfinals are halfway done. Below, we dissect the biggest talking points from this week’s first legs in Europe’s premier club competition.
Benzema’s creativity underappreciated
Karim Benzema’s scoring exploits obviously draw the most attention. He lifted his season’s tally across La Liga and Champions League play to 35 goals with his hat-trick in Wednesday’s 3-1 win at Chelsea, and his quickfire headers during the first half – one powered into the top corner and the other expertly steered beyond Edouard Mendy’s reach – were spellbinding.
But he’s much more than a finisher.
Harry Kane might be the only other striker in world football who can rival Benzema’s awareness, inventiveness, and touch. The Real Madrid marksman dropped into deep positions at Stamford Bridge, luring Chelsea defenders out of the backline so Vinicius Junior and Federico Valverde could run behind, and he was regularly on the end of the attacks he instigated.
Benzema’s intelligent backheel initiated a move that culminated in Vinicius hitting the bar in the 10th minute; a one-touch pass with the outside of his boot sliced through Chelsea’s lines before he buried his first header; and a smart flick at a throw-in started an incursion that finished with his uncharacteristic miss near the end of the first period.
With the 34-year-old’s creativity, it’s no surprise he’s already on 11 La Liga assists this season. That sum is just one behind his personal best from the 2011-12 term, which is remarkable given he spent nine years obliging Cristiano Ronaldo in Spain’s top flight.
Benzema is lethal – he’s only the fourth player to notch trebles in back-to-back Champions League matches – but that shouldn’t be the only quality that defines his game. He’s everything for Real Madrid in the final third.
Chelsea not out of it
A two-goal deficit is daunting, especially when the second leg is played at the Santiago Bernabeu against Luka Modric, Toni Kroos, Benzema, and Real Madrid’s other Champions League savants.
It’s not impossible, though. Chelsea didn’t cower when Benzema completed his hat-trick and should’ve taken more than a single goal from the opening fixture. There are reasons to be optimistic.
Former Chelsea goalkeeper Thibaut Courtois stretched every sinew to push Cesar Azpilicueta’s explosive effort over the bar, a remarkable save in stark contrast to Mendy’s inexcusable error at the other end of the park moments prior. And more chances soon followed, proving Thomas Tuchel’s halftime switch to a back-four worked: unmarked substitute Romelu Lukaku wastefully headed wide, Mason Mount struck narrowly over, and Thiago Silva and Reece James had opportunities.
The opening 20 minutes in Chelsea’s trip to the Bernabeu are crucial. Tuchel has changed his team’s formation and committed to a more attack-minded approach at halftime of each of Chelsea’s past two Champions League outings – away at Lille and Wednesday’s visit from Real Madrid – but he’ll need to get his selection correct from the first whistle in the Spanish capital.
“(We) need to find our competitive spirit and our quality, and then we can hope,” Tuchel said in his post-match press conference.
For a turnaround to occur, Tuchel will likely have to rest some players while Chelsea face Southampton in the Premier League on Saturday, with N’Golo Kante, Andreas Christensen, and Antonio Rudiger notably off the pace in the midweek defeat.
But most of all, Tuchel must be brave. It might not be the time to deploy three central defenders or two No. 6s. Chelsea must attack Real Madrid with intensity.
Will Villarreal rue missed chances?
This is no longer a Cinderella run.
Villarreal, after knocking Juventus out of the Champions League in the round of 16, kept rolling right along, beating Bayern Munich 1-0 in the first leg of their quarterfinal tie Wednesday. It was a superlative outing from Unai Emery’s team, which was once again defensively astute but showed more vigor on the counter than at any point in the previous round.
The only regret: It should’ve been more.
Several chances went begging for the home side, with a pair of agonizing near-misses from Gerard Moreno providing a lifeline for Bayern and consternation for the Yellow Submarine. Huge gaps opened up for Villarreal, with Giovani Lo Celso, in particular, putting in a rousing performance. With Bayern pushing for a goal in the second leg, a similar game script could emerge.
Counting out Bayern is obviously folly, but even going back to the fortress of the Allianz Arena for next week’s second leg, Villarreal shouldn’t – and won’t – be overwhelmed. Bayern’s aura of invincibility is gone. A team long renowned for creating countless scoring chances mustered little, failing to score in a Champions League game for the first time since 2019.
Emery has taken players, oftentimes derided at other clubs, and turned them into key members of a well-drilled unit. It’s a fitting outcome for a manager who faced plenty of criticism himself in his previous posts.
“It’s a deserved defeat, we were not good,” Bayern boss Julian Nagelsmann said after the match.
He’s right. But he also left out a key component. Villarreal were excellent.
“We saw that Villarreal are not an opponent you can walk all over, despite what certain media were saying,” Thomas Muller added.
Right again.
Here are the main talking points from Tuesday’s matches …
Big move on tap for Nunez
Darwin Nunez’s 28th goal of the season nearly inspired an upset Tuesday against Liverpool. His close-range effort in the 49th minute appeared to give Benfica the lift they needed in a tie no one believed they could win. Even if Liverpool proved too much to overcome, leaving Benfica with a 3-1 deficit after the first leg, Nunez showed once again he has enough quality and spirit to lead any attack in Europe.
Nunez is the reason Benfica are even in the Champions League quarterfinals in the first place. He eliminated Ajax in the round of 16 with an opportunistic header that came off a questionable free-kick, denying the clearly superior Dutch a chance to make another deep run in the competition. Before that, the 22-year-old scored a brace against Barcelona in a 3-0 win that ultimately gave Benfica the ammunition they required to advance from the group stage.
But he’s more than a goalscorer. The Uruguayan plays with the grinta that fuels so many of his countrymen, including Edinson Cavani and Luis Suarez, the players he’s set to replace in the national team. Nunez chases after every loose ball and races back to defend in his own end. No run is wasted: He gives his all whether he receives the ball or not, whether his teammates find him in the channels or not, and whether he’s in the attacking third or not.
After pulling one back in the second half Tuesday, Nunez showed no sign of resting on his laurels, galloping along the sideline to defend and eventually win a goal kick near his own corner flag. He motioned to the crowd, pumping it up to keep the tide turning.
It’s that commitment that makes Nunez one of the game’s most exciting prospects outside of Erling Haaland. Expect Europe’s top sides – perhaps even Liverpool – to clamor for his signature this summer.
Diaz making case for more starts
Having played for Porto for two-and-a-half seasons, Luis Diaz knew Benfica’s weaknesses better than most. So, perhaps it’s no surprise he had so much success running behind Benfica’s defenders Tuesday. By the end, Diaz walked away from the Estadio da Luz with a goal and an assist, showing up the fans who booed his every touch. He must’ve taken note of it as well, or else he wouldn’t have celebrated with as much emotion as he did when he made it 3-1.
“He got a nice reception, didn’t he?” Liverpool defender Andrew Robertson said afterward. “It was a good finish for him and a really important goal for us. It gives us a two-goal cushion, which makes a difference.”
Liverpool manager Jurgen Klopp gave Diaz the start ahead of Diogo Jota, and if he so pleased, the German could start the Colombian international the rest of the season without much flak from anyone. Diaz has already made eight starts in three competitions since joining the club in January, emphasizing how quickly he’s adapted to Liverpool’s rigorous style of play.
Diaz has been particularly effective in the Champions League. Liverpool reaped the benefits in the round of 16 when Klopp tossed on the 25-year-old midway through the first leg against Inter. With the Nerazzurri beginning to wane, Diaz overwhelmed the Italian opponents, using his energy to stretch the lines and create space for his team to score two late goals. It proved to be the difference in the tie.
Diaz had a similar performance against Benfica. He busied himself up and down the left flank and forced the Portuguese side into mistakes. Knowing Diaz would remain a menace, Klopp took off Sadio Mane and Mohamed Salah in the 61st minute, allowing his weary internationals some rest while Liverpool’s midseason signing continued to hustle on the pitch.
How can you leave Foden out?
Ilkay Gundogan wasn’t his usual self. His passes weren’t as precise, he struggled to reset the focus of Manchester City’s attacks, and there was no room for him to run through Atletico Madrid’s deep block.
Instead, Tuesday’s match required serpentine movement to draw and evade tackles. It was a tight affair tailor-made for Phil Foden.
Pep Guardiola would be brave to leave the Englishman out of his starting XI for the reverse fixture at the Wanda Metropolitano. The 21-year-old instantly tipped the tie in City’s favor. Seventy-five seconds after he first stepped onto the pitch, Foden took the ball under his spell, attracting three Atletico Madrid players before rolling a pass through the legs of another.
Kevin De Bruyne slotted the ball past Jan Oblak to give City a crucial 1-0 lead going into the second leg.
Foden dared Atletico Madrid’s players to challenge him and was determined to only progress the ball. He danced past Geoffrey Kondogbia and Reinildo before De Bruyne’s blocked shot in the 80th minute, and then Foden teed up the Belgian again when he bent the ball behind the Spanish side’s backline with an audacious strike with the outside of his boot.
The temptation from many in the media is to dub Foden – and, indeed, any player from a working-class background – a street footballer, but his cameo delivered an ethereal sparkle that seemed several galaxies away from the puddles and red rows of homes in his native Stockport.
Simeone’s subs disrupt Atletico
It was going exactly how Diego Simeone had planned.
Atletico Madrid were fine with letting Manchester City control everything ahead of their backline in the first half, and their reluctance to attack was demonstrated by their non-existent press. When City’s defenders had the ball, the visiting players scattered like a dodgeball team anticipating an onslaught.
Simeone saved his numbers for the defense, where his quintet stood firm. The full-backs were unadventurous – including Renan Lodi, whose attacking caused Manchester United problems in the previous round – and having three central defenders freed up a body to track the false nine.
But then, just as Atleti threatened to pinch a goal from the Etihad Stadium early in the second half, Simeone looked to his bench and sought disruption over quality.
The three players that Simeone brought on in the 60th minute were intent on causing chaos – Rodrigo De Paul and Angel Correa were booked for altercations with Jack Grealish, and Matheus Cunha was fortunate to escape punishment for his egregious playacting in the final seconds. Their introductions necessitated the withdrawals of Antoine Griezmann and Marcos Llorente, both of whom could’ve put Atleti ahead on breakaways.
But above all else, Simeone wanted a brawl.
“It’s the way they play. It’s their style and there’s no point us trying to fight them because that’s not our way,” De Bruyne said post-match on Atleti’s combativeness. “We handled it pretty well.”
Simeone’s negative changes were at odds with Guardiola’s positive triple-swap, which included the appearance of the excellent Foden. The contrasting tactical styles between the two teams were obvious during the first leg, but Simeone’s conservatism turned out to be his side’s undoing.
The Champions League quarterfinals got underway this week. Below, we dissect the biggest talking points from Tuesday’s games in Europe’s premier club competition.
Big move on tap for Nunez
Darwin Nunez’s 28th goal of the season nearly inspired an upset Tuesday against Liverpool. His close-range effort in the 49th minute appeared to give Benfica the lift they needed in a tie no one believed they could win. Even if Liverpool proved too much to overcome, leaving Benfica with a 3-1 deficit after the first leg, Nunez showed once again he has enough quality and spirit to lead any attack in Europe.
Nunez is the reason Benfica are even in the Champions League quarterfinals in the first place. He eliminated Ajax in the round of 16 with an opportunistic header that came off a questionable free-kick, denying the clearly superior Dutch a chance to make another deep run in the competition. Before that, the 22-year-old scored a brace against Barcelona in a 3-0 win that ultimately gave Benfica the ammunition they required to advance from the group stage.
But he’s more than a goalscorer. The Uruguayan plays with the grinta that fuels so many of his countrymen, including Edinson Cavani and Luis Suarez, the players he’s set to replace in the national team. Nunez chases after every loose ball and races back to defend in his own end. No run is wasted: He gives his all whether he receives the ball or not, whether his teammates find him in the channels or not, and whether he’s in the attacking third or not.
After pulling one back in the second half Tuesday, Nunez showed no sign of resting on his laurels, galloping along the sideline to defend and eventually win a goal kick near his own corner flag. He motioned to the crowd, pumping it up to keep the tide turning.
It’s that commitment that makes Nunez one of the game’s most exciting prospects outside of Erling Haaland. Expect Europe’s top sides – perhaps even Liverpool – to clamor for his signature this summer.
Diaz making case for more starts
Having played for Porto for two-and-a-half seasons, Luis Diaz knew Benfica’s weaknesses better than most. So, perhaps it’s no surprise he had so much success running behind Benfica’s defenders Tuesday. By the end, Diaz walked away from the Estadio da Luz with a goal and an assist, showing up the fans who booed his every touch. He must’ve taken note of it as well, or else he wouldn’t have celebrated with as much emotion as he did when he made it 3-1.
“He got a nice reception, didn’t he?” Liverpool defender Andrew Robertson said afterward. “It was a good finish for him and a really important goal for us. It gives us a two-goal cushion, which makes a difference.”
Liverpool manager Jurgen Klopp gave Diaz the start ahead of Diogo Jota, and if he so pleased, the German could start the Colombian international the rest of the season without much flak from anyone. Diaz has already made eight starts in three competitions since joining the club in January, emphasizing how quickly he’s adapted to Liverpool’s rigorous style of play.
Diaz has been particularly effective in the Champions League. Liverpool reaped the benefits in the round of 16 when Klopp tossed on the 25-year-old midway through the first leg against Inter. With the Nerazzurri beginning to wane, Diaz overwhelmed the Italian opponents, using his energy to stretch the lines and create space for his team to score two late goals. It proved to be the difference in the tie.
Diaz had a similar performance against Benfica. He busied himself up and down the left flank and forced the Portuguese side into mistakes. Knowing Diaz would remain a menace, Klopp took off Sadio Mane and Mohamed Salah in the 61st minute, allowing his weary internationals some rest while Liverpool’s midseason signing continued to hustle on the pitch.
How can you leave Foden out?
Ilkay Gundogan wasn’t his usual self. His passes weren’t as precise, he struggled to reset the focus of Manchester City’s attacks, and there was no room for him to run through Atletico Madrid’s deep block.
Instead, Tuesday’s match required serpentine movement to draw and evade tackles. It was a tight affair tailor-made for Phil Foden.
Pep Guardiola would be brave to leave the Englishman out of his starting XI for the reverse fixture at the Wanda Metropolitano. The 21-year-old instantly tipped the tie in City’s favor. Seventy-five seconds after he first stepped onto the pitch, Foden took the ball under his spell, attracting three Atletico Madrid players before rolling a pass through the legs of another.
Kevin De Bruyne slotted the ball past Jan Oblak to give City a crucial 1-0 lead going into the second leg.
Foden dared Atletico Madrid’s players to challenge him and was determined to only progress the ball. He danced past Geoffrey Kondogbia and Reinildo before De Bruyne’s blocked shot in the 80th minute, and then Foden teed up the Belgian again when he bent the ball behind the Spanish side’s backline with an audacious strike with the outside of his boot.
The temptation from many in the media is to dub Foden – and, indeed, any player from a working-class background – a street footballer, but his cameo delivered an ethereal sparkle that seemed several galaxies away from the puddles and red rows of homes in his native Stockport.
Simeone’s subs disrupt Atletico
It was going exactly how Diego Simeone had planned.
Atletico Madrid were fine with letting Manchester City control everything ahead of their backline in the first half, and their reluctance to attack was demonstrated by their non-existent press. When City’s defenders had the ball, the visiting players scattered like a dodgeball team anticipating an onslaught.
Simeone saved his numbers for the defense, where his quintet stood firm. The full-backs were unadventurous – including Renan Lodi, whose attacking caused Manchester United problems in the previous round – and having three central defenders freed up a body to track the false nine.
But then, just as Atleti threatened to pinch a goal from the Etihad Stadium early in the second half, Simeone looked to his bench and sought disruption over quality.
The three players that Simeone brought on in the 60th minute were intent on causing chaos – Rodrigo De Paul and Angel Correa were booked for altercations with Jack Grealish, and Matheus Cunha was fortunate to escape punishment for his egregious playacting in the final seconds. Their introductions necessitated the withdrawals of Antoine Griezmann and Marcos Llorente, both of whom could’ve put Atleti ahead on breakaways.
But above all else, Simeone wanted a brawl.
“It’s the way they play. It’s their style and there’s no point us trying to fight them because that’s not our way,” De Bruyne said post-match on Atleti’s combativeness. “We handled it pretty well.”
Simeone’s negative changes were at odds with Guardiola’s positive triple-swap, which included the appearance of the excellent Foden. The contrasting tactical styles between the two teams were obvious during the first leg, but Simeone’s conservatism turned out to be his side’s undoing.
The stage is set for the 2022 World Cup. Below, we examine the five most compelling storylines from Friday’s draw.
No definitive Group of Death in Qatar
When Lothar Matthaus plucked Germany out of Pot 2 during Friday’s draw in Doha, Qatar, it seemed like he had just set up his country to fail at the 2022 World Cup. Already in the same group as Spain, Germany also faced the possibility of being matched with Africa Cup of Nations champion Senegal and Canada, which finished atop the standings in CONCACAF qualifying.
Germany understands more than most nations the perils of taking the group stage lightly. Losses to Mexico and South Korea eliminated the then-defending World Cup champion in the round robin in 2018, setting into motion a period of soul-searching and uncertainty for Die Mannschaft.
But the rest of the draw went smoothly. Japan – far from the team Keisuke Honda led to the round of 16 in 2010 and 2018 – brings relief as the third team in Group E, and the winner of the intercontinental playoff between Costa Rica and New Zealand will round out the quartet in June.
Spain and Germany will still contest the most exciting match of the group stage, but apart from that, qualifying for the knockout round should be a straightforward assignment for two of Europe’s powerhouse nations.
The rest of the groups look fairly balanced. The weakest is undoubtedly Group A, with Qatar and Ecuador likely to serve as cannon fodder to Senegal and the Netherlands. Group H, with Portugal, Uruguay, South Korea, and Ghana, could end up being the Group of Life, as every team has a realistic shot of advancing.
U.S. and England renew old hostilities
The United States will face England on Nov. 25, the day after Thanksgiving, in a rematch of the 1-1 draw between the two rivals in the group stage of the 2010 World Cup. It’s also a match that carries political and socioeconomic undertones. The U.S., after all, supplanted Great Britain as a world economic power during the 20th century, and it has since sent many of its sports franchises to the U.K. as a marketing and expansion exercise. But England has always maintained superiority on the pitch.
“English encounters with the U.S. are freighted with a strange tension, a superiority complex masking deep-rooted anxiety, because if America ever overtakes us in football, then what, as a country, do we have left?” The Guardian’s Tom Dart wrote in 2019.
There’s also some history to explore. At the 1950 World Cup, the U.S. – then composed of amateur players who worked mainly as dishwashers, mailmen, and hearse drivers – upset 3-1 favorite England. The shocking 1-0 win barely made a dent in the American public’s consciousness – The New York Times devoted just two paragraphs to the game – but it stung the English psyche. Bert Williams, England’s goalkeeper for the match, told The Associated Press that it took “a lot of forgetting.”
That remains the U.S.’ only competitive win over England. It now has a chance to reopen old wounds.
Ghana seeking vengeance
Ghana’s out for revenge against Uruguay – and rightfully so. Back in 2010, it was vying to become the first African nation to reach the World Cup semifinals when Luis Suarez swatted away what would’ve been the winning goal in the 120th minute of play. Although Suarez was sent off for that deliberate handball, Asamoah Gyan missed the subsequent penalty kick, and Uruguay won the ensuing shootout, earning social-pariah status as the team that knocked out Africa’s only remaining hope in the first World Cup to ever take place in the continent.
“We thought we had clearly won that particular game but for that save from Suarez,” Kurt Okraku, president of Ghana’s football association, told BBC Sport Africa on Friday. “It is very interesting for us to pitch against them again, obviously with fond memories (this time around).
“It is important that we all set the record straight.”
After that match, Suarez reportedly told the media “the hand of God belongs to me,” referencing Diego Maradona’s goal against England at the 1986 World Cup.
Canada has upset potential
Canada was arguably the toughest team to come out of Pot 4. Only a loss to Panama on Wednesday – with a heavily rotated starting lineup – denied the Canadians a place in Pot 3. Given the U.S. and Mexico, two of the eight teams in Pot 2, each lost to their northern rivals in CONCACAF qualifying, Canada could’ve claimed an even higher place in the draw.
This group of players, led by striker Jonathan David and the omnipresent Alphonso Davies, has the talent and willpower to cause an upset in Qatar. That’s especially true in Group F, which is more manageable than it looks. Belgium and Croatia will enter as the favorites to advance, but despite holding the No. 1 ranking for much of the past two years, the Belgians remain an aging group that mainly feasts on European minnows.
The same goes for Croatia, which is far from the team that made the 2018 World Cup final. Captain Luka Modric continues to anchor the squad at 36 years old, but without Mario Mandzukic – who retired in 2021 – or Ante Rebic – in exile after a spat with head coach Zlatko Dalic – the national team is entering its endgame.
“Canada, for us, was always a hidden threat,” Belgium’s head coach, Roberto Martinez, told TSN’s Matthew Scianitti after the draw.
Martinez added: “It’s been very impressive to see this Canadian team with the consistency, with the energy, with the youth, with the team spirit that they have. … We know that we’ll be facing a team that is together.”
Morocco has some star power – full-back Achraf Hakimi plays for Paris Saint-Germain, and goalscorer Youssef En-Nesyri leads the line for Sevilla, La Liga’s second-placed team – but its recent results don’t instill much fear. It recently lost to Egypt – which didn’t even qualify for the World Cup – and managed most of its wins against the likes of Sudan and Guinea-Bissau.
Juicy quarterfinal matchups on tap
If things go to plan, the quarterfinals could pit England against France, the Netherlands against Argentina, and Spain against Brazil. That would put six of the top eight betting favorites in an early bind and potentially open a path to the semifinals for Portugal, which could avoid some of the mayhem at the top of the knockout bracket if it finishes atop Group H and enters the bottom half. Portugal would then face either Switzerland or Serbia in the round of 16 before meeting Belgium or Germany. Even then, it’s not much of a consolation.
Potential matchups
The quarterfinals four years ago were fairly underwhelming: France beat Uruguay, Belgium upset Brazil, Croatia edged out Russia, and England knocked off Sweden. The prospects are much more tantalizing this time around. Can Lionel Messi avoid disappointment in what is likely to be his last World Cup appearance? Will Brazil be eliminated in the quarterfinals for the fourth time in five tournaments? And is England ready to take the next step?