The Champions League Round of 16 second legs on Tuesday, saw dramatic exits for Manchester City and Chelsea, while Arsenal and Sporting CP secured their spots in the quarter-finals.
This articles explores the three things we learnt from the night
1. Real Madrid’s “European DNA” is a Tactical Impossibility
Despite playing with 10 men for over 70 minutes following Bernardo Silva’s controversial 22nd-minute red card for a goal-line handball, City dominated the ball, registered 22 shots, and found a lifeline through Erling Haaland.
However, Real Madrid were determined to rebel against any comeback from City . They weathered a Manchester storm, relying on the cat-like reflexes of Thibaut Courtois before Vinícius Júnior delivered a masterclass in clinical timing. His 93rd-minute winner, the literal last kick of the game, sealed a 5-1 aggregate victory that felt incredibly harsh on City but perfectly emblematic of Madrid’s ability to survive and strike when it matters most.
2. Sporting CP Comeback Against Bode/Glimt”
In Lisbon, Sporting CP proved that a three-goal deficit is not a death sentence when comeback is a thing in European football. Trailing 3-0 from a frigid first leg in Norway, the Portuguese giants dismantled Bodø/Glimt 5-0 (5-3 on aggregate) to become only the fifth team in UCL history to recover from such a margin.
The turnaround was a show to relentless pressure and tactical belief. Gonçalo Inácio ignited the fire, but it was Luis Suárez the architect of the equalizer from the penalty spot and a 92nd-minute extra-time strike from Maxi Araújo that finally broke the Arctic fairytale. For Bodø/Glimt, the dream ended in heartbreak; for Sporting, it was their first quarter-final berth since 1983.
3. Chelsea fall to PSG shamefully

While City exited with their heads high, Chelsea left Stamford Bridge to a chorus of boos. A staggering 8-2 aggregate annihilation by Paris Saint-Germain represents the heaviest two-legged defeat in the club’s European history.
The gap in quality was obvious from the start. Within the opening 15 minutes, PSG’s Khvicha Kvaratskhelia and Bradley Barcola were already cutting through Chelsea’s defence with ease.
For a club that has spent more than £1 billion under the Clearlake Boehly ownership, the silence inside Stamford Bridge said everything. While PSG’s moves were greeted with mocking olés from the crowd, Chelsea looked short of ideas, raising fresh questions about the direction of the project.
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