
Chelsea and England defender Bright announces retirement
Chelsea captain Millie Bright to retire from football after this season.
Paris Saint-Germain defeated Bayern Munich 5-4 in a thrilling Champions League semi-final first leg, showcasing an unprecedented game rhythm. Coach Luis Enrique praised both teams for their performance.
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Khvicha Kvaratskhelia celebrates scoring (Reuters)
Having put out a team to do that, Luis Enrique perhaps put it best.
âYou have to congratulate the opponents, the players,â the Paris Saint-Germain coach said after his sideâs raucous 5-4 win over Bayern Munich. âIâve never seen a game with that rhythm before.â
You could say this first leg was unique, given how it set a record for a Champions League semi-final, but thereâs somehow more to come. There was even the promise of more to come, as befitting the attacking attitudes that drove this entire spectacle.
âNow weâll go to Munich to try to win and qualify,â Ousmane Dembele said. âWeâre going to attack and Bayern are going to attack.â
Vincent Kompany agreed. âWe could have scored more, and that has to give us belief.â
So many others were left with a renewed belief in the sport as it is played.
âEvery football fan loves a game like that,â Marquinhos said. That feeling might be all the deeper given the debate about set-pieces and structure that has defined so much of the season, especially in England.
There are some lessons there for the Premier League - but only some.
Paris Saint-Germain won the match against Bayern Munich with a score of 5-4.
The coach of Paris Saint-Germain is Luis Enrique.
The match set a record for the highest-scoring Champions League semi-final.
Luis Enrique congratulated the opponents and remarked on the unique rhythm of the game.

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Harry Kane of FC Bayern Munich celebrates scoring (Getty)
This was indeed like watching a different sport, as was previewed in these very pages on the morning of the game; There were moments when it certainly didnât feel like watching 11-a-side football at all, such was that scoreline and also just the general chaos of play.
One of the most captivating elements of the game was how often one of the electric attackers just seemed to be aggressively running straight at goal. It was the source of at least three of the goals, most notably Khvicha Kvaratskheliaâs brilliant initial equaliser, as well as Luis Diazâs run to win the Harry Kane penalty to set it off.
Luis Diazâs own eventual goal, a luscious strike to make it 5-4, was supremely supplied by Kaneâs delightful ball, also had touches of Dennis Bergkamp against Argentina. Thatâs the level we are talking about in terms of attacking.
One of many other talking points is meanwhile how Liverpool let this Luis Diaz go.
Aleksandar Pavlovic of FC Bayern Munich is challenged by Khvicha Kvaratskhelia of Paris Saint-Germain (Getty)
Would he have been able to do this in the more restrained Premier League?
And yet, partly because there were so many goals, there were also so many more debates.
One was shaped by Clarence Seedorf and Wayne Rooney, who lamented the defending. Some of it was pitiful. Manuel Neuer didnât even make a save, and one of his attempted kick-outs did lead to a PSG goal.
If it seems churlish to discuss that amid so much fun, so much entertainment, one obvious inference from their commentary was to ask how âseriousâ this game actually was.
There was almost a sense of the very scale of the scoreline removing some of the credibility, as if this wasnât âreal footballâ.
There is a gloriously simple answer to that. Itâs as âseriousâ as the end result of the Champions League final. The point of all this is to become European champions, after all. It doesnât get more real than that in club football.
PSGâs Ousmane Dembele celebrates scoring against Bayern Munich (AP)
The ends would justify the means, a sentence that feels odd to even say here given that it is more often used about the more pragmatic football anticipated in the other semi-final.
It currently looks like either Bayern or PSG would just blow Arsenal and Atletico Madrid away, but it rarely works out like that in reality. Maybe the real difference, however, is as Kompany said. Both sides believe. They trust in their approach, even with all of the risks.
This is just their way, as so many figures on both sides enthused.
And yet, for all that this will provoke predictions about the future of football, there are fair questions over whether this way is possible in any other setting.
If this 5-4 reminded you of what the game could be, you canât escape the reality that it partly came out of what the game shouldnât be.
It was also said here before the game that both Bayern and PSG greatly benefit from their immense financial superiority over their domestic leagues, with one of them a Qatari sportswashing project. Thereâs always another side to this in the modern game.
That allows them this physical and psychological freshness, as well as the space to commit to this.
Some of it is of course ideological, yes. Luis Enrique has been open about that. Kompany was similarly trying this at Burnley.
Luis Enriqueâs ideology has been helped by PSGâs superiority in Ligue 1 (AP)
Some of it is also circumstance. The Independent understands Premier League coach privately said after the game, itâs a lot more difficult to commit to this when your exhausted players are again playing an expensively assembled defence at the weekend.
And that may have led to another side in this game.
As sensational as the attacking was, it was partly allowed from that dismal defending. It was like these team structures just werenât prepared for this level of attacking quality. Who would be prepared, you might ask, but it did seem more pronounced.
It was like both sides had forgotten how to defend because they donât usually have to do it.
Thatâs why it only offers some lessons for the Premier League.
Dayot Upamencano and Luis Diaz scored late for Bayern to keep this Champions League tie in the balance for the second leg (Reuters)
Still, it would be encouraging for clubs to take the mindset on board. You can see why Sir Jim Ratcliffe would love Luis Enrique at United. Who else might come calling now? Chelsea?
And yet such questions, such technical caveats, feel a little out of step with a game that was mostly about abandon; about going for it.
And theyâve promised to do it all again.
As to who wins at the end of it, PSG feel like they should have killed the tie at 5-2. Luis Diazâs goal feels like it could be very significant.
A little like one of Kvaratskheliaâs runs, though, itâs almost impossible to know which way this is going to turn.