Bayern Munich
cemented their status as the growing power in European football by ruthlessly
dismantling favourites Barcelona in the Champions League semi-final first leg.
Jupp Heynckes' newly crowned Bundesliga champions produced a
magnificent performance laced with power, intensity and quality to give the
Catalan superstars a mauling they will surely find impossible to avenge in the
Nou Camp next week.
Barca coach Tito Vilanova gambled and lost on a clearly unfit
Lionel Messi - but to suggest this was the prime factor behind this crushing
loss is to do a grave disservice to Bayern.
Former Barcelona coach Pep Guardiola will replace Heynckes in
the summer but this dignified 67-year-old elder statesman may well leave behind
the Champions League trophy.
Thomas Muller gave Bayern an early lead and their superiority
was confirmed when Mario Gomez added a second just after half-time.
Barca b
Former Chelsea winger Arjen Robben tormented a desperately
vulnerable Barcelona defence, adding a third before Muller got his second near
the end to surely put this tie out of even Barcelona's reach.
And all this on the day Bayern wielded their power in the
transfer market again by announcing a £32m deal for Borussia Dortmund's
brilliant 20-year-old Mario Gotze - heady days indeed for the German glamour
club once dubbed "FC Hollywood".
In a fevered atmosphere inside a packed and jubilant Allianz
Arena, Bayern looked a team intent on erasing the bitter memories of the
Champions League final defeat on penalties by Chelsea on their own ground last season.
Messi was declared fit to play and started for Barcelona despite
concerns about the hamstring injury he sustained in the previous round against
Paris St Germain. He looked a long way from his usual brilliance - but he was
not alone as buoyant Bayern took control of proceedings.
On a pitch that showed signs of being heavily watered, Bayern
gave Barca a taste of their own medicine with a high-intensity pressing game
aided by the confidence of an outstanding season in which the Bundesliga was
secured on 6 April, the earliest it has ever been won.
Bayern should have been ahead inside two minutes when Robben,
perhaps selfishly, chose to shoot and saw his effort blocked by visiting
goalkeeper Victor Valdes with both Gomez and Franck Ribery pleading for the
pass in perfect positions.
The opening goal had been coming and it duly arrived after 25
minutes. Dante's header from Robben's cross was off target but the opportunist
Muller arrived at the far post to score, despite Valdes making good contact.
Even though the Spanish side were struggling for rhythm,
Barcelona's quality meant danger was never far away. And so it proved as it
took a crucial touch from Dante to take Dani Alves' delivery away from the
lurking Messi.
But Bayern's spirits rose further four minutes after half-time
when they added a second. Valdes was uncertain from Robben's corner and, when
Muller headed back, the arch-poacher Gomez turned in as Barcelona appealed in
vain for offside.
Bayern's work-rate and power had restricted Barcelona's attack
to few dangerous moments, but there was anxiety for the home crowd when Marc
Bartra found space eight yards out only to poke his finish straight at home
keeper Manuel Neuer.
The German champions were coming at Barcelona in waves and
extended their advantage further as the lively Robben worked his way into the
area to score from an angle, although there seemed to be a clear case for an
infringement as Muller blocked off Jordi Alba.
Barcelona's agony was not over yet as Muller applied another of
those trademark close-range finished from substitute Luiz Gustavo's cross to
give Bayern an advantage of such command it is difficult to see how it can be
retrieved.
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