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Sunday 7 June 2015

Barca make Berlin history



It was a match which perfectly summarised Barcelona’s treble-winning season, a match which, in itself, encapsulated not only the highest of highs, but also the lowest of lows. And in the end, as Gerard Pique so rightly pointed out, the addition of the European crown, the club’s fourth in the space of decade, to their La Liga and Copa del Rey titles, was perfection.

But it very nearly wasn’t.

Jittery as if they’d forgotten how to approach finals, upon kick-off, the Blaugrana were immediately placed on the back foot. Juventus’ proactive pressing saw Luis Enrique’s men cough up possession and concede a corner early on. And yet, true to form, Barcelona found their feet, and subsequently, the back of the net as an incisive through ball from Neymar carved up a depleted Juventus defence, before Andres Iniesta’s square ball to an unmarked Ivan Rakitic saw the Catalans draw first blood.

In many ways, the manner in which the Camp Nou outfit scored their first was apt. So much had been made of the fact that Enrique had started to change Barcelona’s tiki-taka approach. And yet, the way the Catalans carved up Juve’s usually-sturdy defence was exactly in that same vintage vein they had so often done. Their use of possession, quick transitions and intricate short passing led to a goal which involved all 10 of Barca’s outfield players.

While the scoreline at half-time failed to do Barca’s dominance justice, the fact remains that as the Blaugrana ambled towards the break, they continued to create openings, and had it not been for Gianluigi Buffon’s first-half heroics, for the Bianconeri, their dreams of a fairytale would’ve turned into a disastrous nightmare.

Read the rest of my piece on Football Espana

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