The best competition in the world of football is the Champions League — and that’s no coincidence. It’s where the highest level of play and the most thrilling matches take place, and yesterday was yet another example of that.
The tie between Barcelona and Inter Milan will be remembered for a long time due to how evenly matched it was and the number of goals scored (7–6 on aggregate), with wild games in both the first and second legs.
In both matches, Inter took an early 2–0 lead (thanks largely to Lautaro), but both times Barcelona managed to come back (in the first leg thanks to Lamine Yamal). Yesterday, they even went up 3–2 just minutes before the end of the match — a scoreline that would have seen them through to the Champions League final.
But in the final minutes, chaos erupted when Acerbi scored the 3–3 equalizer for Inter. Then, in extra time, it was Frattesi who scored the goal that sealed their qualification, making it 4–3 and 7–6 on aggregate.
Despite losing in the statistics
One of the curious things about football — and perhaps one of the reasons why it’s the most popular sport in the world, the one that stirs the most passion globally (unlike other more regionally focused sports like basketball, baseball, American football, cricket, etc.) — is how unpredictable the game can be.
In football, the most important thing is the goal — not just a little more important than other aspects, but almost everything. That’s why it’s possible for a team to lose in all the key statistics and still win the match by scoring more goals.
Something like that happened to Inter Milan yesterday against Barcelona. If we look at the main stats at the end of the match:
| Inter Milan | Barcelona | |
|---|---|---|
| Ball Possesion | 37% | 63% |
| Attempts on target | 7 | 10 |
| Total Attempts | 13 | 23 |
| Saves | 7 | 3 |
| Corners | 5 | 7 |
| Offsides | 9 | 2 |
| Distance Covered | 147.51 km | 146.36 km |
| Passes completed | 218 (69%) | 673 (86%) |
| Fouls Committed | 14 | 10 |
| Yellow / Red Cards | 5 / 0 | 3 / 0 |
We see that Barcelona had nearly double the possession, 10 shots on target (vs. 7 for Inter), 23 total chances (vs. Inter’s 13), more corners (7 vs. 5), and they completed three times more passes than Inter (673 vs. 218), but… they scored one less goal (3 vs. 4) — and that’s why they lost and were eliminated.