Atletico Madrid hold off Barcelona comeback to reach Champions League semi-finals

Barcelona threw everything at Atletico Madrid but it was not enough. Despite winning the second leg 2-1 at the Riyadh Air Metropolitano on Tuesday, Hansi Flick's side could not overturn a two-goal first-leg deficit as Atletico advanced 3-2 on aggregate to reach the Champions League semi-finals for the first time since 2017.
Barcelona fly out of the blocks
Needing two goals just to force extra time, Barcelona started at a ferocious pace. Lamine Yamal drew them level on the night inside the opening quarter, and Ferran Torres added a second before the half-hour mark to make it 2-0 on the night and 2-2 on aggregate. For a spell, Atletico looked rattled. The Metropolitano, which had been rocking at kickoff, fell quiet.
But Simeone's teams do not stay rattled for long. Ademola Lookman finished off a swift counter-attack from a Marcos Llorente assist to pull one back before half-time, and that goal changed everything. Suddenly Barcelona needed two more, and the momentum swung sharply.
Garcia red card ends Barcelona's hopes
The second half became a grinding, physical contest that suited Atletico far more than Barcelona. Flick's side pressed for the goals they needed but kept running into a wall of red and white shirts. The tie was effectively killed in the 79th minute when Eric Garcia was shown a straight red card for hauling down Alexander Sorloth to stop a breakaway. Down to ten men, Barcelona's fading hopes disappeared entirely.
Atletico saw the game out with trademark composure. Simeone celebrated with the home fans at the final whistle, arms raised in the direction of the south stand, knowing his side had survived a first-half storm to earn their place in the last four.
A familiar semi-final stage for Simeone
Atletico will face either Arsenal or Sporting CP in the semi-finals, with the Gunners leading that tie 1-0 heading into Wednesday's second leg at the Emirates. For Simeone, it represents a return to a stage he has graced before, having taken Atletico to the 2014 and 2016 Champions League finals. Barcelona, who had been chasing a treble before their first-leg collapse, head home with their European campaign over and a La Liga title race to refocus on.













