Champions League: Leicester Win on Debut, Real Madrid Make Stunning Comeback
Premier League champions Leicester City defeated Belgium's Club Brugge 3-0 in their Champions League debut in Bruges on Wednesday.
- Agence France-Presse
- Updated: September 15, 2016 08:57 am IST
Highlights
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Leicester City won on their Champions League debut
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Real Madrid also won beating Sporting Lisbon
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Monaco beat English club Tottenham in Wembley Stadium
The Leicester City fairytale has another chapter after they eased to a 3-0 away win in their Champions League debut on Wednesday, as Monaco beat Tottenham at Wembley in front of a record crowd for an English club.
On a night of goals, Sergio Aguero hit a hat-trick as Manchester City hammered Borussia Moenchengladbach 4-0 at home in a fixture which took place 24 hours late after rain forced the game off on Tuesday, while a rampant Borussia Dortmund smashed Legia Warsaw for six.
But the headlines will all be about Leicester, who stunned the football world last season when they went from relegation candidates to Premier League champions in the space of 12 miraculous months.
An away trip to Club Brugge of Belgium was not exactly the stuff of Leicester's European dreams, but they showed some of the verve they have been missing so far this season as Riyad Mahrez struck twice, one of them a sumptuous free-kick and the other a penalty.
"From our first chance we scored and from that point we had the control of the match and Brugge had the control of the ball," said Leicester's colourful Italian manager Claudio Ranieri.
"We played our style. It was good for us to start our story with a victory."
Much tougher tests surely await the Foxes, but this was an accomplished, clinical performance in their first European outing since losing to Red Star Belgrade in the UEFA Cup first round in 2000.
Also in Group G are Porto and FC Copenhagen, who played out a 1-1 draw in Portugal to leave Leicester top of the pile after the opening fixtures.
Leicester are only the third English club to win their first-ever #UCL match ?? pic.twitter.com/URoq2juk8f
- Champions League (@ChampionsLeague) September 14, 2016
Current French league leaders Monaco were also notable winners on the night, stunning Tottenham Hotspur 2-1 in an incident-packed encounter at "the home of football" in front of 85,011 fans -- a record home attendance for an English club.
Tottenham are back in the Champions League for the first time in five years and, with the capacity at their White Hart Lane stadium reduced due to redevelopment, they opted to play their European matches at Wembley this season.
The iconic Wembley arch was lit up in Tottenham's blue and white, but that was the extent of the home comforts for Mauricio Pochettino's side as they paid the price for a sloppy first-half display.
Goals from Bernardo Silva and Thomas Lemar put Monaco in command and although Toby Alderweireld got one back, Tottenham were unable to turn their second-half dominance into an equaliser in a feisty encounter.
"They had only two shots on target and scored twice. We feel very disappointed with the result," Pochettino said.
"We improved in the second half and had chances to win. We deserved more, but you cannot concede like we did."
Ronaldo on target
In Madrid, Champions League holders Real had a big scare at home to Sporting Lisbon, as Cristiano Ronaldo -- against his boyhood club -- and substitute Alvaro Morata struck in the closing minutes to seal a stunning comeback and win 2-1.
Madrid looked to be heading for their first home defeat in the competition for five years after Bruno Cesar's low effort three minutes into the second-half handed Sporting a thoroughly merited lead.
However, in a frantic finale, Ronaldo's free-kick levelled the game -- he refused to celebrate -- before Morata met James Rodriguez's cross deep into stoppage time to complete a dramatic fightback.
Zidane, @realmadriden "This is Real Madrid and we know we can always turn things around in a minute." #UCL pic.twitter.com/0JkuubrxRJ
- Champions League (@ChampionsLeague) September 14, 2016
"We started the game a little passively," Ronaldo told BeIN Sports.
"But football is like this and Real Madrid are like this. The comebacks form part of this legendary stadium."
In Turin, Gonzalo Higuain and Sami Khedira fired blanks as Sevilla held dominant but wasteful Juventus to a 0-0 draw.
"I'm disappointed we had to settle for a scoreless draw because everyone was expecting us to win three or four nil," said Juventus coach Massimiliano Allegri.