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Barcelona Tops Madrid, 2-0: Messi Leads Squad To Victory Against Short Sided Foes

PAUL LOGOTHETIS   04/27/11 07:06 PM ET   AP

MADRID — Lionel Messi's clutch scoring was overshadowed by the loud complaining from the other side.

Messi lit up an ill-tempered Champions League semifinal on Wednesday with two goals in the last 15 minutes to give Barcelona a 2-0 victory against short-handed Real Madrid.

Messi sent substitute Ibrahim Afellay's cross through the legs of goalkeeper Iker Casillas to open the scoring in the 76th minute. With three minutes to play, the elusive Argentina forward brilliantly moved past three defenders before slipping the ball past Casillas for his 52nd goal of the season, and 11th in the Champions League.

"A team that has nine European Cups never gives up on a series, I'm convinced of that," Barcelona coach Pep Guardiola said. "We played a very good game. We controlled their counterattacks, their aerial game, which is very dangerous."

The match turned on the ejection of Madrid's Pepe in the 61st minute. That enraged Madrid coach Jose Mourinho, who was sent to the stands for protesting the decision, leaving Madrid playing with 10 against Barcelona for the fourth straight game.

Pepe was sent off after colliding with Daniel Alves as he lunged for a ball and Mourinho was sent to the stands for sarcastically clapping and showing a thumbs up to the fourth official.

Mourinho has seen his team finish with 10 players in his last five matches against Barcelona, counting Inter Milan's 1-0 defeat at Barcelona in the semifinals last year. Inter still advanced, then won the championship against Bayern Munich.

"If I say to (the referee) and to UEFA what I think and feel, my career ends today," Mourinho said. "One day I hope to get an answer to the question: Why?"

Mourinho took a seat in the first row behind the dugout and began scribbling instructions that were passed to assistant coach Aitor Karanka.

But there was no stopping Messi, whose second goal was a wonderful example of his trademark: a darting run and classic finish.

It was Barcelona's first win in three games between the bitter rivals in 12 days after a 1-1 league draw and a 1-0 extra-time Copa del Rey final defeat.

Madrid's defense in Tuesday's return leg will be short-handed with Pepe and Sergio Ramos both suspended. Ramos got a yellow card for a foul on Messi in the 53rd.

Mourinho described the second leg in Barcelona as "mission impossible" as he continued to bemoan his side's treatment by the referee.

"We'll go there with pride, without Pepe, who did nothing, without Ramos, who did nothing, and the coach who can't be on the bench," he said. "If we score a goal, they'll kill us again. It's a result that is impossible.

"Why in a game that was equal did he do what he did? But he won't answer, he'll go home because he doesn't have to answer to anyone."

Messi's 179th goal tied him with Josep Samitier as the third-leading scorer for Barcelona, behind only Cesar Rodriguez (235) and Laszlo Kubala (196).

"At 23 ... that's incredible," Guardiola said.

Messi was not available for comment.

Both coaches had stoked tensions on the eve of the match, with Guardiola launching an expletive-filled attack on Mourinho, and the bad will spilled over into the match.

Tensions first erupted in the 40th minute when Madrid defender Alvaro Arbeloa was carded after a tussle with Pedro Rodriguez, while Danny Alves was shown a yellow card for a push on Angel Di Maria.

Substitute Barcelona keeper Jose Manuel Pinto was the first to be sent off for a red card at halftime as the two teams skirmished while leaving the field. That left Barcelona without a reserve goalkeeper as the frustration of not capitalizing on 70 percent of the possession in the first 45 minutes seemed to boil over.

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12:04 PM on 04/28/2011
I'm happy that Huff Post is covering the UEFA Champions League, and reporting on soccer in general, but it's kind of strange they haven't mentioned the CONCACAF Final from last night.. Maybe they will later today? :/
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dgoshilla
12:04 AM on 04/28/2011
Who cares? MLS is the only soccer Huff Po should be reporting on.
12:27 AM on 04/28/2011
Lol. Your kidding, right? That's like me saying, I play basketball, I'm from Europe, but the NBA sucks. Obviously, the NBA is the best basketball platform in the world. Similarily, if you're going to watch 'soccer', you should be watching the finest teams in Europe play.

Your comment kind of reminds me of a WSJ article printed yesterday, making all these horrible analogies between the Final Four and the UCL Semis - it would have been far more interesting to make analogies between each team and their jersey sponsor (Gazprom, AON, BTWIN, UNICEF). But, hey, I guess thats what I should expect from News Corp. Their values are so divergent from UEFA principles.

Anyways... the MLS is so trivial. The gameplay is wack, the team names are a pathetic attempt to emulate legitimacy (FC Dallas, Real Salt Lake), and the announcing is atrocious (minus Smith). I've served my country, and we have a lot of great things going for us, but 'soccer' intelligence isn't one of them.
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jubo
03:41 AM on 04/28/2011
And the tea Party the only one to report on?
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10:41 PM on 04/27/2011
The game sucked. Friggin' Greg Luganis never dove that much in his entire career.

Drama-queens, nearly every one of 'em. They don't even fight like men--well, Frenchmen, maybe.
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jubo
03:38 AM on 04/28/2011
And how are you not a drama queen?
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10:13 AM on 04/28/2011
No tiara, no stage--though it's been said that all the world's a stage, right?

Did you watch the game, jubo? Aside from two nice Messi goals, one sublime, the game sucked. And as for the drama-queen comment, it remains unchallenged.
07:15 PM on 04/27/2011
I'm a touch too young to remember the incomparable brilliance of Pele. I did have the pleasure of watching Maradona work his magic on the pitch and I feel equally fortunate to be witnessing another footballing genius in the form of the diminutive Argentinian Lionel Messi. He's performing at an almost other wordly level. As he glides through defenders, it's as if the ball is glued to his boots. His touches are so quick and slight that I'm often left wondering what happened when watching in real time as some quick flick rattles the back of the net. It's only during the replay that his wizardry is revealed. He just seems to be operating at a speed that no other player right now can match.

Playing with such an excellent supporting cast at Barcelona is of course a big help, but I'm sure he'd be performing at an equally mind-blowing level on some lesser side.
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jubo
03:40 AM on 04/28/2011
Well said; he is among the best ever. At 23.
02:44 PM on 04/28/2011
Well my friend, I think you are exaggerating. You are overwhelming this lionel as if he was the best player in history. Have you forgotten about all other player that have existed, like Pele or Maradona, or as of right now Cristiano Ronaldo. Messi has no won any international titles with the national team. In my opinion, I think that if you want to be the best player of the world each year and of history, there has to be great contribution to both the club , and the national team. Messi has already done the first part many times, which is succeding with Barcelona , but has no been quite "shinny" with the national team.
04:15 PM on 04/30/2011
My point was he's the best player right now, not the best player ever. Pele probably still wins there and I acknowledged the greatness of Pele and Maradona in my remarks. Messi probably hasn't even reached his full potential yet. When he does, watch out.