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Barcelona clinch Women's Champions League in comeback victory

Barcelona clinch Women's Champions League in comeback victory

Barcelona celebrate after winning the Women's Champions League final at the Philips Stadion in Eindhoven, the Netherlands, on Jun 3, 2023. (Photo: Reuters/Piroschka van de Wouw)

EINDHOVEN, Netherlands: Barcelona won their second Women's Champions League in three years on Saturday (Jun 3) when they came back from two goals down to beat VfL Wolfsburg 3-2 in a thrilling final before a sold-out crowd in Eindhoven.

Swedish defender Fridolina Rolfo struck the winning goal from close range in the 70th minute, rounding off a sensational comeback for Barcelona who had been 2-0 down at half-time.

The Spanish league champions quickly set the record straight in the second half as Patricia Guijarro headed in two goals in the first five minutes after the break.

The equaliser came as no surprise as Barcelona had dominated play for most of the first half, lacking efficiency only in front of the goal.

They had threatened to score in the opening minutes, before Polish striker Ewa Pajor put Wolfsburg ahead in the third minute after pressuring Barcelona's English defender Lucy Bronze into losing possession.

Barcelona quickly increased the pressure but saw Salma Paralluelo and Aitana Bonmati squander chances when face-to-face with Wolfsburg goalkeeper Merle Frohms, while Irene Paredes headed a corner wide from close range.

Wolfsburg waited for their chances on the counterattack and saw their patience rewarded in the 37th minute when Pajor played a perfect cross to Alexandra Popp who headed in the German team's second goal against the run of play.

But Barcelona's second-half whirlwind proved too much for Wolfsburg, who were chasing their first Champions League crown since 2014.

They came close to an equaliser once, from a corner in stoppage time, but in the end offered too little to prevent Barcelona from lifting the trophy in front of nearly 34,000 fans in Eindhoven's Philips Stadion.

This year's final was the first before a sold-out crowd in the history of the Women's Champions League and attracted the biggest crowd ever to a women's football match played in the Netherlands.

Source: Reuters/kg

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