This story is from June 11, 2023
Manchester City beat Inter Milan to win UEFA Champions League and complete the treble
As it happened: Man City vs Inter Milan
The victory also made City the fourth different English side to win the Champions League, after Man United (1999, 2008), Liverpool (2005, 2019) and Chelsea (2012, 2021) -- the most of any nation.
Spanish midfielder Rodri's 68th-minute goal settled a cagey game which a far-from-fluent City dominated without ever looking comfortable against the side from Italy.
Manchester City won the first Champions League title in their history on Saturday and secured a treble of trophies by beating Inter Milan 1-0.
Rodri's sweetly-struck goal proved the difference for Abu Dhabi-backed City, who have already won the Premier League and FA Cup this season.
Rodri sidefooted in on 68 minutes after Bernardo Silva pulled back a cross that fell perfectly for the unmarked Spaniard at the Ataturk Olympic Stadium.
The win sealed the third Champions League for City manager Pep Guardiola, who won it twice with Barcelona.
The outcome could have been different had Romelu Lukaku's header not been stopped by Ederson's leg minutes later.
Earlier in the second half, City also enjoyed a slice of luck when Federico Dimarco's goalbound header was blocked by his own player, Lukaku.
In another Inter chance, Lautaro Martinez raced away after a misunderstanding in the City defence but goalkeeper Ederson tore out of his goal to narrow the angle and stop the shot.
Inter had kept City goalless in a cagey first half marked by the injury-enforced exit of Manchester City midfielder Kevin De Bruyne in the 36th minute, to be replaced by Phil Foden.
In City's best chance of that half, the otherwise muted Erling Haaland shot straight at Andre Onana in the Inter goal and Silva curled a shot just wide before that.
Inter almost levelled at the death when a point-blank header by substitute Romelu Lukaku was saved by Ederson.
But City, who lost in the final two years ago against Chelsea, would not be denied.
"Emotional. A dream came true. All these guys around here waited I don't know how many years. They deserve, we deserve," Rodri said after the victory.
Man City manager Pep Guardiola has now won the Champions League three times and took his trophy count with City to 12.
It was far from a fluent City performance, however, against a tireless Inter side who looked capable of causing a shock.
City were stifled in the first half and their fans were reduced to near silence at times as the nerves became frayed.
With Kevin de Bruyne off injured, City struggled to create chances and were wobbly at the back but in the end the ever-reliable Rodri came to the rescue.
For once Inter could not close down the spaces and Bernardo Silva's cutback was swept home by the Spaniard.
Even then, City were forced to go to the wire at the end of the long season with Lautaro Martinez hitting the bar for Inter and Lukaku denied by a superb Ederson save at the death.
NEAR-MISSES
In finally guiding Manchester City to the European crown they so cherished after a few gut-wrenching near misses since Sheikh Mansour bought the club in 2008, Guardiola became the first manager to achieve two trebles in European football, having done the Spanish equivalent with Barcelona in 2009.
He has won 12 trophies with City since taking charge in 2016 and with the Champions League jinx broken, any sense of inferiority City may have suffered to the established European royalty of Real Madrid, Bayern Munich and Liverpool has gone.
City still must defend themselves against more than 100 alleged breaches of Premier League financial regulations dating back to 2009, but that is for another day.
On Saturday alongside the Bosphorus, that was the last thing City's joyous fans cared about as they celebrated the club's first European trophy since the now defunct European Cup Winners' Cup in 1969–70.
Guardiola's side fluffed their lines in Porto two years ago when losing to Chelsea in the Champions League final -- a defeat partially blamed on Guardiola's tactics.
This time he and his players delivered, although it was far from straightforward against the wily Italian side.
(With inputs from Reuters)
- The Ding Liren blunder that made D Gukesh youngest-ever world chess champion
- 'End of chess...': Former world champion reacts to D Gukesh vs Ding Liren result
- D Gukesh becomes World Chess champion: How much prize money did the Indian Grandmaster win?
- Kim Kardashian sends $4 billion Skims brand gift to Carmelo Anthony's ex La La Anthony, latter expresses gratitude to friend
- WWE officially gives devastating update on Jey Uso’s injury after Drew McIntyre's attack
- India vs Australia 3rd Test, Shubman Gill press conference LIVE: Focus on Indian batting order, bowling combination
- Young Gukesh did not use chess engines; family, coach lent the fuel
- India vs Australia: Steve Smith adopts 'Mr Cricket's less is more' training strategy to overcome form slump
- Checkde India! Teen prodigy Gukesh Dommaraju becomes youngest world chess champion
- Watch: Emotional moment when D Gukesh's father realised his son had won the World Chess Championship
- India vs Australia 3rd Test: Can Steve Smith turn his horror season around?
- Russian Chess Federation chief accuses Ding Liren of losing on purpose to D Gukesh in World Championship
- 2nd Test: India beat Bangladesh by seven wickets to sweep series
- 2nd Test, Day 4: India push for victory with T20-style batting
- 2nd Test, Day 1: B'desh 107/3 vs India on rain-shortened opening day
- Ashwin shines as India hammer Bangladesh in Chennai Test
- 1st Test, Day 3: India hold upper hand despite spirited Bangladesh chase