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The 6 biggest ever UCL rebounds - can Man Utd and Juventus produce new wonders?


The main leg of Champions League round of 16 has completed, and it left us a couple of astounding outcomes.



Ole Gunnar Solskjaer endured his first annihilation when Manchester United lost 2-0 to PSG at home, while Cristiano Ronaldo, who promises to win Champions League with Juventus, fell at his old adversaries Atletico Madrid.

Joined need to battle back without Paul Pogba in the second leg, who was sent off in the most recent minutes amid the thrashing. In the mean time, Anthony Martial and Jesse Lingard both got harmed in that amusement and stay dicey for the second leg.

Juventus, trailing 2-0 to Atletico, are likewise confronting colossal errands as Diego Simeone's side are apparently the best cautious group in Europe. Taking the away-objective tenets into thought, their 2-objective deficiency will be multiplied if Atletico figure out how to locate the net in the second leg.

Be that as it may, nothing is outlandish in football. Liverpool demonstrated it, Barcelona likewise demonstrated it - even in two distinctive ways.

Presently how about we investigate those most noteworthy rebounds in the Champions League ever. Will Manchester United and Juventus add their names to the rundown after the second leg?

6. Wolfsburg versus Real Madrid, 2015-16, Quarterfinal

First-leg result: Wolfsburg 2-0 Real Madrid

Second-leg result: Real Madrid 3-0 Wolfsburg

A tie which is considered as the earliest reference point of Real Madrid's line in the Champions League. In the wake of taking out Roma in the Round of 16, Real Madrid drew Bundesliga side Wolfsburg in the quarterfinal, an apparently simple adversary for Zinedine Zidane's side.

Nonetheless, two first-half objectives shocked Ronaldo and co in the Volkswagen Arena. With a less than impressive execution in the thrashing, Madrid's expectations once looked thin.

That was the point at which you need a legend - Cristiano Ronaldo. The Portuguese opened the second leg with 2 objectives in 3 minutes before hitting a lucky free-kick objective into the net, completing his mind boggling cap trap to send Real Madrid through

Ronaldo demonstrated he can without any assistance topple a 2-objective shortage. Would he be able to do it once again?

5. Manchester United versus Bayern Munich, 1998-99, Final

90th moment: Man Utd 0-1 Bayern

93rd moment: Man Utd 2-1 Bayern

Ronaldo isn't the special case who delivered a marvel previously. Ole Gunnar Solskjaer did it far sooner than him.

Manchester United were down an objective heading into stoppage time of the 1999 Champions League last. Their mission for the primary treble in English history was going to miss the mark.

That is until Teddy Sheringham scored in the 91st moment.

In any case, Manchester United didn't require additional time in this one in light of the fact that Solskjaer's shocking objective in the last second pushed the Red Devils to their first European crown in 31 years, also that notable treble.

4. Air conditioning Milan versus Deportivo la Coruna, 2003-04, Quarterfinal

First-leg result: AC Milan 4-1 Deportivo

Second-leg result: Deportivo 4-0 AC Milan

Milan's group in 2004 was stacked with the world's best stars including Kaka, Andrea Pirlo, Paolo Maldini, Cafu and Andriy Shevchenko.

A 4-1 misfortune in the primary leg without a doubt spelt rout for Spanish club Deportivo La Coruna. Be that as it may, as Deportivo mentor Javier Irureta said before the second leg in Spain, "Wonders frequently occur, things you may not soundly anticipate."

Far from home, the guarding champion and competition most loved Milan were flighty right off the bat, in the end surrendering to Deportivo's gigantic weight as an early Walter Pandiani objective.

As the Riazor swarm roared, a Juan Carlos Valeron header and a furious drive from Albert Luque about a moment from halftime eradicated Milan's first leg lead and would send Deportivo through.

Be that as it may, Irureta's side wasn't fulfilled yet, as they included one more for good measure on a splendid volley from Fran to give the Galicians an astounding quarterfinal triumph.

3. Barcelona versus Roma, 2017-18, Quarterfinal

First-leg result: Barcelona 4-1 Roma

Second-leg result: Roma 3-0 Barcelona; Roma advance on away objectives

Barcelona entered the second leg of their quarterfinal conflict with Roma in an agreeable position.

The Catalans had not lost a match in household or Champions League play all season and had not tasted annihilation in 18 straight matches, including a 4-1 whipping of Roma in the primary leg of the challenge at Camp Nou.

Yet, Ernesto Valverde's side turned out level footed, enabling a 6th moment objective to Edin Dzeko on a splendid Daniele De Rossi long pass.

De Rossi multiplied Roma's lead soon after half-time from the punishment spot and protector Kostas Manolas completed an excellent header past Marc-Andre ter Stegen late in the amusement to significantly move Roma to the elimination rounds.

2. PSG versus Barcelona, 2016-17, Round of 16

First-leg result: PSG 4-0 Barcelona

Second-leg result: Barcelona 6-1 PSG

No group had ever bounced back from a four-objective shortage in the Champions League until Barcelona stunned Paris and the world.

The principal leg in France delivered heartbreaking outcomes for Luis Enrique's side as Paris Saint-Germain took care of business, winning 4-0 behind objectives from Angel Di Maria and Julian Draxler.

Coming into the second leg, Barcelona neglected to verify a pivotal away objective and expected to put somewhere around five past PSG to progress to the quarterfinals. A third-minute Luis Suarez header began the scoring for Barca, who at that point scored two additional occasions inside the initial 50 minutes to put the weight on the French side.

PSG reacted with an astounding volley from Edinson Cavani, without a doubt spelling fate for Barcelona. Pursuing three additional objectives in the late phases of the diversion, Neymar twisted a free kick past Kurzawa and only two minutes after the fact changed over a punishment to make it 5-5 on total.

Be that as it may, Barcelona still required another supernatural occurrence to check PSG's away objective. In the 95th moment, Sergi Roberto fantastically struck the amusement winning objective in the last seconds to finish a standout amongst the most amazing diversions in Champions League history.

1. Liverpool versus AC Milan, 2004-05, Final

First-half outcome: Liverpool 0-3 Milan

Full-time result: Liverpool 3-3 Milan

Liverpool win on punishments (3-2)

Liverpool defeated a three-objective deficiency against forceful AC Milan to win the Champions League Final on punishments. On a starry evening in Istanbul, Milan rapidly led the pack on a splendid volley from chief Paolo Maldini off a cross from Andrea Pirlo.

Striker Hernan Crespo included two additional objectives previously half-time to make it 3-0, making an apparently incomprehensible errand for Liverpool.

Be that as it may, Steven Gerrard gave Liverpool trust with a header into the correct corner and Vladimir Smicer included another only two minutes after the fact.

Milan's lead would formally be eradicated in the 61st moment as Xabi Alonso followed up his missed punishment by soaring a shot into the highest point of the netting.

The score remained dimension all through control and additional time and the match made a beeline for punishments, where Liverpool rose 3-2 to win their fifth European Cup.

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