Champions League final: Spurs and Liverpool left standing after crazy knockout rounds

Dom Farrell

Champions League final: Spurs and Liverpool left standing after crazy knockout rounds image

Tottenham and Liverpool will contest an all-English Champions League final in Madrid on Saturday and both teams certainly earned their place in the showpiece.

A day after the Reds remarkably overturned a 3-0 semifinal deficit against Barcelona, Spurs came back from being behind by the same margin with only 45 minutes of their tie against Ajax remaining in Amsterdam.

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Both games were wild matches to live long in the memory but, somehow, they were entirely in keeping with the incredible drama this season's Champions League knockout stages have produced.

Routine fixtures became the exception as Europe's elite did battle in style.

Juventus 3 Atletico Madrid 0 (3-2 agg)

Setting the tone for a run of games where overturning the odds became vogue, Atletico Madrid saw a strong position crumble in the face of a familiar foe.

Jose Gimenez and Diego Godin gave Diego Simeone's men a 2-0 victory at the Wanda Metropolitano -- prompting an X-rated celebrated from their boss in the eyes of UEFA -- but the return match of the last-16 showdown belonged to Cristiano Ronaldo.

Massimiliano Allegri figured his star forward's aerial prowess could cause Atleti problems and so it proved when he powered in behind Juanfran to score in the 27th minute.

Jan Oblak could not prevent a second Ronaldo header from crossing his line after Godin and Gimenez were caught out by the five-time Ballon d'Or winner, who dispatched a penalty four minutes from time to complete a hat trick and take his career tally against Los Rojiblancos to 25.

Real Madrid 1 Ajax 4 (3-5 agg)

They might have fallen painfully in the semifinal, but Ajax's fearless young stars can reflect fondly upon one of the greatest ever modern Champions League campaigns.

Despite their impressive display in a 2-1 first-leg defeat, nobody really seemed to think Erik ten Hag's side could turn things around in the last 16 at the Santiago Bernabeu. Sergio Ramos certainly did not -- he purposefully picked up a booking to avoid the risk of a quarterfinal ban, earning an additional one-match suspension from UEFA in the process.

In the absence of its captain, Madrid completely capitulated to a fearless and thrilling opponent.

Hakim Ziyech and David Neres put the visitors 2-0 up by the 18th minute and it was 3-0 just after the hour thanks to the inspired Dusan Tadic.

Marco Asensio got a goal back but Lasse Schone's free kick beat Thibaut Courtois and sent Madrid crashing out. It was the first time they had ever been knocked out after winning the first leg of a Champions League tie.

Paris Saint-Germain 1 Manchester United 3 (3-3 agg, United won on away goals)

A day after Ajax's thrashing of Madrid, Manchester United made history at Parc des Princes.

No side had ever won a knockout tie after trailing 2-0 from a first leg at home, and with 10 senior players missing, including the banned Paul Pogba, United's chances looked slim.

Romelu Lukaku scored just two minutes in, though, and despite Juan Bernat's equalizer on the night, Lukaku capitalized upon a Gianluigi Buffon error to make it 2-1.

As the game crept towards second-half injury time, Diogo Dalot's shot struck Presnel Kimpembe's arm and the referee awarded a penalty after a lengthy VAR review. Marcus Rashford scored it, United progressed and the clamor for Ole Gunnar Solskjaer to be given the permanent manager's job grew louder.

Manchester City 4 Tottenham 3 (4-4 agg, Spurs win on away goals)

Tottenham scored through Son Heung-min in a tense, frenetic first leg. Crucially, as it turned out, City did not. They were not about to make the same mistake as Raheem Sterling thrashed an early opener past Hugo Lloris at the Etihad Stadium.

Son responded with two superb finishes of his own, leaving Pep Guardiola's men with a quarterfinal mountain to climb. They duly began to scale it. Bernardo Silva scored, Sterling scored again. There had only been 21 minutes played.

Something faintly resembling a normal soccer match broke out and Sergio Aguero finished emphatically to give City the lead in the tie for the first time in the 59th minute.

In a sight Ajax are now familiar with, Spurs looked spent until Fernando Llorente bundled them back into the lead on away goals. That advantage ultimately remained, but only after Sterling thought he had completed his hat-trick. Bedlam ensued until VAR showed Aguero was fractionally offside during the build-up.

Liverpool 4 Barcelona 0 (4-3 agg)

Fresh from netting a late winner at Newcastle United the weekend before, Divock Origi allowed the Liverpool faithful to dream by poaching his maiden Champions League goal in the seventh minute. Still, overturning the 3-0 advantage Barca had brought to Merseyside looked a tall order.

Jurgen Klopp needed Alisson to be on form as he saved from Lionel Messi and Luis Suarez, before another unlikely hero emerged.

Andy Robertson's injury forced James Milner to left-back and Georginio Wijnaldum into the fray at halftime. By the hour, the Dutch midfielder had Liverpool level thanks to two goals in 122 delirious seconds.

Origi had the final word thanks to Trent Alexander-Arnold's quick thinking from a 79th-minute corner, leaving Barcelona and Messi crestfallen.

Ajax 2 Tottenham 3 (3-3 agg, Spurs win on away goals)

As it did at the Tottenham Hotspur Stadium, Ajax made a smooth start and led through its inspirational captain Matthijs de Ligt in the fifth minute.

Ziyech emphatically made it 2-0 on the night and 3-0 on aggregate, but Lucas changed the complexion of the contest with a quickfire brace as he was supported by Dele Alli's intelligent running from midfield and Llorente's robust accompaniment in attack.

Ziyech hit the post and Spurs center-back Jan Vertonghen hit the bar. Amsterdam held its breath and Lucas proved to be the coolest man in the stadium in the 96th minute, sending his side onwards to the Wanda Metropolitano.

Dom Farrell

Dom Farrell Photo

Dom is the senior content producer for Sporting News UK. He previously worked as fan brands editor for Manchester City at Reach Plc. Prior to that, he built more than a decade of experience in the sports journalism industry, primarily for the Stats Perform and Press Association news agencies. Dom has covered major football events on location, including the entirety of Euro 2016 and the 2018 World Cup in Paris and St Petersburg respectively, along with numerous high-profile Premier League, Champions League and England international matches. Cricket and boxing are his other major sporting passions and he has covered the likes of Anthony Joshua, Tyson Fury, Wladimir Klitschko, Gennadiy Golovkin and Vasyl Lomachenko live from ringside.