With just a one-goal deficit, it looks manageable for the Bavarians heading home, where chaos tends to tilt in their favor.
Bayern Munich’s home dominance is no myth: The edge that could decide the Champions League semifinal against PSG
Nine goals should tell you everything, but somehow it doesn’t.
That first leg in Paris felt like a game that kept restarting every ten minutes. Wait a minute, it pretty much did! Control wasn’t a word that could be used for it, just two teams taking turns landing punches and refusing to stay down. You don’t “analyze” a match like that so much as survive it (although we tried).
And yet, here we are, with Bayern only a goal behind and the whole thing shifted to Munich. That detail, the part about the location, likely matters more than anything that happened in France.
Bayern and the Munich factor
There’s something about Bayern at home in Europe that’s hard to pin down without sounding dramatic. It’s not just results, even if those are overwhelming. It’s the way games start to tilt once the crowd senses a swing. A half-chance becomes a wave. One goal starts to feel like two are coming. Opponents know it too, which is usually when the nerves creep in. And the likes of Harry Kane starts to sniff.
Bayern have overturned four first-leg defeats in Champions League knockout ties since 1992/93, most recently against Lazio in 2023/24, when they followed a 1-0 away loss with a 3-0 home win.
Their home record against PSG is another source of belief. Paris have lost more away games against Bayern than against any other opponent in Europe’s top club competition, with Munich winning five of seven.
Bayern have also lost only one of their last 29 Champions League home games and have won all six in Munich this season.
Reigning champions are there for the taking
PSG aren’t exactly fragile, but they’re not immune to that feeling either. They’re brilliant when the game is open and flowing. Less convincing when it turns into a storm.
And this second leg has storm written all over it.
No one expects control now. Not after that first leg. The idea that this will suddenly become a tight, cautious semifinal doesn’t really hold up. That was last night’s offering.
If anything, there’s a chance that this one gets even messier (or is that just wishful thinking?) Both teams certainly know they can score. Both teams know the other can too. That’s hardly a recipe for patience. It’s one for moments. Bursts. Five-minute stretches where everything flips. Then again, maybe this time it’ll be different.
So, a one-goal deficit doesn’t feel like much in what is going to be an electric atmosphere. Not when history keeps pointing in the same direction.
The first leg gave us chaos. Munich often decides which of the two teams handles it better.
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