Paris Saint-Germain earns soccer roundup win over Dynamo Kiev
MADRID (AP) ― Real Madrid scored twice late in an electrifying finish Tuesday to beat Manchester City 3-2 to open the Champions League group stage, while Paris Saint-Germain marked its new big-spending era with an emphatic 4-1 win over Dynamo Kiev.
Madrid forward Cristiano Ronaldo beat goalkeeper Joe Hart in the 90th minute to cap a dramatic comeback as the nine-time Champions League winners twice came from behind for a morale-boosting victory over the English champions following a week of domestic disarray.
While Madrid showed its pedigree as nine-time champion against its rich and ambitious opponent, AC Milan couldn’t seem to use one of its favorite competitions to shake off its early season troubles as it was held to a 0-0 draw at home to Anderlecht.
Also, Robert Lewandowski scored late as Borussia Dortmund kept pace with Madrid in the tough Group D with a 1-0 win over Ajax.
Arsenal shook off its poor away form in the competition to win 2-1 at French champion Montpellier, while Schalke also opened Group A with a 2-1 road win at Olympiakos.
FC Porto won 2-0 at Dinamo Zagreb while Malaga thrashed Zenit St. Petersburg 3-0 in its competition debut.
City hoped to get off on the right foot after missing out on the knockout stages last season in the matchup between the champions of Spain and England. The big-spending Premier League club certainly had its chance only to come undone against a dogged opponent desperate for a victory.
“The most important thing was to win and we did that. The team is good, the fans are good and I’m good,” said Ronaldo, who returned to the Santiago Bernabeu for the first time since saying he felt “sad” at the club. “It was a crazy game.”
Ronaldo’s winner capped a frantic finale after City had done well to soak up Madrid’s pressure in the first half before twice taking the lead in the second.
“It is difficult not because we lost ― we can lose against a side like Real Madrid ― but because with four minutes to go it was 2-1,” City manager Roberto Mancini said.
Madrid’s weakness on set pieces again proved costly as Aleksandar Kolarov curled home a free kick in the 85th minute to re-establish the advantage after Marcelo had canceled out Edin Dzeko’s 68th-minute opener as City’s substitutes performed.
Madrid came roaring back, however. Substitute Karim Benzema turned to squeeze home an 87th-minute equalizer past Hart, before Ronaldo capped the rally as the hosts shook off the criticism following a poor domestic start.
Ronaldo, who refused to celebrate when scoring in his last home game, didn’t hesitate to do so this time and neither did coach Jose Mourinho.
“I recovered my team, now I just hope I don’t lose it,” Mourinho said.
Lewandowski controlled the ball in the penalty area before hammering home a shot with three minutes remaining to reward Dortmund’s late dominance and get its hopes of advancing rolling in the toughest group of the competition.
Zlatan Ibrahimovic became the first player to score for six different clubs in the competition. PSG attacked with gusto from the outset, eight years after its last appearance in the competition, and the convincing win confirmed PSG’s status as Group A favorite ahead of Porto.
“It’s always important to win your first game in the Champions League,” PSG coach Carlo Ancelotti said. “To play the way we did tonight can only be good for our confidence.”
Ibrahimovic, who previously scored for Ajax, Juventus, Inter Milan, Barcelona and Milan, netted from the penalty spot in the 19th for his sixth goal from six matches.
Brazil defenders Thiago Silva and Alex profited from terrible marking to put the home side 3-0 ahead after little more than 30 minutes, with Javier Pastore answering Miguel Veloso’s 87th-minute consolation goal.
Seven-time champion Milan is still searching for a positive result after its dismal start since Ibrahimovic’s exit. The Serie A club failed to rebound from losing its first two home games for the first time in 82 years. An error-strewn performance saw the Italian club’s players jeered off the pitch by the more than half-empty San Siro.