Postpublished at 90 mins
Bayern Munich 0-1 Paris St-Germain (agg 4-6)
We'll see what the board says soon but you can't see Bayern scoring twice at this stage.
At a glance
Ousmane Dembele extends PSG's aggregate lead with thunderous finish in third minute
Harry Kane scores in stoppage time but Bayern unable to overturn 5-4 deficit from first leg
PSG will now face Arsenal in the final in Budapest on 30 May
Paris St-Germain set up a Champions League final against Arsenal as they overcame Bayern Munich to stay on course to retain their crown.
The semi-final second leg was not a classic like the first encounter in Paris, which saw Luis Enrique's holders take a 5-4 advantage to Munich's Allianz Arena.
Harry Kane scored his 55th goal of the season for Bayern deep into stoppage time, but it could not provide any consolation on a night of bitter disappointment for Vincent Kompany's side.
It was almost impossible to repeat the stunning standards of the first leg, but this was still a game of high quality and opportunities.
And PSG took their first chance after only three minutes when Georgian genius Khvicha Kvaratskhelia's brilliant run and cross set up Ousmane Dembele for a thumping finish.
In an electric atmosphere, Bayern tried to force their way back into the tie, but Kane was mostly kept at arm's length and the hosts were frustrated.
Bayern were convinced they should have had a first-half penalty when Vitinha rifled a clearance against Joao Neves' arm inside the box, but the laws state a spot-kick cannot be given if the ball has been played by a team-mate.
PSG created the better opportunities after the break, with Desire Doue coming close on several occasions, but Bayern keeper Manuel Neuer formed a formidable barrier.
Bayern pressed tirelessly, with Kane striking superbly late on, but could not recover the deficit and PSG will now meet Arsenal in Budapest on Saturday, 30 May.
With manager Luis Enrique leading PSG to a second successive Champions League final, it continues the emergence and development of one of the outstanding sides of recent years.
PSG flourished brilliantly in the second half of last season to beat the Premier League elite of Manchester City, Liverpool, Aston Villa and Arsenal before the historic 5-0 demolition of Inter Milan in the final.
In the same Allianz Arena where Inter were so decisively dismissed last season, PSG held Bayern at bay with maturity and a mix of attacking brilliance and superb defending.
PSG's early goal was a hammer blow to Bayern and a perfect example of the lethal threat they possess, with Kvaratskhelia and Dembele combining to deadly effect.
They were dangerous throughout, particularly in the shape of Doue and Kvaratskhelia, but huge credit must go to PSG in the defensive context too, with veteran Marquinhos marshalling the backline magnificently.
And with the promptings of Vitinha in midfield keeping PSG ticking over, Luis Enrique has built the complete package and a huge threat to Arsenal's hopes of winning their first Champions League.
Bayern's superb supporters mostly stayed in place after the final whistle to acclaim their team after a gallant but fruitless effort to dislodge PSG from their Champions League perch.
There was no disguising, however, the pained expression on the faces of a Bayern side that had given everything but, like every other in the last 12 months, come up short against the Parisians in Europe.
Until his sweet late strike on the turn offered the briefest of hope to Bayern, Kane had been well marshalled by PSG's defence and was largely a peripheral figure.
Bayern can console themselves with another Bundesliga title, but had high hopes of progressing to another Champions League final by chasing down that one-goal deficit.
In the end PSG, once more, had too much in a two-legged semi-final that was a credit to both sides and both coaches - Luis Enrique and Bayern boss Kompany.
After the opportunity to rate players has closed, the score displayed represents the average from all the submissions by BBC Sport users.
Manager: Vincent Kompany
Formation: 4 - 2 - 3 - 1
Manager: Luis Enrique
Formation: 4 - 3 - 3
Manager: Vincent Kompany
Formation: 4 - 2 - 3 - 1
Manager: Luis Enrique
Formation: 4 - 3 - 3
High chance of scoring
Medium chance of scoring
Low chance of scoring
Dominant period
Match momentum measures the swing of the match by comparing each team’s threat to see who is more likely to score within that minute. The momentum value is the difference between each team’s most dangerous moment, or team threat, in that minute.
Match momentum measures the swing of the match by comparing each team’s threat to see who is more likely to score within that minute. The momentum value is the difference between each team’s most dangerous moment, or team threat, in that minute.
| Minute | Team with most threat |
|---|---|
Kick off 1' | Paris Saint-Germain |
2' | Paris Saint-Germain |
3' | Paris Saint-GermainGoal |
4' | Paris Saint-Germain |
5' | Paris Saint-Germain |
6' | Bayern Munich |
7' | Bayern Munich |
8' | Bayern Munich |
9' | Bayern Munich |
10' | Bayern Munich |
11' | Bayern Munich |
12' | Bayern Munich |
13' | Bayern Munich |
14' | Bayern Munich |
15' | Bayern Munich |
16' | Bayern Munich |
17' | Bayern Munich |
18' | Bayern Munich |
19' | Bayern Munich |
20' | Bayern Munich |
21' | Bayern Munich |
22' | Bayern Munich |
23' | Bayern Munich |
24' | Bayern Munich |
25' | Bayern Munich |
26' | Paris Saint-Germain |
27' | Bayern Munich |
28' | Bayern Munich |
29' | Bayern Munich |
30' | Paris Saint-Germain |
31' | Bayern Munich |
32' | Bayern Munich |
33' | Paris Saint-Germain |
34' | Paris Saint-Germain |
35' | Paris Saint-Germain |
36' | Bayern Munich |
37' | Paris Saint-Germain |
38' | Paris Saint-Germain |
39' | Paris Saint-Germain |
40' | Paris Saint-Germain |
41' | Bayern Munich |
42' | Bayern Munich |
43' | Bayern Munich |
44' | Bayern Munich |
45' | Bayern Munich |
45'+1 | Bayern Munich |
45'+2 | Bayern Munich |
Half time 45'+3 | Bayern Munich |
46' | Bayern Munich |
47' | Bayern Munich |
48' | Bayern Munich |
49' | Bayern Munich |
50' | Paris Saint-Germain |
51' | Paris Saint-Germain |
52' | Bayern Munich |
53' | Paris Saint-Germain |
54' | Bayern Munich |
55' | Bayern Munich |
56' | Bayern Munich |
57' | Bayern Munich |
58' | Bayern Munich |
59' | Bayern Munich |
60' | Bayern Munich |
61' | Bayern Munich |
62' | Bayern Munich |
63' | Bayern Munich |
64' | Bayern Munich |
65' | Bayern Munich |
66' | Paris Saint-Germain |
67' | Bayern Munich |
68' | Bayern Munich |
69' | Bayern Munich |
70' | Bayern Munich |
71' | Bayern Munich |
72' | Paris Saint-Germain |
73' | Bayern Munich |
74' | Bayern Munich |
75' | Paris Saint-Germain |
76' | Paris Saint-Germain |
77' | Bayern Munich |
78' | Bayern Munich |
79' | Bayern Munich |
80' | Paris Saint-Germain |
81' | Bayern Munich |
82' | Bayern Munich |
83' | Bayern Munich |
84' | Bayern Munich |
85' | Bayern Munich |
86' | Bayern Munich |
87' | Bayern Munich |
88' | Bayern Munich |
89' | Bayern Munich |
90' | Bayern Munich |
90'+1 | Bayern Munich |
90'+2 | Bayern Munich |
90'+3 | Bayern Munich |
90'+4 | Bayern MunichGoal |
90'+5 | Bayern Munich |
90'+6 | Bayern Munich |
Full time 90'+7 | Bayern Munich |
UEFA Champions League
All competitions
All competitions
All competitions
Paris SG 5-4 Bayern Munich in the first leg was the highest scoring European Cup semi-final match since Eintracht Frankfurt beat Rangers 6-3 in 1959-60. Across both legs, in major European competition the most goals in any semi-final was in that Frankfurt – Rangers tie (16), which ended 12-4 on aggregate to the German side.
In UEFA Champions League history, only one team has ever scored five goals in a knockout match and then been eliminated in that tie, which was Manchester City against Monaco in the last 16 in 2016-17 (5-3 first leg, 1-3 second leg, out on away goals rule).
Although Bayern Munich have overturned a first leg deficit four times out of 16 previous ties in the UEFA Champions League (since 1992-93), they’ve been in the last 16 stage (three times) and quarter-finals (once). They’ve lost the first leg in five previous semi-finals and been eliminated each time.
Paris SG have lost more away games against Bayern Munich (5) than against any other opponent in the European Cup/UEFA Champions League. Of teams they have faced more than once away from home across the two competitions, only against Manchester City (100% - 3/3) and Real Madrid (75% - 3/4) do they have a higher loss percentage than at Bayern (71% - 5/7).
The two leading scorers in the UEFA Champions League this season are Paris SG (43 goals) and Bayern Munich (42). The record for goals scored in a European Cup campaign (all-time since 1955) is 45 by Barcelona in 1999-00.
Only Real Madrid (18) have qualified for more European Cup/UEFA Champions League finals than Bayern Munich, who are looking to reach their 12th here (currently level with Milan on 11). Paris SG, meanwhile, could become the French side with the most European Cup/Champions League final appearances (3) – they are currently level with Marseille and Reims (2 each).
Paris Saint-Germain have allowed 50+ touches in their own box in each of their last two UEFA Champions League games (50 for Liverpool, 52 for Bayern Munich) – in their first 13 games this season, the average touches by opponents in PSG’s box was just 17.
Bayern Munich have scored 20 goals in five knockout games in the 2025-26 UEFA Champions League, with that average of four goals per game the highest ever since 1992-93. Paris SG have scored 22 in their seven games, with only PSG themselves last season scoring more in the knockout stages in a season (24).
24.2% of the total time of match delays in the first leg between Paris SG and Bayern Munich was waiting for kick-off following goals; the highest percentage in a UEFA Champions League match this season.
Bayern Munich players made 40 off-ball runs ahead of the ball in the first leg against Paris SG; their most in a UEFA Champions League match this season. 11 of those were by midfielder Aleksander Pavlovic, which was also the most by a Bayern player in a single game in this edition.
Khvicha Kvaratskhelia has been involved in 15 goals in the UEFA Champions League this season (10 goals, 5 assists), a record by a Paris SG player in one campaign. He's scored seven knockout stage goals, with only three players scoring more in a season for any club – Cristiano Ronaldo in 2013-14 (8) and 2016-17 (10), Lionel Messi in 2011-12 (8) and Karim Benzema in 2021-22 (10).
Harry Kane has scored 13 UEFA Champions League goals for Bayern Munich this season, just two shy of the record for goals in a major European season for the club, set by Jürgen Klinsmann in the 1995-96 UEFA Cup (15) and Robert Lewandowski in the 2019-20 Champions League (15). He’s also scored in his last six appearances in the competition – the longest ever run by an Englishman in the European Cup (since 1955).
Since the last 16 stage was introduced in 2003-04, PSG’s Khvicha Kvaratskhelia this season is just the fourth player to score or assist in six consecutive UEFA Champions League knockout appearances in one season, after Kaka in 2006-07 for Milan, Edin Dzeko in 2017-18 for Roma and Ousmane Dembélé in 2024-25 for PSG. None of those did it in seven in a row.
Bayern Munich pair Joshua Kimmich and Aleksander Pavlovic made a combined 24 line-breaking passes in last week’s fixture, more than the four Paris SG midfielders who appeared in the match combined (17 – Vitinha, Neves, Zaïre-Emery, Ruiz). Indeed, it was the only time this season that a midfielder playing against Paris SG has made more line-breaking passes than Vitinha (7) in the match, with both Kimmich (14) and Pavlovic (10) doing so.
13 of Désiré Doué’s 17 UEFA Champions League goal involvements for Paris SG have come in the knockout stages (7 goals, 6 assists) – no other has player has 10+ goals and assists outside the group stages before turning 21, and of players with 500+ minutes in the knockout stages, only Raphinha (every 59 mins) and Ivica Olic (63 mins) average a goal or assist more regularly than Doué (72 mins).