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Atalanta’s dream ends with cruel late double strike from PSG

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The UEFA Champions League knockout stages always produce great drama and the single game format for this season’s quarter-finals has intensified the emotions.

On Wednesday, Paris St-Germain (PSG) struck twice in the final minutes to end the fairytale for debutants Atalanta.

Although the team from Bergamo, the Italian town of around 120,000, had never qualified for the Champions League before, they were moments away from glory.

They nearly humbled the financial powerhouse of PSG, backed by the oil wealth of the club’s Qatari owners.

Then PSG struck twice, with Brazilian defender Marquinhos scoring in the 90th minute before substitute Eric Maxim Choupo-Moting decided the contest in stoppage time.

Atalanta’s hopes of glory were suddenly snatched from their grasp.

The sense of destiny, of romance, which had surrounded Gian Piero Gasperini’s team, suddenly evaporated into the night air at the empty Estadio da Luz.

There was no second leg, no away goals calculation, nothing other than the finality of defeat, of history being rewritten in a matter of seconds.

It was so cruel on the Italian side, who had worked so hard and had taken the lead with a beautiful 27th minute goal from their Croatia midfielder Mario Pasalic.

But when Atalanta finally reflect on the loss they will surely acknowledge that they had been helped by some wasteful finishing by PSG.

The wasteful finishing was in particular from their Brazil striker Neymar, and the alert goalkeeping of Marco Sportiello.

Whatever memories Atalanta fans have of this defeat, they will not include celebrating their goal in the stands or singing to console their heroes who collapsed on the turf at the final whistle.

Due to the COVID-19 related restrictions, there were no supporters of either team inside the 64,000 capacity stadium.

So, the biggest night of Atalanta’s 112-year history was one of frustration in front of the television for their supporters.

A handful of the most passionate had, inevitably, made the trip to Lisbon anyway, choosing to at least be close to the hope-for miracle, watching in bars in the Portuguese capital.

Some made their way out to the stadium before the game to greet the players as they arrived on their bus at the gates to the stadium.

The stadium, which is the home of Benfica, provided Gasperini’s men with a reminder of who they were playing for.

“It is a strong emotion. I’ve been watching Atalanta for 40 years and I couldn’t miss this game, even if you can’t enter the stadium,” Manuel Colombo, bedecked in a black and blue striped facemask, told Reuters.

“Time moves forward. Who knows whether we will ever get a game like this again?” he added.

But throughout the long build-up to this game, the particularly strong impact of the novel coronavirus on Bergamo has been present in the thoughts of those involved with the club.

At least since the Champions League was suspended in March.

At the height of the virus outbreak, Bergamo’s hospitals were overwhelmed with infected people.

With morgues unable to keep up, convoys of Army trucks carrying away the dead became a chilling symbol of the global pandemic.

Colombo paused before reflecting on that aspect of Atalanta’s campaign and his journey to Lisbon.

“We have to think today about those people who died due to COVID before their time, those many grandparents who took their grandchildren to see Atalanta for the first time and who aren’t with us anymore.

“I am thinking about them above all,” he said.

This Atalanta team will still be remembered as heroes by Colombo and all the club’s fans, having gifted the “Bergamisan” an unimaginable season of success in a year of such pain.

But those neutrals who felt robbed of a story of football romance, can take some solace in the smile on the face of the unlikely match-winner Cameroon international Choupo-Moting.

The 31-year-old, who signed on a free transfer after suffering relegation from the English Premier League with Stoke City, was the toast of Paris.

He was originally left out of PSG’s squad for the Champions League knockout stages.

Such a pity that no fans were there to witness it.

Victor Okoye

NEWSVERGE, published by The Verge Communications is an online community of international news portal and social advocates dedicated to bringing you commentaries, features, news reports from a Nigerian-African perspective. A unique organization, founded in the spirit of Article 19 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, comprising of ordinary people with an overriding commitment to seeking the truth and publishing it without fear or favour. The Verge Communications is fully registered with the Corporate Affairs Commission of the Federal Republic of Nigeria as a corporate organization.

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