Davies’ late strike for Bayern breaks Celtic hearts in Champions League

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If Bayern Munich are heavily incenti­vised by the return of the Champions League final to their home stadium, this was a strange way of showing it. To Celtic, all the plaudits following a heroic showing in Bavaria.

This Celtic performance ranks among the finest by a Scottish team away from home in Europe in living memory. Extra-time felt the least they deserved after taking a second-half lead. They were denied by a horrible, scrappy goal claimed by Alphonso Davies after a Cameron Carter-Vickers clearance flew back off him from all of two yards. Just 30 seconds of stoppage time remained. Celtic have grown in this Champions League. In Munich, they came of age. This outcome was so cruel on them.

Bayern supposedly have redemption on their mind after the penalty shootout defeat by Chelsea when European club football’s showpiece occasion was last held at the Allianz Arena, 13 years ago. Vincent Kompany watched with increasing anxiety as even a last-16 spot looked in serious doubt. Celtic can reflect so positively on that when the dust ­settles. But in the short term, aggregate defeat by the odd goal in five stung so much.

Celtic’s scepticism over the prospect of Harry Kane missing this game proved justified. The England captain sat out training on Monday to assist his recovery from a facial injury sustained in the weekend draw with Bayer Leverkusen. Within 10 ­minutes he had already tested Kasper Schmeichel with a deflected effort. The teams had traded opportunities by that point; Serge Gnabry headed wide from a Michael Olise cross, with the Celtic captain Callum McGregor wasting a shot after a driving run from midfield.

A controlled, composed Celtic start to proceedings should have seen them take the lead. Instead, three wonder­ful chances were passed up within two minutes. Fine play on the left flank by Jota preceded the ­Portuguese attacker picking out Nicolas Kühn. Manuel Neuer was beaten by Kühn’s attempt but Raphaël Guerreiro was on hand to clear from the goalline.

Next came a teasing Arne Engels cross that narrowly evaded the out­stretched Daizen Maeda. Brendan Rodgers was still cursing those moments when Dayot Upamecano shanked a clearance straight to the feet of Engels. The Belgian fed Maeda, who had more time than he realised for a shot that sailed over Neuer’s crossbar.

A quarter of the way through the match, Bayern were unques­tionably spooked by the ­ferocity of Celtic’s press. Beyond that, Celtic looked admirably assured in possession.

Joshua Kimmich missed the target as Bayern tried to settle an unconvinced crowd. For a team ­holding an overall lead, added to course and distance specialism, Bayern’s untidiness was curious. Gnabry had Leon Goretzka bearing down on goal, five minutes before the break, and he somehow passed straight into the hands of Schmeichel.

We had a cup tie, in which one of European football’s powerhouses were being made to look hilariously ordinary. Kane almost broke the mould, ­handing Bayern what would have been a totally undeserved half-time lead, but struck the bar from Josip Stanisic’s cut-back. It was the visiting support who roared their side off at the break.

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Nicolas Kühn puts Celtic in front on the night against his former club.
Nicolas Kühn puts Celtic in front on the night against his former club. Photograph: Andrew Milligan/PA

Bayern’s fans were still digesting the fact Kane did not reappear for the second half when it was Reo Hatate’s turn to be profligate. The Celtic midfielder waited far too long to shoot from close range, allowing Bayern to clear. This time, the home team did respond appropriately as Schmeichel was forced into a smart block from Goretzka. Rodgers introduced Adam Idah for Jota on the hour, due to the latter’s fitness rather than performance. By this time Bayern were ­dominating the ball without particularly troubling Schmeichel. Olise summed that up, his tame strike comfortably held by the Danish goalkeeper.

Celtic’s moment was imminent. Maeda won possession on the left, his pass to Kühn initially cut out by Kim Min-jae. The defender’s attempted block was unconvincing, though, and allowed Kühn to collect possession. The 25-year-old made no mistake with only Neuer to beat. Celtic’s euphoria contrasted with boos from the Bayern following. Kompany removed Gnabry – who had been hopeless – and Guerreiro. Leroy Sané and Davies had the task of shaking life into Bayern.

Maeda headed at Neuer as Celtic glanced towards dreamland. Sané’s first involvement saw a glorious pass find no takers in the six-yard box. Goretzka headed a Kimmich cross wide, moments after Olise appealed in vain for a penalty following a challenge from Jeffrey Schlupp. This was a sign of Bayern’s desperation. As Schmeichel batted away a deflected Kimmich cross, that sentiment grew.

A series of Bayern corners stepped up the pressure on Celtic’s defence before Schmeichel denied Goretzka from open play. Carter-Vickers pounced on the loose ball, only to see it ricochet back off Davies. The Celtic players slumped en masse to their knees. Only those with rocks for hearts would offer no sympathy.

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