Barcelona 7-2 Newcastle [8-3 agg]: Raphinha stars as Newcastle crumble in second half | OneFootball

Barcelona 7-2 Newcastle [8-3 agg]: Raphinha stars as Newcastle crumble in second half | OneFootball

In partnership with

Yahoo sports
Icon: FromTheSpot

FromTheSpot

·18 marzo 2026

Barcelona 7-2 Newcastle [8-3 agg]: Raphinha stars as Newcastle crumble in second half

Immagine dell'articolo:Barcelona 7-2 Newcastle [8-3 agg]: Raphinha stars as Newcastle crumble in second half

After an impressive first-half performance from Newcastle, Barcelona ran riot after the break at the Spotify Camp Nou to claim a 7-2 win on the night and progress to the UEFA Champions League quarter-finals as 8-3 aggregate winners.

Blows were exchanged throughout a frenetic opening 30 minutes in Catalunya, with Anthony Elanga twice restoring parity after the hosts had taken the lead.


OneFootball Video


But Lamine Yamal’s penalty on the stroke of half time proved to be Newcastle’s downfall, with Eddie Howe’s men shipping a further four goals after the break to condemn themselves to a mammoth defeat in Europe’s elite club competition.

Barcelona will face Atlético Madrid or Tottenham in the quarter-finals.

As it happened

There are great games in the UEFA Champions League, and then there are games you simply cannot take your eyes off. This, by some margin, fell into the latter category – a fantastic advert for what this competition has to offer when two of the continent’s best teams go head-to-head in a winner-takes-all clash.

A bright start from the visitors at the Spotify Camp Nou saw Joan Garcia put to work early on, first picking up the pieces of Sandro Tonali’s free-kick before then grasping Dan Burn’s effort after a short corner.

But Barcelona, buoyed by the majority of a 56,662-strong crowd, took the lead against the run of play in the 6th minute when slick buildup play saw Lamine Yamal drive past Malick Thiaw and thread a ball through for Raphinha, who capitalised on a slip from Lewis Hall to play a quick one-two with Fermín López and slot into the far corner.

Newcastle responded well though and got back on the front foot within minutes, with Tonali able to whip in another free-kick from the left after Marc Bernal sent Harvey Barnes tumbling to the ground.

But it was Anthony Elanga who’d prove to be the visitors’ hero with a composed finish at the back post with quarter of an hour played in Catalunya. The left-hand side had served Newcastle well throughout their early forays forward and this was no exception, with Barnes and Hall combining for the winger to curl a low ball behind the Barça defence for Elanga to drive across the goalkeeper and restore parity.

That parity lasted just three minutes, as Newcastle switched off from a set-piece to allow Raphinha’s delivery to find Gerard Martín on the left of the box, with his header across the face of goal poked home by teenager Marc Bernal to fire the blaugrana back into the lead.

Barcelona were swiftly undone by beautiful football from Eddie Howe’s men when a complacent Yamal opted for a backheel inside the hosts’ defensive third, handing possession to a lively Hall who combined once more with Barnes. His ball, threaded through the legs of substitute Ronald Araújo – who had replaced Eric García just minutes prior – was tucked home by Elanga at the far post.

Yet there was still more life to be breathed into this thrilling Champions League knockout tie, as a confident Newcastle side sought to take the lead for the first time on the night. Anthony Gordon fired wide of the target, albeit from an offside position, before yet another Tonali free-kick played short to Barnes was eventually held by Joan Garcia.

But for all of Barcelona’s defensive frailties, they are a lethal side going forwards. Burn’s impressive reflexes were put to the test as he flew in to deny Robert Lewandowski’s strike thumped across the face of goal, before the blaugrana flew forward again through Yamal and would be left ruing an outrageous miss.

The teenager’s ball picked out Lewandowski on the edge of the arc, who spun instantly out for Raphinha on the left. The Brazilian saw his strike parried away by Ramsdale, with Lewandowski failing to bury the rebound and the arriving Yamal blazing well over the crossbar.

He’d soon be afforded an opportunity to make amends from the penalty spot, though, as Kieran Trippier was judged to have pulled back Raphinha inside the box as the former Leeds man sought to latch onto Fermín’s cross from the right flank. Ramsdale managed to get fingertips to Yamal’s effort from 12 yards out, but couldn’t quite manage to deny the Spaniard’s 10th goal in this competition.

Newcastle had gone toe-to-toe with the LaLiga giants throughout the first half – but that’s where their luck ran out, as Barça struck gold six minutes after the break to build a two-goal cushion. Having broken free of Tonali in midfield, a quick one-two with Raphinha allowed Fermín to embark on a blistering run from the halfway line before despatching past Ramsdale.

And bad turned to worse five minutes later for Howe’s men when Raphinha’s corner was nodded home by Lewandowski at the back post, with the Polish forward rising above Tino Livramento at the back post to give Newcastle a mountain to climb – and just over half an hour to do it.

Newcastle weren’t even afforded time to begin their mountaineering preparations before Lewandowski rippled the back of the net again; the 37-year-old was picked out by Yamal who dummied a shot before rolling past Ramsdale for the hosts’ sixth goal of the night.

Still there would be no respite for the Magpies, and it was through their own doing that Barcelona were permitted to score an easy seventh goal. Jacob Ramsey’s shambolic attempt at a lofted pass inside the defensive third allowed Raphinha to intercept, take a touch and slot past a dejected Ramsdale.

Despite running riot in the second half and cruising through to the last eight of the competition, it wasn’t a perfect night for the blaugrana, though, who were forced to see goalkeeper Joan Garcia hobble off with an injury inside the dying stages, replaced by veteran Wojciech Szczesny.

Barcelona progress to face Atlético Madrid or Tottenham in the quarter-finals as a hefty defeat sees Newcastle bow out of the UEFA Champions League and turn their attention to this weekend’s Premier League derby meeting with Sunderland.

Barça analysis: A classic Champions League night at the Camp Nou

Still under construction, the Spotify Camp Nou will host upwards of 100,000 fans when it is finally completed. Just shy of 60,000 flooded through the turnstiles on Wednesday, and they were treated to a Champions League performance that will long be regarded as one of the best this stadium has ever witnessed.

Having salvaged a dramatic late draw on Tyneside last week, Barcelona were second-best throughout much of the first half in Catalunya. Twice they took the lead, twice they were pegged back by Anthony Elanga, and on countless occasions they could have been further punished by the lively combination of Harvey Barnes and Lewis Hall on the left flank.

But just as he dampened the celebrations at St James’ Park last Tuesday with his late penalty, Lamine Yamal would once again prove to be Newcastle’s downfall, converting from 12 yards out on the stroke of half time, changing the tone of both managers’ team talks.

There is only one word apt to sum up the magnificence of Barcelona’s second half performance. It was a rout, plain and simple.

Three goals in sixteen second-half minutes – and then Raphinha’s second of the night in the 72nd minute – condemned Newcastle to such a sizeable defeat that their impressive first-half performance rapidly paled into obscurity. This had become a humbling, and one that is ever more impressive given that this is a Barcelona side powered by youngsters and La Masia graduates.

Pau Cubarsí, Marc Bernal and Lamine Yamal are all still teenagers, not that it’d be apparent from their performances – barring perhaps the latter’s rather complacent backheel that directly led to Newcastle’s second goal of the night. Gerard Martín, Fermín López and Eric Garcia all graduated from the esteemed La Masia academy, meaning that more than half of Hansi Flick’s starting lineup were local talent, nurtured and turned into world-beaters by a club that now affords them opportunities on the world stage.

They don’t just say that Barça is més que un club for no reason. That is the Catalan way; it is what this club has been built on for decades, and on nights like tonight when the opposition has been reliant on Saudi ownership and mass investment, it feels like a victory for fan-owned football.

Newcastle analysis: A first half to be proud of, and a second that sparks concern

Coming to the Spotify Camp Nou and walking away with a win is a tough task – one that no side has managed since Barcelona returned to their famous home ground earlier this season.

Despite never leading on Wednesday, Newcastle looked set to be the team to change that. Eddie Howe’s men responded swiftly to every blow they were dealt, and perhaps should have taken the lead through one of the countless opportunities fabricated by Harvey Barnes and Lewis Hall on the left.

But alas, it was Kieran Trippier’s pull of Raphinha’s arm inside the penalty area in first-half stoppage time that would be Newcastle’s undoing. Lamine Yamal slotted home with composure, just as he had done as St James’ Park a week prior, and there was no way back for the Magpies this time around.

A woeful second half condemned Eddie Howe to an unwanted comparison with Gary Neville, the last English manager to take charge of a side at the Camp Nou, whose Sevilla team also shipped seven against Barcelona.

But let’s be clear. This was not a question of capability – Newcastle demonstrated throughout the first half that they were the better of the two sides, as they had done in spells at St James’ Park last week – but a question of mentality.

Barça’s blows came quickly in the second half, and Newcastle’s response never arrived. They looked defeated, and the scoreboard painted a picture of a humiliation not seen to this extent at the Camp Nou since PSG were humbled 6-1 almost a decade ago.

To put it simply, when it mattered, Newcastle imploded. It has been a busy season for Eddie Howe’s men, but now is not the time to collapse in this fashion – not when the club’s first-ever Champions League quarter-final is at stake, and not when the Magpies host fierce rivals Sunderland in four days’ time.

Regis Le Bris’ men will smell blood, and with Newcastle having fallen flat at the Stadium of Light in December, a second derby defeat of the season would be unforgivable.

Visualizza l' imprint del creator