Evening Standard
·6 May 2025
Inter Milan 4-3 Barcelona (7-6): Acerbi and Frattesi combine to deliver Inter Milan to legendary European win

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·6 May 2025
Raphinha laid further claim to the Balon d’Or
It would require 210 minutes of play and 13 goals over two legs, but Inter Milan eventually bested Barcelona in an unforgettable contest to reach their second Champions League final in three years.
After such a cinematic first leg, which finished at three goals apiece, one would not have thought it possible for the second leg to be more theatrical, but the San Siro would produce yet another European night for the history books. Raphinha scored a late would-be winner to start he celebrations in Barcelona, but they were cruelly cut short by Francesco Acerbi’s injury-time winner, before Davide Frattesi added a winner in the first half of extra time to trigger adulant celebrations in the stands.
After struggling through the opening exchanges, Inter’s high press would eventually break the deadlock. Federico Dimarco, the man burdened with the unenviable duty of marking Lamine Yamal, picked Dani Olmo’s pocket and threaded a through-ball to Denzel Dumfries, the Dutchman unselfishly crossing to the returning Lautaro Martinez to finish, prompting raucous celebrations on the Inter Milan bench.
They would lead by two before the break. Martinez was taken down by Pau Cubarsi to win a penalty, which Hakan Calhanoglu duly dispatched, leading the Tifosi to believe it was all wrapped up.
But no matter how bleak the situation appears, count Barcelona out at your peril.
They would hit two quickfire goals to even the tie shortly after the break - Eric Garcia struck first with a perfectly timed leaping volley, before very nearly making it two as he was denied at full stretch by Yann Sommer. Dani Olmo, though, would hit the equaliser moments later, heading home from close range with half an hour left.
And as Inter grew increasingly sloppy in the late stages, Barcelona were increasingly insistent, asking the hard questions as the hosts dug deeper than ever to produce answers. They remained under siege for the remainder of the second half, and it all seemed to be over when Raphinha scored a sure winner on the rebound in the 88th minute.
Acerbi’s 93rd-minute equaliser forced extra time
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But this tie had yet more twists in store. The 37-year-old Acerbi would smash home his first Champions League goal to pull Inter back from the brink yet again and force a dreaded period of extra time.
And it would be the man from Rome, Davide Frattesi, who would be Milan’s hero of the night. Thuram did the hard work, battling to hold off two Barcelona defenders before working a ball into the mixer, and it found Frattesi in enough space to take a touch and shoot, leaving Szcesney rooted as he found the far corner with an effort which will be immortalised in Nerrazurri folklore.
Try as they might, Barcelona could not muster another retort. They mounted a considerable assault on the Inter box, but one of the greatest Champions League ties ever was all out of magic. Even the wonderkid Yamal had nothing left to offer, his closest effort of the night tipped wide by Sommer with 114 minutes played.
Full time would bring those left on the pitch relief and anguish in equal measures, but Inter ultimately take the spoils and will be the side booking tickets to Munich. They return to the Champions League final, and an opportunity presents to put to bed the demons of 2023.