Soccer·Recap

Champions League: Roma knock out Barcelona with extraordinary comeback

A pair of own goals by Daniele De Rossi and Kostas Manolas helped Barcelona beat Roma 4-1 in the opening leg of their Champions League quarter-final on Wednesday.

Liverpool recovers to advance over Man City

Barcelona's Lionel Messi, centre, walks off the pitch as Roma players celebrate reaching the semifinals during the Champions League quarter-final second leg on Tuesday. (Gregorio Borgia/The Associated Press)

With his arms held out wide and his mouth gaping open, Kostas Manolas started running and yelling uncontrollably. Then he patted his chest and was mobbed by his Roma teammates.

Manolas, a center back known more for his defensive skills then his attacking abilities, had just scored one of the most memorable goals in Roma's history.

His header from a corner in the 82nd minute Tuesday put Roma into the Champions League semifinals and knocked out five-time champion Barcelona following one of the most extraordinary comebacks in the competition's history.

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Roma won 3-0 to overturn a three-goal deficit and advance on away goals, having entered the game as massive underdogs after losing the first leg of their quarter-final 4-1 against a Lionel Messi-led team that was one of the big favorites to win the competition.

"It is for moments like this that it is so beautiful to live for these colors," recently retired Roma captain Francesco Totti tweeted, adding "Daje Roma!" — "Go Roma" in Roman dialect — followed by two heart emojis in yellow and red.

The atmosphere inside the Stadio Olimpico was deafening as Roma unexpectedly dominated.

Needed a 'miracle' to advance

Roma coach Eusebio Di Francesco acknowledged before the match that his team needed a "miracle" to advance, and they got the start they needed when when Edin Dzeko controlled an over-the-top pass between two defenders after six minutes and poked in his sixth goal in this season's competition.

Then near the hour mark, Dzeko earned a penalty that Daniele De Rossi converted to set the stage for Manolas' late header.

"It wasn't luck. This is what happened," Di Francesco said. "But this isn't enough. We can't be satisfied. This squad needs to aim for [the final in] Kiev. This is an extraordinary squad. Why shouldn't we aim to get there?"

Messi and fellow Barcelona forward Luis Suarez hardly threatened as Roma dominated possession for long stretches and stifled the Catalan club with high pressure.

Roma capitalized on its aerial threat through Dzeko and Patrik Schick and its stifling defense forced Barcelona into a series of uncharacteristic misplaced passes.

"They showed attitude and for whatever reason we didn't know how to respond, or to make chances," Barcelona midfielder Sergio Busquets said. "For that reason they were better in all aspects tonight."

'It's really tough'

It's the first time that Roma has reached the last four since it lost the 1984 final to Liverpool on penalties in its own stadium — and it's the third straight year that Barcelona has been eliminated at this stage.

"It's a possibility that this might be my last game in the Champions League but right now this is hard for all the team, all of us," Barcelona captain Andrea Iniesta said after setting a record with his 22nd match in the quarter-finals. "We so wanted to win this tournament but we've failed to do so again.

"It's really tough. It seems untrue. Very hard to accept. With the advantage we had we went out because we really did things badly. The Champions League punishes you for that."

Liverpool also reached the semifinals after recovering from conceding a goal inside two minutes against Manchester City to win 2-1 thanks to second-half strikes by former Roma striker Mohamed Salah and Roberto Firmino.

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Liverpool easily moves on after defeating Manchester City 5-1 on aggregate.

Only two clubs had previously overturned at least a three-goal first-leg deficit in the Champions League — Deportivo La Coruna beat AC Milan 4-0 after losing the opening leg 4-1 in the 2004 quarter-finals and Barcelona routed Paris Saint-Germain 6-1 after losing the first game 4-0 in last season's Round of 16.

"Well when you lose a match like this you think about everything that went wrong. You analyze things," Barcelona coach Ernesto Valverde said through a translator when asked if would take the blame for the loss. "We had a great opportunity and we didn't seize it."

Roma captain De Rossi set up Dzeko's goal with a straight ball and the Bosnian striker muscled off defenders to shoot past Marc-Andre ter Stegen with his left foot.

Barcelona's only real chances of the first half came from two free kicks, both of which Messi missed high.

Suarez was so frustrated at times for not receiving enough balls that he slammed both hands on the pitch on one occasion.

Experience not enough

Dzeko was at it again after the break with a show of brute force, shrugging off Gerard Pique and Umtiti to approach the goal. Pique then grabbed Dzeko's left arm and tugged the striker to the ground.

The referee didn't immediately point to the spot but then showed a yellow to Pique and awarded the penalty.

De Rossi confidently struck the spot kick inside the right post and even though Ter Stegen leaped in the right direction the goalkeeper had no chance.

It was De Rossi's first Champions League goal since October 2015.

Roma substitute Stephan El Shaarawy had a chance at Roma's third in the 79th but Ter Stegen produced a brilliant save to deny the striker from close range.

Three minutes later, however, the Barcelona goalkeeper had no chance when Manolas headed inside the far post.

Valverde waited until the final 10 minutes to use all three of his substitutions.

"We had enough experience on the pitch to solve things," the manager said, before adding: "I thought."