Bayern reach final

Gnabry and Lewandowski fire ruthless Munich past Lyon

Serge Gnabry struck a first-half brace and Robert ­Lewandowski also scored as a ruthless Bayern Munich taught Lyon a harsh lesson in their Champions League semifinal in Lisbon on Wednesday, winning 3-0 to set up a tantalizing final against Paris Saint-Germain.

Lyon squandered two golden opportunities to go ahead early on at the Estadio Jose Alvalade, through Memphis Depay and Karl Toko-Ekambi.

Within seconds of the latter miss, Gnabry had blasted Bayern into an 18th-minute lead in stunning style, and the Germany winger scored again just after the half-hour mark.

Gnabry, who scored four times in Bayern’s 7-2 annihilation of Tottenham Hotspur in the group stage, has now scored nine in nine appearances in this season’s competition.

Lewandowski’s inevitable goal, his 55th of the season, came two minutes from time.

Bayern as a team have 42 goals in 10 Champions League outings, with this more modest victory following their 8-2 trouncing of Barcelona in the quarterfinals.

“We knew this would be a hard game,” insisted coach Hansi Flick. “We needed a bit of luck to get through the opening stages before Serge made the difference.”

They have won all their European matches this season but the biggest test awaits, against a PSG side who will be a step up from what they faced here.

Lyon came seventh in the last French season, which was shortened because of the coronavirus pandemic. PSG won Ligue 1 and crushed RB Leipzig 3-0 in their semifinal.

It promises to be an enthralling final, even in the bizarre atmosphere behind closed doors in Portugal’s capital.

“For me, it’s a dream come true. Playing in the UEFA Champions League and making it to the final. It’s everything you can ask for,” Bayern’s Alphonso Davies told BT Sport.

The German champions will be looking to win their sixth European Cup, seven years on from their last Champions League triumph. It will be their 11th final altogether, against a club appearing in their first-ever final.

For Lyon there will be disappointment as their second semi­final appearance ends the same way as their first, a defeat by Bayern in 2010.

Step too far

This was a step too far for Rudi Garcia’s side following their shock successes against Juventus and Manchester City.

Now they must rouse themselves for a new Ligue 1 season which is just about to start, but there will be no European football at all for Lyon in 2020-21, for the first time in 24 years.

They would have had to win this Champions League just to qualify again, and to be fair they will ­wonder what might have been in this semifinal had they taken at least one of those early chances.

“Congratulations to Bayern. I don’t think they were unbeatable,” said Toko-Ekambi.

“We had chances to score and we played well.”

Bayern certainly take risks with their incredibly high line, inviting opponents to try to get in behind them.

Lyon’s chance arrived inside the fourth minute. Maxence Caqueret intercepted a Thiago Alcantara pass, looked up and released Depay. The Dutchman went round Manuel Neuer but, with the angle tightening, he could only find the side-netting with his shot.

Astonishing transformation

The next big let-off for the Bavarians came when Leo Dubois sent a pass in behind for Toko-Ekambi. He got his shot away at the second attempt but hit the upright.

Just 49 seconds after that, Lyon were behind.

Gnabry cut in from the right into the middle before letting fly from just inside the box. His thumping left-foot strike gave Anthony Lopes no chance.

It was a different game after that and Gnabry made it 2-0 in the 33rd minute.

He stole possession in the Lyon half and laid the ball out to Ivan Perisic. The Croatian’s low cross should have been converted by ­Lewandowski. Lopes saved from him but Gnabry converted the follow-up.

Substitute Philippe Coutinho had a late effort disallowed for offside, before Lewandowski made it 3-0 as he headed home Joshua Kimmich’s free kick.

Bayern now have 20 consecutive victories and are unbeaten in 29 matches, a run that began in December. Just a few weeks before that Bayern were in a mess, having sacked coach Niko Kovac.

The transformation under Flick has been astonishing and they are now 90 minutes away from ending this longest of seasons with a treble.

Bayern Munich striker Robert Lewandowski misses a chance during the match against Lyon on Wednesday in Lisbon, Portugal. Photo: VCG

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