Harry Kane made an instant impact on his return from injury as Bayern Munich claimed a hard-earned first-leg advantage over Real Madrid in a gripping Champions League quarter-final at the Bernabeu.
Back in the starting line-up after a minor problem kept him out of England’s friendly against Japan and Bayern’s Bundesliga victory over Freiburg, Kane reminded everyone of his quality with a goal that helped swing the tie in Bayern’s favour. Watched from the stands by England head coach Thomas Tuchel, the striker delivered when it mattered most on a big European night.
Bayern had started brightly and looked the more threatening side in the first half. Although Kane was kept relatively quiet for long spells before the break, he still played an important role in the move that led to the opening goal. Former Liverpool forward Luis Diaz finished calmly four minutes before half-time after Bayern carved open the Real defence, giving the visitors a deserved lead.
If Kane had been subdued in the first half, he wasted no time after the restart in making his mark. Just moments into the second period, the England captain produced a clinical right-footed finish into the bottom corner, leaving Real goalkeeper Andriy Lunin with no chance. It was a goal of real class, the kind that underlined why Bayern were so eager to have him back fit for one of the biggest games of their season.
Real Madrid, however, refused to let the night slip away quietly. Bayern goalkeeper Manuel Neuer was forced into four excellent saves, three of them to deny Kylian Mbappe, as the home side searched for a way back into the contest. Yet Bayern also looked dangerous throughout and might have added to their lead in an open and fast-moving match.
With tension rising around the stadium, Real turned to Jude Bellingham just after the hour mark in an attempt to rescue the first leg. The midfielder made an immediate difference with an energetic and influential cameo as the hosts pushed harder. Trent Alexander-Arnold, who had endured some difficult moments defensively, responded with a reminder of his attacking quality by driving in a superb low cross that Mbappe turned home in the 74th minute.
That goal gave Real fresh belief and lifted the mood inside the Bernabeu, but Bayern stayed composed through the closing stages. Despite late pressure from the Spanish side, Vincent Kompany’s team held firm and now take a narrow but valuable lead back to Munich for the second leg.
