Uefa Champions 2012 May 2026 |
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Second Season Episodes :: Music & Songs in Season Two Episodes
Also see Music/Songs for Season Three (3)
Uefa Champions 2012 May 2026
Captain John Terry, suspended but dressed in full kit, hoisted the trophy in a moment of absurd, heartfelt comedy and pathos. The 2012 Champions League was not the most beautiful victory. It wasn’t tactical perfection or technical superiority. It was guts, resilience, and the unyielding belief of a team that refused to accept its own obituary. For Bayern, the heartbreak was real, but it fueled their treble-winning season the following year. For Chelsea, it validated the Roman Abramovich era—ten years and ten managers later, they were kings of Europe.
Then came the breakthrough. , who had been a constant menace, rose at the far post to head home from a Toni Kroos cross. The Allianz Arena erupted. It was Müller’s 14th goal of the Champions League campaign. Surely, the trophy was staying in Germany. uefa champions 2012
Bayern, by contrast, were a juggernaut. Led by Philipp Lahm, Bastian Schweinsteiger, Thomas Müller, and the prolific Mario Gomez, they had cruised to the final on their own turf. From the first whistle, Bayern dominated. They registered 26 shots to Chelsea’s 9, earned 20 corners to Chelsea’s 1, and pinned the English side deep in their own half. For 83 minutes, it felt like an execution delayed. Captain John Terry, suspended but dressed in full
But , the Czech goalkeeper who had endured a season of head injuries and criticism, guessed correctly and dived left to save Robben’s spot-kick. It was the kind of save that changes destinies. The Penalty Shootout: Redemption and Roar After 120 minutes, the final would be decided from 12 yards. The tension was unbearable. Juan Mata missed Chelsea’s first, striking weakly at Neuer. Bayern had the advantage. It was guts, resilience, and the unyielding belief
Up stepped . He had scored in every major final he’d played for Chelsea. He placed the ball, took a deep breath, and sent Neuer the wrong way. The Aftermath: A King’s Farewell The image of Drogba running toward the Chelsea end, sliding on his knees, arms wide, is etched into football iconography. But perhaps even more powerful was what followed: Drogba, minutes later, walking alone behind the goal, knowing he was leaving Chelsea. He had delivered the one trophy the club had always craved—the European Cup.
With five minutes of normal time remaining, Chelsea had shown nothing going forward. Their only recognized striker, Didier Drogba, had been isolated. The dream was over. Deep into the 88th minute, Chelsea won their only corner of the entire match. Juan Mata swung the ball in. And there he was— Didier Drogba , powering a near-post header past Manuel Neuer. 1–1. Silence in Munich. Pandemonium in every corner of London.
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Quotations, etc. Copyright Heel & Toe Productions, Bad Hat Harry Productions, et al.
Pictures from the show copyright Fox Broadcasting Corporation
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