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UEFA Champions League draw: Live results and bracket

UEFA Champions League draw: Live results and bracket

Fox Sports21-02-2025
The stage is nearly set for the UEFA Champions League Round of 16 after the final four clubs qualified by winning the final leg of their playoff matchups on Wednesday.
Now, the 16 teams will be drawn into eight fixtures on Friday for the next phase of the tournament. The draw will take place at the House of European Football in Nyon, Swizterland and can be streamed on UEFA.com at 6 a.m. PT.
Here are the full results of the Champions League draw and the bracket for the tournament.
Live Coverage for this began on 5:54a ET
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PSG 2-2 Tottenham (4-3 pens): Spurs let 2-0 lead slip in closing stages to miss out on UEFA Super Cup
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PSG 2-2 Tottenham (4-3 pens): Spurs let 2-0 lead slip in closing stages to miss out on UEFA Super Cup

Paris Saint-Germain have added the UEFA Super Cup to their 2025 trophy haul, beating Tottenham Hotspur on penalties after a 2-2 draw in 90 minutes. Before the game some had wondered if Spurs would be blown away by PSG like Inter had been in May's Champions League final, but it quickly became clear that Thomas Frank had set up his new team in a typically robust formation, with three centre-halves and two mobile wing-backs. The approach ceded the ball to the Ligue 1 side but they were unable to do very much with it. Tottenham, meanwhile, looked dangerous on the break — with Richarlison and Mohammed Kudus linking well up front. Advertisement The opening goal was almost pure Brentford in its construction. A Guglielmo Vicario indirect free-kick was recycled in the penalty area, and after a Palhinha shot was tipped onto the bar by Lucas Chevalier, Micky van de Ven followed up to give Spurs a surprise — but fully deserved — lead. The Champions League winners trudged in at half-time without having generated a single shot on target, only the fifth time that has happened in the Luis Enrique era. Within three minutes of the restart Spurs were 2-0 up. Another indirect free-kick, another header at the back post, and this time Cristian Romero's effort squirmed over Chevalier's fingers. But PSG inevitably grew into the game as the second half progressed, and had a goal disallowed for offside after 66 minutes. Enrique's side continued to press in the closing stages and finally broke through in the 85th minute via a driven finish from Kang-In Lee. It made for a nervy denouement for the Spurs fans and their worst fears were realised when a Dembele cross was headed home by Goncalo Ramos in injury time. That took the match to penalties, and though Vitinha missed PSG's first, the Parisians were flawless after that, with misses from Van de Ven and Mathys Tel proving terminal for Tottenham. Jack Pitt-Brooke, Elias Burke and Conor O'Neill analyse the game. Adding more silverware to a club that has been starved of it for so long is important, and the Spurs players' dejected faces as they watched PSG celebrate with their fans on the pitch at the end of the game demonstrated just how close they were to adding a second trophy to their cabinet in three months. Still, Frank should take encouragement from his side's performance against the European champions in his first competitive match in charge. Advertisement Sure, Spurs were unable to weather the late spell of pressure, but they were the better side for large parts against a team that many believe is the best in the world. Losing on penalties was a cruel end to a match where Tottenham demonstrated their potential against arguably the best football team in the world. 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Conor O'Neill The single most impressive thing about Tottenham Hotspur for much of this evening was the amazing pragmatism and intelligence and nous about how they played. This was Thomas Frank's first competitive game in charge and he unveiled a 3-5-2 system unlike anything we saw from them in recent years. It was a plan perfectly calibrated to maximise Spurs' strengths but also to compromise PSG's. The two wing-backs Djed Spence and Pedro Porro shackled PSG's two full-backs Achraf Hakimi and Nuno Mendes, never allowing them to stretch the play and dominate Spurs. Tottenham consistently made the middle of the pitch difficult to break through and were always able to break with pace down the middle thanks to Mohammad Kudus and Richarlison. And best of all Spurs were ruthlessly effective from set pieces, scoring twice from clever moves. In one sense it felt different from what we saw from Spurs in recent years. That view may not be entirely fair: it was Ange Postecoglou's pragmatism in the Europa League campaign that won Spurs that trophy, and that got them into this game in the first place. But they did not always come into big games against superior opposition with a method to nullify them. That is what we saw from Tottenham this evening, a bespoke plan deployed to perfection for the occasion. Advertisement The frustration from Spurs is that their plan ran out of steam and by 70 or so minutes they had nothing left in the tank. Their pragmatism almost appeared limiting, as they camped in their own box, and were eventually picked off. Which shows that ultimately no game plan is entirely without flaws. Jack Pitt-Brooke It's unclear whether Tottenham's counter-punching approach tonight will become Frank's established playstyle or simply a one-off adjustment to contain one of Europe's most potent attacking teams. 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While those throws caused plenty of chaos, it was a routine from Frank's free-kick playbook that produced the two goals. Goalkeeper Vicario launched a diagonal towards Christian Romero on the left flank with his flick into the middle sparking a bout of pinball that ended with Van de Ven's rebounded finish. Romero then got on the scoresheet himself for the second, meeting another launched diagonal with a guided header. At Brentford, Frank often stationed an imposing centre-back — such as Nathan Collins — out wide against a lighter full-back, and he has wasted no time bringing that tactic to his new charges. After last season's abysmal domestic campaign, Spurs have plenty of areas to address. Set-pieces offer a quick and obvious win, and, like Danso with a throw-in, Frank is seizing the opportunity with both hands. Conor O'Neill Having reached the final of the Club World Cup in mid-July, PSG only returned for pre-season training last week. 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Jack Pitt-Brooke We'll bring you this after the PSG manager has spoken post-game We'll bring you this after the Tottenham Hotspur manager has spoken post-game Spot the pattern. Connect the terms Find the hidden link between sports terms Play today's puzzle

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