Real,  late show sinks Dortmund to secure 15th European Cup

Real Madrid won their 15th European Cup at a raucous Wembley on Saturday when they delivered another late surge to claim a 2-0 victory over a Borussia Dortmund team who had threatened an upset win after dominating the first hour.With Dortmund having made, but spurned, several good chances, Real took control when Dani Carvajal headed in from a corner after 74 minutes and Vinicius Jr. fired home the second to beak German hearts.

Victory secured the trophy for the sixth time in 11 seasons and it was Real’s 11th straight triumph in a European final – their last defeat coming against Aberdeen in the Cup Winners’ Cup 41 years ago. They have now won the continent’s most prestigious club competition more than twice as often as the next best team.

It was a record-extending fifth success as a coach for Carlo Ancelotti, who also won the trophy twice as a player with AC Milan.

“I never get used to it, because it was difficult, very difficult, more than expected,” the Italian said. “In the second half we were better – this is a dream that continues.”

Dortmund defender Mats Hummels said Madrid have been doing that for 100 years, and he was not far off given they were 2-0 down in the first European Cup final in 1956 before coming back to beat Stade de Reims 4-3 for the first of their five in a row that started their love affair with the competition.

Words bouncing around in post-match interviews on Saturday included “clinical”, “ice-cold”, and “belief”, while Carvajal summed up the match perfectly after the latest turnaround as his side completed a LaLiga-Champions League double.

“After the first half we didn’t even deserve to go to the changing rooms level,” he said. “But we came out of the first half alive, knowing that we would have our moment… and here it is”.

European Cup winners 1955-2024

1955–56 Real Madrid 4–3 Reims Paris
1956–57 Real Madrid 2–0 Fiorentina Madrid
1957–58 Real Madrid 3–2* AC Milan Brussels
1958–59 Real Madrid 2–0 Reims Stuttgart
1959–60 Real Madrid 7–3 Eintracht Frankfurt Glasgow
1960–61 Benfica 3–2 Barcelona Bern
1961–62 Benfica 5–3 Real Madrid Amsterdam
1962–63 AC Milan 2–1 Benfica London
1963–64 Inter Milan 3–1 Real Madrid Vienna
1964–65 Inter Milan 1–0 Benfica Milan
1965–66 Real Madrid 2–1 Partizan Brussels
1966–67 Celtic 2–1 Inter Milan Lisbon
1967–68 Manchester United 4–1* Benfica London
1968–69 AC Milan 4–1 Ajax Madrid
1969–70 Feyenoord 2–1* Celtic Milan
1970–71 Ajax 2–0 Panathinaikos London
1971–72 Ajax 2–0 Inter Milan Rotterdam
1972–73 Ajax 1–0 Juventus Belgrade
1973–74 Bayern Munich 1–1 (4-0 on replay) Atletico Madrid Brussels
1974–75 Bayern Munich 2–0 Leeds United Paris
1975–76 Bayern Munich 1–0 Saint-Etienne Glasgow
1976–77 Liverpool 3–1 Borussia Moenchengladbach Rome
1977–78 Liverpool 1–0 Club Brugge London
1978–79 Nottingham Forest 1–0 Malmo FF Munich
1979–80 Nottingham Forest 1–0 Hamburger SV Madrid
1980–81 Liverpool 1–0 Real Madrid Paris
1981–82 Aston Villa 1–0 Bayern Munich Rotterdam
1982–83 Hamburger SV 1–0 Juventus Athens
1983–84 Liverpool 1–1 (4-2 on penalties) AS Roma Rome
1984–85 Juventus 1–0 Liverpool Brussels
1985–86 Steaua Bucharest 0–0 (2-0 on penalties) Barcelona Seville
1986–87 Porto 2–1 Bayern Munich Vienna
1987–88 PSV Eindhoven 0–0 (6-5 on penalties) Benfica Stuttgart
1988–89 AC Milan 4–0 Steaua București Barcelona
1989–90 AC Milan 1–0 Benfica Vienna
1990–91 Red Star Belgrade 0–0 (5-3 on penalties) Marseille Bari
1991–92 Barcelona 1–0† Sampdoria London
1992–93 Marseille 1–0 AC Milan Munich
1993–94 Milan 4–0 Barcelona Athens
1994–95 Ajax 1–0 AC Milan Vienna
1995–96 Juventus 1–1 (4-2 on penalties) Ajax Rome
1996–97 Borussia Dortmund 3–1 Juventus Munich
1997–98 Real Madrid 1–0 Juventus Amsterdam
1998–99 Manchester United 2–1 Bayern Munich Barcelona
1999–2000 Real Madrid 3–0 Valencia St Denis
2000–01 Bayern Munich 1–1 (5-4 on penalties) Valencia Milan
2001–02 Real Madrid 2–1 Bayer Leverkusen Glasgow
2002–03 AC Milan 0–0 (3-2 on penalties) Juventus Manchester
2003–04 Porto 3–0 Monaco Gelsenkirchen
2004–05 Liverpool 3–3 (3-2 on penalties) AC Milan Istanbul
2005–06 Barcelona 2–1 Arsenal St Denis
2006–07 AC Milan 2–1 Liverpool Athens
2007–08 Manchester United 1–1 (6-5 on penalties) Chelsea Moscow
2008–09 Barcelona 2–0 Manchester United Rome
2009–10 Inter Milan 2–0 Bayern Munich Madrid
2010–11 Barcelona 3–1 Manchester United London
2011–12 Chelsea 1–1 (4-3 on penalties) Bayern Munich Munich
2012–13 Bayern Munich 2–1 Borussia Dortmund London
2013–14 Real Madrid 4–1* Atletico Madrid Lisbon
2014–15 Barcelona 3–1 Juventus Berlin
2015–16 Real Madrid 1–1 (5-3 on penalties) Atletico Madrid Milan
2016–17 Real Madrid 4–1 Juventus Cardiff
2017–18 Real Madrid 3–1 Liverpool Kyiv
2018–19 Liverpool 2–0 Tottenham Hotspur Madrid
2019–20 Bayern Munich 1–0 Paris St Germain Lisbon
2020–21 Chelsea 1–0 Manchester City Porto
2021–22 Real Madrid 1–0 Liverpool St Denis
2022–23 Manchester City 1–0 Inter Milan Istanbul
2023-24 Real Madrid 2-0 Borussia Dortmund London
15 – Real Madrid
7 – AC Milan
6 – Bayern Munich, Liverpool
5 – Barcelona
4 – Ajax Amsterdam
3 – Manchester United, Inter Milan
2 – Benfica, Juventus, Nottingham Forest, Porto, Chelsea
1 – Celtic, Hamburg SV, Steaua Bucharest, Olympique Marseille, Feyenoord, Aston Villa, PSV Eindhoven, Red Star Belgrade, Borussia Dortmund, Manchester CityThe European Cup became the Champions League in 1992.

Dortmund, who had shocked Paris St Germain in the semi-finals, had a dream first half in every aspect other than scoring.

Playing with confidence and aggression, their first good chance came after 21 minutes when Karim Adeyemi went too wide when rounding goalkeeper Thibaut Courtois.

Then came a flurry of opportunities as Niclas Fuellkrug hit the post and low shots by Julian Brandt and Marcel Sabitzer were saved by Courtois.

YELLOW WALL

Dortmund had been attacking towards their own fans who, revelling in their team’s first Champions League final since 2013 and only their third ever, did their best to reproduce the yellow wall atmosphere of their Westfalenstadion with noise and unified bouncing that shook the stadium to its foundations.

Madrid were unfazed by what was happening, however, and looked livelier from the start of the second half without really threatening.

Courtois saved a diving header from Fuellkrug and Dortmund were soon ruing the misses as 5ft 8 ins (172cm) full back Carvajal rose to meet a Kroos corner and steer in a glancing header.

The assist was a fitting way for Germany midfielder Kroos to mark his final game for the club while he Carvajal, Nacho and Luka Modric all equalled Francisco Gento’s record of six titles from their first era of Real dominance.

Madrid added their second goal when Dortmund’s Ian Maatsen gave the ball away on the edge of his box. LaLiga player of the year and former Dortmund midfielder Jude Bellingham fed Vinicius Jr in space and the Brazilian fired home unerringly.

Dortmund’s fans continued to sing in defeat, though they and their players will know this was a missed opportunity that will hurt for a long time.

“Today we saw a Dortmund team that we want to see,” said coach Edin Terzic, whose side finished fifth in the Bundesliga.

“We played a fantastic game and maybe deserved a bit more than to lose 2-0.

“We did a lot of things right but they had this killer instinct. They were ice cold and they are deserved champions.”