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The Champions League has witnessed some immortal individual displays… but which one lives longest in the memory?

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No one would have blamed Gareth Bale for keeping his head down in that second half at the San Siro. Tottenham were 4-0 down, after all. What happened next is one of the most extraordinary performances in modern memory – even more incredible because of the fact that Bale was so individually brilliant, despite Tottenham's collapse in the first half. The Welshman tore Inter Milan to shreds with an unbelievable hat-trick – it wasn't quite enough but when Inter came to north London weeks later, the Welshman led them to victory. 2–0 lead is the most dangerous scoreline. .. at least, according to the old cliche. It certainly is when you're Atletico Madrid and Cristiano Ronaldo is on the opposing team. Different shirt, same outcome for the Portuguese forward who picked Juve up in the second leg and scored yet another stunning European hat-trick to silence Simeone's side. There was no doubting him as the biggest big-game player on earth – potentially of all time – after this one. So little was expected of Ajax after a 2-1 first-leg defeat to Real Madrid, that Sergio Ramos picked up a booking to keep him fresh for the next round. Somehow though, in the cauldron of the Bernabeu, Dusan Tadic put on the performance of a lifetime, as Real were knocked out of the Champions League for the first time in four years. The best features, fun and footballing quizzes, straight to your inbox every week. The ex-Southampton star was note-perfect throughout, running rings around the likes of Modric and Kroos; he set up the first and the second – the latter with a Zidane-like pirouette before he slid in David Neres – and thumped the third into the top corner. For 90 minutes, he was the most brilliant footballer in the world. It takes something special to get the opposition fans to give you a standing ovation in a game of such importance and magnitude. Ronaldo was not just special. He was phenomenal. The Brazilian had gone through horrendous and well-documented injury problems throughout his spell at Inter, but worked his way back to his best after joining Real Madrid in 2002. This quarter-final second leg towards the end of his first season at the club confirmed he was well and truly ready to take the world by storm again. Real held a 3-1 lead from the first-leg at a Bernabeu, and Sir Alex Ferguson's men did brilliantly to score four. But Ronaldo got three brilliant goals all on his own inside an hour before being subbed off. The whole of Old Trafford rose to its feet to clap him off the pitch in recognition of having seen a masterclass from perhaps the finest centre-forward of all time. It's perhaps poetic that Pep Guardiola was foiled three times by three different Spanish sides in three semi-finals of the Champions League while managing Bayern Munich. He just couldn't defeat the country that he'd redefined the football of forever – and the most iconic performance of those six games came from his former protege. This was peak Lionel Messi – and that's saying something. The little genius scored twice, gave Neymar a sumptuous assist and simply waltzed through the Bayern back four like they weren't even there. The image of Jerome Boateng slipping onto his backside as he's wrong-footed has become the profile picture of this performance – but that was just the tip of the iceberg. Some may say that Lucas Moura's whirlwind against Ajax will forever go down as perhaps the most world-class performance from someone who wasn't that world-class. He had absolutely no right to do what he did that night. Tottenham were dead and buried. Yet in 45 minutes, Moura resurrected Spurs with the most inspired one-man comeback that the Champions League had ever seen, scoring three away goals to put the hosts to the sword. It was breathtaking beyond belief - and it was one of the best games in the tournament's history. ? OTD in 2013. .. Dortmund thumped Real Madrid 4-1 in their Champions League semi-final first leg ? Robert Lewandowski scored ALL FOUR OF THEM ? pic. twitter. com/6ABJj Jk7Mw April 24, 2020 Lionel Messi scored five goals against Bayer Leverkusen in 2012 – but considering it was a second leg and that the first was already won, we're not putting it on this list. And anyway, this four-goal spectacular was Messi's defining performance. Every time he got the ball, Arsenal players looked terrified. He could beat them with pace, a pass or raw power and they knew it. He was just quicker, physically and mentally, and the ease with which he racked up four goals was just frightening. He's had plenty of standout moments in Europe over the years – but few 90-minute displays as perfect as this. The ultimate captain's contribution. Roy Keane never got to play in the 1999 Champions League final, due to suspension – but he sure did play his part to make sure Manchester United got there. The Irishman managed to keep a lid on Edgar Davids, Antonio Conte and Didier Deschamps for 90 minutes, stopping almost every Juve attack by himself. Not only that, he was responsible for everything great about United building forward. He was a tornado on and off the ball that night. ? OTD in 2013. .. Dortmund thumped Real Madrid 4-1 in their Champions League semi-final first leg ? Robert Lewandowski scored ALL FOUR OF THEM ? pic. twitter. com/6ABJj Jk7Mw April 24, 2020 We were all set for an El Clasico final, weren't we? And then Robert Lewandowski happened. The archetypal striker's display, Lewy tormented Madrid with a performance of poise, precision and absolutely no mercy whatsoever. Dortmund were more intense, quicker, stronger and more important, deadlier and the Polish forward summed up everything to love about them that night. What a game. What a comeback. And what a captain. Mere words do not do justice to the performance that Steven Gerrard conjured to drag Liverpool back from the brink in Istanbul that night. It wasn't just that they were facing a collection of the greatest players in the world, or that confidence had been zapped – it was the never-say-die spirit of their captain, the tenacity and brilliance on and off the ball that turned defeat into heaven for the Reds. Gerrard turned the tide almost all by himself that night to deliver a Champions League trophy to Merseyside for the fifth time. It was utterly spellbinding – and it might never be topped in the pantheon of all-time great European displays.

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The 20 best individual Champions League performances ever: 10-1

Steven Chicken has been working as a football writer since 2009, taking in stints with Football365 and the Huddersfield Examiner. Steven still covers Huddersfield Town home and away for his own publication,  We Are Terriers. com. Steven is a two-time nominee for Regional Journalist of the Year at the prestigious British Sports Journalism Awards, making the shortlist in 2020 and 2023. You must confirm your public display name before commenting Please logout and then login again, you will then be prompted to enter your display name.

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