A snowy night away facing arguably one of the biggest clubs in the history of football is never a happy outing for any team. Add to that a 1-3 deficit in the first leg, and you cannot rule out the possibility of a cricket score on aggregate. With the current form Arsenal and Bayern Munich are in, such a prospect loomed large. Arsenal, instead of reveling in the news of Ribery and Schweinsteiger being ruled out for the tie, reciprocated with bad news of their own, as their talisman Jack Wilshere, the Bayern misfit Podolski and Bacary Sagna had to be restricted to their TV sets with injuries. And so the sane bets were on Bayern as the odds were strongly in favour of the ever in-form German giants running away with the match right from the whistle.
This year's Champions League had its share of upsets and comebacks as was evident just the previous night, with Barca beating the shit out of AC Milan to overturn a 0-2 deficit. But come on. That was Barcelona and they had Messi. All Arsenal had was an empty trophy cabinet and a bunch of youngsters trying to make it big. But then, there was one similarity. Both the teams had very recently lost to bitter rivals and had a point to prove. Barcelona certainly had vengeance on their mind, as players were ready to "put their hands on fire" and promise to win. That they did, as they took Milan to the cleaners. It was Arsenal's turn now. The pre-match mood did suggest that the players were in a similar mood, with Vermaelen talking about repaying the manager's faith. They believed they could deliver the Munich Miracle and so did the Gooner family silently.
And so they kicked off, in a vibrant Allianz Arena, with some determination. This instantly paid off as Rosicky slipped it through to Walcott who put in an inch perfect pass for Giroud to tap in, just under 3 minutes. "The goal is just gonna wake up the sleeping beast" a random tweet read. But, to the surprise of everyone, this stunned the Arena into a gloomy silence. The away supporters suddenly found their voice as Arsenal started getting passes together in an attempt to strike again. "Oooh... Saanti Cazooorlaa.." they went. The unsual thing was the attitude of the Bayern eleven on the pitch, almost displaying a certain arrogance from the first leg lead. Unperturbed by the early setback, they continued to attack with Lahm and Abate streaming forward at every opportunity they got. This, and poor passing by Arsenal and especially Rosicky (with the lack of game time, the poor co-ordination was clearly evident) meant Bayern had a lot of shots at goal. But, Bayern clearly left their shooting boots in their dressing rooms as everybody from Kroos to Robben aimed to lift the top off the stadium (Arrogance, may be?). In the meanwhile, Arsenal looked threatening on the counter and were waiting for the right moment to strike. As the half ended, Bayern looked more comfortable on the ball and in the tie.
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