UCL round-up: Real make Liverpool suffer, Wenger gets dramatic birthday gift

Sport360 staff 10:11 23/10/2014
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  • First goal at Anfield: Real Madrid's Cristiano Ronaldo previously hadn't scored at Liverpool's ground.

    Real Madrid handed Liverpool a 3-0 UEFA Champions League reality check, while Arsenal struck twice at the death in a 2-1 win at Anderlecht to mark manager Arsene Wenger's 65th birthday in style.

    At Anfield, Cristiano Ronaldo hit his 70th UEFA Champions League goal – one short of the all-time record 71 held by Raul, and his 20th of the season already – with Karim Benzema grabbing a brace. 

    Real maintained their 100 percent record in Group B and Ronaldo was delighted to add to his Champions League haul, saying: "It was special, my first goal at Anfield and I am very happy. 

    "We knew that Anfield is a difficult place but we were fantastic in the first 45 minutes and we deserved to win."

    "I'm not worried about the Champions League goalscoring record. I know I will beat it. The best thing is that the team has nine points."

    Ronaldo had never scored at Anfield in his five appearances for Manchester United, but he needed only 23 minutes to end that barren run.

    Seizing possession in a central area 25 yards from goal, Ronaldo moved the ball onto James Rodriguez before sprinting into the penalty area to meet the Colombian's chipped pass, which dropped perfectly over three Liverpool defenders, with a sublime finish as he held off Martin Skrtel to flick his shot past Simon Mignolet.

    To make matters worse for Liverpool, Mario Balotelli was hauled off at half-time after swapping shirts with Pepe in the tunnel in a move that will hardly quell the feeling the striker is developing into a major flop.

    "It's something that doesn't happen here, it shouldn't happen here," said Liverpool manager Brendan Rodgers. "For me, if you want to do that it's something you do at the end of the game. I will deal with that tomorrow [Thursday]."

    Ludogorets Razgrad of Bulgaria moved into second place behind Real after a last-gasp 1-0 win over Basel.

    Like Real, Borussia Dortmund also recorded their third win from three after trouncing Galatasary 4-0 while, in Brussels, late goals by Kieran Gibbs and Lukas Podolski handed Arsenal a dramatic 2-1 win away to Anderlecht.

    An Andy Najar header in the 71st minute looked set to give the Belgian champions a rare European victory until Gibbs volleyed in a Calum Chambers cross with a minute left.
         
    Substitute Podolski then struck a minute into injury time to seal all three points, to the great relief of Wenger.

    "They had big chances that they didn't take, and our experience made the difference. Unexpectedly, but as long as we didn't concede the second goal we had a chance at least to take a pont," said Wenger.

    "Maybe we didn't deserve to win it because of the quality of match Anderlecht played tonight."

    Last year's runners-up Atletico Madrid moved a step closer to qualifying for the last 16 with a comfortable 5-0 win over Malmo at the Vicente Calderon to go top of Group A.

    It took the Spanish champions until after half-time to make the breakthrough, but once Koke had finished off a fine team move to open the scoring there was little doubt Diego Simeone's men were headed for victory.

    Two goals in two minutes from Mario Mandzukic – his 19th in 23 Champions League appearances – and Antoine Griezmann just after the hour mark made the game safe before late goals from Diego Godin and Alessio Cerci rounded off the scoring.

    Previous leaders Juventus slumped to a 1-0 loss at Olympiakos with Swiss midfielder Pajtim Kasami scoring a first half winner.

    In Group C, 10-man Bayer Leverkusen went top with a 2-0 win over Andre Villas-Boas' Zenit St Petersburg to claim a second straight victory, defenders Giulio Donati and Kyriakos Papadopoulos scoring the Germans' goals.

    Leverkusen were forced to play the final ten minutes a man down after Brazilian left-back Wendell was sent off for a second yellow-card. 

    Monaco's goalless draw at home to Benfica means Leverkusen took over at the top, despite having lost their opening match at Monaco before beating Benfica at the BayArena.

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