Dominant Lyon beat Wolfsburg to claim fifth straight Women’s Champions League title

Lyon players pose with the trophy after winning the Women's Champions League final match against Wolfsburg at the Anoeta Stadium in San Sebastian, Spain on Sunday.
Lyon players pose with the trophy after winning the Women's Champions League final match against Wolfsburg at the Anoeta Stadium in San Sebastian, Spain on Sunday.
block
AFP, Spain :
Lyon continued their reign as Europe’s dominant women’s team on Sunday, beating Wolfsburg 3-1 in the Champions League final to win the trophy for the fifth year running with Japan star Saki Kumagai’s goal proving crucial.
Kumagai netted after Eugenie Le Sommer had handed the French outfit the lead in San Sebastian, giving Lyon a 2-0 half-time advantage and leaving Wolfsburg with too much to do even if Alexandra Popp pulled one back in the second half.
Icelandic midfielder Sara Bjork Gunnarsdottir’s late effort made sure of the victory for Lyon, whose fifth consecutive Champions League crown is their seventh overall, comfortably a record.
Five in a row sees them equal the feat achieved by the Real Madrid men’s team between 1956 and 1960, in the early days of the European Cup. French President Emmanuel Macron even tweeted his congratulations at the end of the game.
“Now we need to win a sixth in a row to beat the record,” said captain Wendie Renard, who along with Le Sommer and goalkeeper Sarah Bouhaddi has featured in all seven final wins.
“It is hard to win this trophy but we give everything to win it every year.”
Lyon’s latest triumph confirms their status as the finest club team around even as rivals across Europe step up their investment in the women’s game.
Jean-Luc Vasseur’s team had previously edged out Bayern Munich and Paris Saint-Germain in the ‘Final Eight’ in Spain’s Basque Country, played out behind closed doors because of the coronavirus pandemic.
They also pipped PSG to claim a 14th successive French title this year and defeated the same team on penalties in the French Cup final.
This victory, against a side who won a German domestic double and were unbeaten in 40 games before the final, showcased the depth of their squad. Lyon were missing four leading stars, with France duo Griedge Mbock and Amandine Henry injured and Norway’s 2018 Ballon d’Or winner Ada Hegerberg not fully fit. England forward Nikita Parris was suspended.
But Lyon’s long-serving president Jean-Michel Aulas continues to be rewarded for his heavy investment in a women’s team, despite the prize money for winning the Champions League being a mere 450,000 euros ($535,000), a tiny fraction of that on offer in the men’s competition.
block