Updated: Mar 11, 2025, 11:52 pm
Paris Saint-Germain beat Liverpool 4-1 in a penalty shootout to advance to the Champions League quarterfinals after winning a rip-roaring last-16 second-leg match at Anfield 1-0 on Tuesday thanks to a goal from Ousmane Dembélé.
After the tie had finished 1-1 in the aggregate, PSG goalkeeper Gianluigi Donnarumma saved spot kicks from Darwin Núñez and Curtis Jones, while the visitors converted all their efforts.
PSG will meet either Aston Villa or Club Brugge in the quarters, with Villa taking a 3-1 lead into Wednesday's second leg.
Dembele stunned the Anfield crowd with his 12th-minute goal against the run of play. Ibrahima Konaté slid in to block Bradley Barcola's effort but pushed the ball away from goalkeeper Alisson in the process, and Dembélé needed only to knock it into an empty net.
The goal was the earliest Premier League-leading Liverpool had conceded at Anfield in the Champions League since September 2017 against Sevilla.
Arne Slot's team played considerably better than a week earlier -- when it needed a last-gasp goal from substitute Harvey Elliott after the Parisians had dominated -- and Reds talisman Mohamed Salah had a shot blocked on the goal line by Nuno Mendes in the game's first few minutes.
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Donnarumma was forced into making an early diving save to keep out a shot from Konaté, but both sides spurned chances in a nervy game that had fans on the edge of their seats.
Liverpool parked themselves in PSG's territory for much of the second half of normal time and had a goal from Dominik Szoboszlai disallowed for offside in the buildup early in the second period.
They kept Donnarumma busy in the dying minutes, with the keeper parrying away ball after ball fired into the box, but it was Dembélé who unleashed what looked like the winner in extra time before Alisson made a dramatic diving save to push the ball wide with his fingertips.
PSG were rock solid under pressure in the shootout, with Vitinha, Gonçalo Ramos, Dembélé and Désiré Doué finding the net. Liverpool got off to a good start with Salah slamming his effort home, but Núñez and Jones had tame efforts comfortably stopped by Donnarumma.
History was not on the Parisians' side entering Tuesday's contest, as they became just the fourth of 28 teams to progress after losing the first leg at home in a Champions League knockout tie.
The thousands of traveling fans, many of them shirtless despite the chilly temperature, were not daunted by the odds, as they danced and sang until the final whistle.