Newcastle’s Champions League journey met a crushing conclusion at Camp Nou. A frantic opening period eventually succumbed to a second-half demolition, with Barcelona netting five goals post-interval to secure an emphatic 8-3 aggregate triumph.
For a full 45 minutes, Eddie Howe’s squad had matched the La Liga leaders stride for stride in one of the most remarkable first halves European football has witnessed in recent memory.
By the conclusion of the evening, Newcastle had conceded seven goals in a single fixture for the first time since suffering a 7-3 loss to Arsenal in December 2012.
Raphinha’s sixth-minute initial score – considerably aided by Lewis Hall’s untimely slip – was swiftly equalized by Anthony Elanga’s confident strike after Hall, commendably, then delivered a superb pass behind the Barcelona backline.
Marc Bernal re-established Barcelona’s advantage from a poorly conceded free-kick after 18 minutes, before Elanga found the net again on 28, slotting home at the far post from Harvey Barnes’s low delivery.
Newcastle had an opportunity to head into the half-time break level. Dan Burn executed an astonishing last-gasp block, thwarting Raphinha and Lewandowski in a two-on-one scenario, and Yamal inexplicably fired over from eight yards with Ramsdale already overcome after the goalkeeper had mishandled Raphinha’s attempt.

Instead, a VAR-reviewed penalty awarded in the fifth minute of stoppage time for Trippier’s tug on Raphinha allowed Yamal to dispatch the ball home, sending Barcelona into the interval with a 3-2 lead for the night, and 4-3 on aggregate.
Barcelona Elevates Performance
Newcastle required an impeccable beginning to the second half; what they received was quite the contrary. Fermin Lopez was sent through one-on-one by a masterful Raphinha chip on 51 minutes and deftly slid a precise finish into the bottom right corner. The contest was decisively over.
Lewandowski, who had previously been relatively subdued, then commanded the spotlight. The Polish forward headed Raphinha’s corner into the bottom right corner at 56 minutes, followed five minutes later by a moment of sheer brilliance, faking his initial shot on the edge of the box before guiding it into the bottom left as the space opened up.
At 37 years and 209 days of age, Lewandowski became the oldest player ever to net a brace in a Champions League fixture, surpassing Filippo Inzaghi’s record established for Milan in 2010.
Raphinha rounded off a superb individual showing on 72 minutes, capitalizing on a loose ball and rolling it into an unguarded net to make the score 7-2 on the evening.
Newcastle had exhausted all efforts. Tonali hobbled off with an ailment, Elanga was substituted, and weary figures struggled to contend with the incessant motion of Barcelona’s attacking play.
Ramsdale produced a commendable late block to deny Yamal but was powerless against the goals that had already bypassed him.
This outcome equals the joint-highest total ever conceded by an English team in European competition, matching Tottenham’s 7-2 defeat to Bayern Munich in 2019.
For Newcastle, it marks a bitter conclusion to a campaign that held considerable promise and delivered significantly, right up until the final 45 minutes.

