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Kylian Mbappe.
Kylian Mbappe celebrates scoring Monaco’s third goal in their 3-2 win against Borussia Dortmund in the Champions League quarter-final first leg at Signal Iduna Park. Photograph: Ralph Orlowski/Reuters
Kylian Mbappe celebrates scoring Monaco’s third goal in their 3-2 win against Borussia Dortmund in the Champions League quarter-final first leg at Signal Iduna Park. Photograph: Ralph Orlowski/Reuters

Kylian Mbappe gives Monaco crucial edge against Borussia Dortmund

This article is more than 7 years old

Monaco showed little room for sentiment as they beat Borussia Dortmund 3-2 in a thrilling Champions League quarter-final first leg.

Less than 24 hours after the tie was postponed when three explosions went off near the Dortmund team bus as they made their way to Signal Iduna Park, the Ligue 1 leaders gained the advantage with Kylian Mbappé’s double and a Sven Bender own goal.

Questions were asked whether Dortmund would have been in the right frame of mind to take the field so soon after the incident and with their team‑mate Marc Bartra in hospital having undergone surgery on an arm injury sustained in the blasts.

After wearing T-shirts supporting their stricken team-mate in the warmup, their performance in the opening half proved doubters right as Monaco, who also missed a first-half spot-kick, surged into a two-goal lead.

The second half was a different story and goals by Ousmane Dembélé and Shinji Kagawa either side of Mbappé’s second left it all to play for ahead of the return leg in the Principality.

Mbappé, tipped to be the next big star of European football, was in the game from the off and showcased his pace and power as he earned a 17th-minute penalty. He surged into the area and was felled by Sokratis Papastathopoulos, who received a booking, but Fabinho dragged his spot‑kick well wide of the post.

Dortmund’s reprieve lasted two minutes, as Monaco went ahead, though there was more than a hint of luck involved. Thomas Lemar found himself in space on the left and squared to Mbappé, who was in an offside position, and Monaco’s fortune did not end there as the striker converted off his thigh, without knowing too much about it.

Ten minutes before half-time Monaco doubled the lead when Andrea Raggi’s superb delivery from the left was diverted into his own net by a hapless Bender.

Dortmund’s manager, Thomas Tuchel, responded at the break by bringing on Nuri Sahin and Christian Pulisic and it had an immediate effect, as kicking towards the ‘Yellow Wall’ the hosts were rampant after the restart.

After several near misses, they finally got back into the game just before the hour when Dembélé tapped into an empty net after neat play by Pierre‑Emerick Aubameyang and Kagawa.

As Dortmund pushed for a leveller, Monaco had a superb chance to restore their two-goal lead with 15 minutes remaining, when Lemar’s ball set Radamel Falcao free, the striker rounded the goalkeeper Roman Burki but blazed over when off balance.

Monaco were not so wasteful when their next chance arrived in the 79th minute as Mbappé intercepted Lukasz Pisczek’s loose pass, raced clear and sent a sublime finish into the top corner.

It was his 21st goal of the season and only enhances his flourishing reputation.

Kagawa gave Dortmund hope, though, five minutes later with a superb goal, killing Pulisic’s cross dead, before slotting home in style.

Aubameyang could have earned a draw in injury time but he headed over and Monaco will leave Germany as favourites to progress.

'We are human beings': Dortmund unhappy with rescheduling of Monaco game – video

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