Marcus Rashford celebrating his Champions League free kick goal for Barcelona at Camp Nou
The long shadow of Lionel Messi has finally been lifted from set-pieces at the Camp Nou.
On a night that felt like a bridge between Barcelona’s celebrated past and their electric future, Marcus Rashford wrote his name into the club’s modern folklore. With a stunning 85th-minute free kick that curled beautifully into the bottom corner, the English forward sealed a dominant 4–1 victory over FC Copenhagen, confirming Barcelona’s top-eight finish and direct qualification to the UEFA Champions League Round of 16.
This was not just another goal. It was history.
Not since May 1, 2019 — the night Lionel Messi dismantled Liverpool with that unforgettable free kick — had a Barcelona player scored directly from a free kick in the Champions League at Camp Nou. Seven long years of near-misses, hope, and frustration ended the moment Rashford stepped up.
The strike felt symbolic. Messi’s era, defined by genius and inevitability, finally passed the baton to a new match-winner — one who arrived with questions, pressure, and something to prove.
Any lingering skepticism around Rashford’s loan move evaporated instantly.
Social media exploded as the net rippled:
Beyond the emotion, the achievement placed Rashford in rare company. He is now one of only two English players to score direct free kicks for two different clubs in the UEFA Champions League — for Manchester United and Barcelona.
The only other name on that list? David Beckham.
Barcelona didn’t have it easy. After falling behind early to a Viktor Dadason opener, Robert Lewandowski, Lamine Yamal, and Raphinha dragged the Catalans back into control.
But it was Rashford’s introduction that delivered the exclamation point.
His free kick was different from Messi’s artistry — less caress, more conviction. A violent blend of power and precision that left goalkeeper Dominik Kotarski rooted to the spot.
Hansi Flick summed it up perfectly after the match:
“When he is there with his control and his finishing, it is amazing to have him.”
By finishing fifth overall, Barcelona avoid the gruelling playoff round — a massive boost for a club that has struggled in European knockouts in recent seasons. The direct route to the Round of 16 offers not just rest, but belief.
Belief that this version of Barça — young, fearless, and now armed with a proven match-winner — can finally rewrite their European narrative.
As one fan captured it best:
“There’s no team he plays for that he won’t excel. He’s just undeniable.”
Messi’s shadow may always loom large at Camp Nou — but on this night, Marcus Rashford proved that history doesn’t have to repeat itself to be respected. Sometimes, it just needs a new hero.
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