Saturday night in Munich was not about Real Madrid or Barcelona. It wasn’t about Lionel Messi, Cristiano Ronaldo, or even Kylian Mbappe. This UEFA Champions League final was about two clubs chasing legacy, two teams carrying decades of ambition and the burden of expectation.
Paris Saint-Germain and Inter Milan collided under the lights of the Allianz Arena, a final without the usual suspects but rich in storyline and intensity. At stake? For PSG, a chance at their first-ever Champions League title, and with it, the final piece of a historic treble. For Inter, it was a return to European supremacy, just two years after their last appearance in the final.
But as the whistle blew for halftime, PSG was firmly in control, leading 2-0. The goals came with stinging irony—Achraf Hakimi, a former Inter player, struck first, and Desire Doue’s deflected effort doubled the lead. The scoreboard was stark. So was the question echoing across Europe: When was the last time Inter was trailing at half-time in a Champions League final and ended up winning the game?
Control lost, doubts raised
Inter Milan is not known for drama. This is a club forged in the fires of tactical discipline and defensive steel. From Helenio Herrera’s Catenaccio era to Jose Mourinho’s ruthlessly efficient treble-winners in 2010, the Serie A runners-up do not chase chaos—they conquer with composure.
And yet, as they walked off the pitch at halftime, trailing 2-0, they looked lost. “For all their legacy, history, and tactical discipline, Inter Milan have never been known for the wild, last-gasp heroics that define some of the Champions League’s most famous turnarounds,” wrote ESPN during the match commentary.
The opening 45 minutes were not kind to Simone Inzaghi’s side. They rarely troubled PSG’s backline, and even when they enjoyed brief spells of possession, their final pass was lacking.
Uncomfortable truth: It’s never happened
So, back to that question—has Inter ever come back from a halftime deficit in a Champions League final and won? The answer, brutally simple: Never.
Let’s look at the history:
- 1964: Inter 3-1 Real Madrid
Half-time score: 1-1
Inter took the lead, were pegged back, but finished strong. - 1965: Inter 1-0 Benfica
Half-time score: 1-0
A cautious, controlled affair. No comeback required. - 2010: Inter 2-0 Bayern Munich
Half-time score: 1-0
Diego Milito scored in both halves. Inter never let go.
On each of these triumphant nights, the Italians were either leading or level at the break. They have never overturned a halftime deficit to win a European final. This makes the 2-0 scoreline in Munich not just a mountain, but Everest. It’s not merely a deficit—it’s a break from identity, a defiance of their own history.
Yet, the Champions League has never been a slave to logic. From Istanbul in 2005 to Madrid’s miracle runs, it thrives on the improbable. The question is no longer about numbers. It is now one of spirit. Can Simone Inzaghi’s Inter carve out a different story? One that defies their carefully curated legacy of control and becomes something raw, defiant, and unforgettable?