- Lionel Messi - 77', 80'
- Neymar - 90'+4'
Lionel Messi puts in magical display as Barcelona beat Bayern Munich
Lionel Messi's late brace ensured it was a miserable return to the Camp Nou for Bayern Munich manager Pep Guardiola as his former team ran out 3-0 winners in the first leg of their Champions League semifinal.
The former Barcelona boss, who won 14 titles in four years with the Catalan giants, saw the architect of so many of his greatest triumphs put him on the brink of a Champions League exit at the penultimate stage for the second successive year.
Going into the game, Guardiola admitted Messi was "just too good" to be stopped and so it proved as the Argentinian ace, who was quiet for long periods, burst into life to give Luis Enrique's side the advantage before Neymar twisted the knife to make it 3-0 at the death.
Early on, Guardiola lured everyone into a state of confusion by playing three at the back. His bold tactics, which also included a high line and man-marking, created a nervy opening to the game before the hosts got to grips with it.
With Jerome Boateng, Rafinha and Mehdi Benatia going toe-to-toe with Neymar, Luis Suarez and Messi, opportunities were always going to come for Barca and it only took six minutes for Bayern's backline to creak.
Suarez's pace had the visitors retreating and while his scuffed shot from distance did little to trouble Manuel Neuer it gave Luis Enrique's side the impetus to up the tempo and put Bayern firmly on the back foot.
The former Liverpool striker beat Bayern's offside trap to race clear six minutes later, but Neuer stood his ground and managed to flick Suarez's goal-bound effort clear with his outstretched right leg.
As Barca cut loose with blistering pace, power and skill it began to look like Guardiola's plans would blow up in his face and Rafinha had to be on hand to block a certain goal for Neymar at the far post in the 15th minute.
That seemed to be a wake-up call, with the visitors tightening up and reverting to a more familiar shape afterwards, and a masked Robert Lewandowski was inches away from giving them the lead with their first purposeful raid shortly after.
Thomas Muller found space on the right and played it across the six-yard box for Lewandowski, who was in acres of space, but it was just out of reach for the Poland international.
Five minutes before the break Neuer was once again at his best to deny Dani Alves with a point-blank block at the far post and somehow keep it goalless after a breathless 45 minutes.
Guardiola's side made a more assured start to the second half without crafting clear-cut chances, but Barca remained a constant threat on the break.
Messi, who buzzed around the periphery of the game for large parts of the first half, unleashed a powerful drive from just outside the box after a give-and-go exchange with Neymar during one such surge upfield, but Neuer gathered cleanly, making it look easy.
And the German justified his "sweeper-keeper" nickname around the hour-mark, when he raced well off his line to thwart Neymar from a ball over the top.
But after a night of heroics from Neuer, Messi finally broke his resistance by catching him out on his near post 13 minutes from time.
The Argentinian picked up the ball on the right, gave a trademark half-shimmy and then unleashed a rasping left-footed drive through a crowd of bodies. Neuer dived, but was unable to get anything on it.
Messi then left Boateng flat on the floor as he twisted and turned in the Bayern box before chipping home exquisitely for his 10th goal in 11 Champions League matches this season three minutes later.
It was Messi's 77th Champions League goal, taking him one ahead of Real Madrid's Cristiano Ronaldo for the all-time competition goal scoring record.
The four-time Ballon d'Or winner slipped Neymar through one-on-one against Neuer at the death and the Brazilian remained cool to give Barca an even bigger advantage.