ionel
Messi set the tone for another Champions League campaign when scoring a
hat-trick in Barcelona's 7-0 destruction of Celtic, so throwing down
the gauntlet to great rival Cristiano Ronaldo of Real Madrid.
As
Barca racked up its largest win in the competition, the Argentine
registered a record sixth Champions League hat-trick -- one more than
Ronaldo.
However, the Portuguese's 93 Champions League goals are unsurpassed, even if Messi narrowed the gap by taking his tally to 86.
Messi needed just three
minutes to rifle the opener at the Nou Camp, and he doubled the lead in
Tuesday's opening Group C encounter just moments after Moussa Dembele's
spot-kick was saved by home keeper Marc-Andre ter Stegen.
Neymar,
who provided four assists, soon curled home a fine free-kick, Andres
Iniesta lashed home a stunning volley before Messi added a fifth as
Barcelona rebounded from Saturday's shock defeat to Alaves in blistering
fashion he five-time world footballer of the
year also hit a post, just seconds before setting up Luis Suarez --
whose first goal was another fine volley -- to tap home his second.
The defeat for Celtic, which won the competition in 1967, was the Scottish side's heaviest European loss.
Yet
Barcelona could be punished by European football governing body UEFA
after fans displayed thousands of pro-Catalan independence flags prior
to kickoff.
Barca was fined
$170,00 for the same offense -- such political statements are banned --
during last season's competition, with a portion of the fine suspended
for two years.
Meanwhile, Ronaldo,
who finished top scorer in last season's Champions League campaign with
16 goals, has the chance to pull away from Messi once again when the
reigning European champion hosts Sporting Lisbon on Wednesday.
In Group A, French champion Paris Saint-Germain was held to a 1-1 draw at home by Arsenal despite dominating for large parts of the game.
Edinson
Cavani headed home for the host after just one minute before proceeding
to miss several chances, so allowing Alexis Sanchez to draw the Gunners
level late on.
Both sides
finished the match with 10 men as PSG midfielder Marco Verratti and
Arsenal substitute Olivier Giroud were sent off in the 93rd minute.
Switzerland's Basel was held to a 1-1 draw at home by Ludogorets in the other Group A clash, with the Bulgarian champion taking part for only the second time.
Carlo Ancelotti has been brought in by Bayern Munich to
win the Champions League and the Italian, who has done so three times
as a coach, started his Group D campaign with a comprehensive 5-0 win
over Russian debutant Rostov.
It
proved an unforgettable night for Joshua Kimmich, 21, who scored his
first two goals in the competition while Thomas Muller netted on his
27th birthday.
It
was Bayern's 13th consecutive home victory in the Champions League,
beating the previous best mark held by Manchester United.
Also in Group D, last season's runner-up Atletico Madrid started its campaign with a 1-0 win away to PSV Eindhoven.
In Group B, Napoli won 2-1 at Dynamo Kiev, whose goalkeeper
Oleksandr Shovkovski made history by becoming the second oldest player
in the Champions League at the age of 41 years and 255 days.
Marco Ballota -- formerly of Lazio -- remains the oldest at 43 years and 252 days.
Brazilian Talisca is also unlikely to forget Tuesday's action as the attacking midfielder, who is on loan at Besiktas from Benfica, scored for the Turkish side in injury time in a 1-1 draw in Portugal.
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