The UEFA Champions League Round of 16 has officially concluded, and it left football fans completely breathless. From unprecedented managerial decisions to historic scorelines, this knockout stage was pure, unfiltered chaos.
From the Round of 16, eight have advanced to the quarterfinals. Arsenal will take on Sporting CP, while Bayern face Real Madrid. PSG will be up against Liverpool, whereas an all-Spanish tie sees Atletico Madrid locking horns against Barcelona.

If you missed the action of Round of 16, don't worry. Here are the five most jaw-dropping moments from both legs of the Round of 16 that nobody saw coming.
In one of the most brutal and humiliating moments in Champions League history, Tottenham Hotspur's backup goalkeeper, Antonin Kinsky, was substituted just 17 minutes into his UCL debut against Atletico Madrid. Thrown into the starting lineup by interim manager Igor Tudor, the 22-year-old completely crumbled under the pressure. Kinsky slipped to gift Marcos Llorente an early goal, and minutes later, he completely miskicked a pass that allowed Julian Alvarez to tap into an empty net. Down 3-0 in just 15 minutes, Tudor made the ruthless decision to hook Kinsky for Guglielmo Vicario. A devastated Kinsky left the pitch in tears, making it the earliest an uninjured goalkeeper has been subbed off in the tournament's history. Atletico ultimately advanced with a 7-5 aggregate victory.
Newcastle United travelled to the Spotify Camp Nou with hope after a tense 1-1 draw in the first leg, but they were met with an absolute buzzsaw. Barcelona unleashed a terrifying attacking masterclass, thrashing the Magpies 7-2 to secure an 8-3 aggregate win. Despite Newcastle's Anthony Elanga scoring a quick-fire double to level the game at 2-2 in the first half, Barcelona's Lamine Yamal shifted the momentum with a stoppage-time penalty. In the second half, the Spanish giants ran riot. Robert Lewandowski and Raphinha both scored twice, forcing Newcastle's defense to totally collapse. The seven goals conceded tied the unwanted record for the most goals an English club has ever shipped in a UEFA knockout match.
Speaking of unwanted records, Chelsea suffered an absolute humiliation at the hands of Paris Saint-Germain. After being battered 5-2 in the first leg in Paris, the Blues were hoping to salvage some pride at Stamford Bridge. Instead, PSG showed zero mercy. The reigning French champions stormed London and secured a dominant 3-0 away victory, sealing a horrifying 8-2 aggregate defeat for Chelsea. It was a stark reminder of the massive gap between Europe's absolute elite and a struggling Chelsea side.
Sporting CP found themselves in a massive hole after being stunned 3-0 by the ultimate giant-killers, Norwegian side Bodo/Glimt, in the first leg. Facing an exit, Sporting completely flipped the script at home. In a chaotic and emotionally charged second leg, the Portuguese champions fought back to force extra time and ultimately dismantled Bodo/Glimt 5-0. The 5-3 aggregate victory goes down as one of the greatest comebacks in recent Champions League history.
Liverpool's season has been erratic, but Anfield on a European night remains a fortress. After suffering a shock 1-0 defeat to Galatasaray in Istanbul, Arne Slot's men needed a response. Liverpool could easily have scored more, with Salah striking the bar and were it not for Cakir, the final result could have been even uglier for Galatasaray. The tension spiked when Mohamed Salah missed a crucial penalty in first-half stoppage time, but he quickly redeemed himself in the second half. Salah provided two brilliant assists for Hugo Ekitike and Ryan Gravenberch before curling in a trademark spectacular goal of his own. It was Salah's 50th career Champions League goal, capping off a 4-0 thrashing (4-1 on aggregate).