Neymar breezed into the Estadio da Luz wearing a smile on his face and carrying a speaker in his hand, even stopping to dance for the cameras on his way towards the Paris Saint-Germain dressing room.
He looked entirely at ease with the magnitude of what was to come. This was not his first Champions League final, after all. By the end of it, though, his demeanour could hardly have been more different. He sat crying on the bench as Bayern Munich celebrated their triumph in front of him.
It was supposed to be his big night. His opportunity, three years on from his £198m move from Barcelona, to finally step out of Lionel Messi's shadow and lead PSG to Champions League glory for the first time in their history. It is precisely what he was brought there to do.
Such an outcome would have silenced his many critics. Those who feel PSG overpaid for him. Those who feel he offers style but not enough substance. But it is not how the night transpired. PSG pushed Bayern close but they could find no answer to Kingsley Coman's goal. They needed a moment of inspiration but Neymar could not provide it.
Reaching the Champions League final is an achievement in itself, of course. Neymar was instrumental in the victories that took PSG past Borussia Dortmund, Atalanta and RB Leipzig on their way there. But history rarely remembers the runners-up and Neymar's tears showed he knows it.
PSG have dominated domestically since Neymar's arrival in France, winning three consecutive Ligue 1 titles and a lot more besides. But any player who wants to be considered the world's best will always be judged by his performances on the European stage and the Champions League has been a persistent source of disappointment for him since 2017.
In his first season, Neymar was part of the side beaten 3-1 in the first leg of their last-16 meeting with Real Madrid, only to then miss the second leg with an injury. The following year, he was absent again as PSG were knocked out by Manchester United at the same juncture of the competition.
It seemed at that point that Neymar's time in Paris was coming to an end, with Barcelona eager to take him back to Catalonia. But after months of speculation he resolved to stay. Thomas Tuchel even managed to make him work harder for the team. At 28, Neymar was finally maturing.
That maturity could be seen in the way he chased down red-shirted defenders on Sunday night, covering more ground than any of his team-mates with the exception of Marquinhos. Neymar's mentality has changed. He is now at the peak of his powers. But it was not enough in Lisbon and that is why the pain of the defeat is so acute for him.
There is no escaping that it is a missed opportunity and Neymar will also be aware that it might have been a different story had he buried the chance he fired into the legs of Manuel Neuer early in the first half.
"We talked about it before, that the first goal would decide the match," lamented Tuchel afterwards. "It's a pity we couldn't do it because it would've been a big obstacle and a challenge for them to turn it around."
It was certainly a pivotal moment. Bayern, emboldened by Neuer's heroics, recovered their poise soon afterwards and began to dominate. And while there were flickers of Neymar's class in the remainder of the game, that first-half chance was about as good as it got for him overall.
In fact, in the closing stages, his new-found maturity made way for petulance and frustration. It is understandable that the heavy tackles should rile him, of course. Few players attract more fouls. But the problem was how it affected his game. Late on, at a time when PSG needed quality and composure, Neymar could only offer sloppy touches and missed passes.
What happens next is not entirely clear. Neymar has two years to run on his contract at the Parc des Princes. His agent, Wagner Ribeiro, recently stated that the Brazilian is content to stay at the club for the duration of that contract. But there is always an element of uncertainty around his future and the defeat in Lisbon is sure to prompt speculation.
Neymar may feel his chances of achieving true greatness would be better elsewhere.
Barcelona would love to have him back in Catalonia and Real Madrid are in a rebuilding phase too. But the finances involved in a transfer would surely be too much for any club in the present climate. And besides, few clubs are better placed than PSG to go one step further than they managed in Lisbon in the years ahead.
In Tuchel, they have a manager who has succeeded where the others have failed. A manager who has united the dressing room and moulded a collection of stars into a team. Their starting line-up is as strong as any in world football and crucially, their Qatari backers have near limitless funds to strengthen any areas of weakness.
Psychologically, the run to the final should give them belief. Pep Guardiola knows just how difficult it is to turn a club with no history at Europe's top table into Champions League winners, but PSG have shown they are ahead of Manchester City in their development. They now know what they are capable of on this stage. The trophy could easily have been theirs on Sunday night. They were not overawed by the occasion.
Neymar would do well to bear that in mind. But what's most important is that if another opportunity like this one does arise, he grasps it with both hands. Only then will he cement his legacy as a true great. Only then will he succeed Messi and Cristiano Ronaldo as the world's best.
jizbklrsty
522
Neymar played his game but was overmarked we saw. He didnt have space to dribble as usual hence creating open spaces on the Bayern defence was not seen. He did not miss any shot this time.The one he shot was at tight angle where Neuer blocked. Yes, Mbappe missed an open sitter from just 6 yards. It was an unusual weak and straight shot to the goal keeper.Normally he has powerful shots. Di Maria was slow today unlike semi final. He too missed a shot from 6 yards. He should have gone for ground shot on the first bar..as there were space there. He went for 2nd bar shot seeing more space with his weaker right leg. Again Marquinos had a good opportunity to score in that small space..which was eventually blocked by the keeper's leg. Mbappe was brought down by Kimmich in the box but didnt not claim nor any PSG player reacted.The refree felt..who cares..no claim..so did the VAR reckon at tandem. It was a penalty. Finally Neymar dribbled 2 defenders in front of goal ahead of Neuer and placed to Choupo Moting who could have tapped in easily but did not. My analysis says Manual Neurer defied all PSG goals and won the competition single handedly..and nothing else. Both teams could not deliver so well as they do normally. The deciding goal Comman scored was not extra ordinary at all. He was well placed and was free scoring goal, any player could score. Last but not the least...Neuer's master class sunk the PSG's TITANIC this time. Must appreciate this guy, friend or foe. Period.
BankoleLonge
493
Putting sentiments aside, can you guys agree with me that despite Neymar's efforts, his style of play majorly cost PSG the match last night. Remember he was busy dribbling in the Atalanta game and now has a personal achievement of equalling Messi's record of 16 successful dribbles in a single match. ABEG, WHO DRIBBLING HELP? I said it then that the introduction of Mbappe coupled with Atalanta coach's mistake of removing Duvan Zapata helped PSG win that match. As usual, yesterday again, Neymar who is fondly referred to as STAR BOY was just unreasonably and annoyingly holding unto the ball for too long a time when he could have quickly released a nice pass to his teammates. Sadly, it seems his poor play affected the ever-reliable and always direct Mbappe yesterday as he also wasted glorious chances he usually bury even with his eyes closed. Neymar really needs to grow up and he needs to do that very fast. He needs to start playing extremely matured football. At 28 years, we all thought he should have received the baton of dominance in world football from Messi and CR7. Sadly, I'm afraid he just might end his career only perceiving that coveted laurel of Balon d'Or without ever eating the savoury meal of lifting it as the best player on our planet. It was painful to see him cry profusely after the match. I hope that will be enough motivation to come back hungrier next season with an updated version of himself and his entire team to get to this same stage again and go one step further by lifting the trophy.
BankoleLonge
70
Although I wanted PSG to win, my only joy and consolation after the match was that CR7's 17goals record in a single Champs League season stands tall and intact despite LewanGOALski's 15goals beastly onslaught this season. Respect Lewandowski, but CR7 remains THE BOSS!