A thunderous first leg behind them, FC Barcelona Femení host Bayern Munich at Spotify Camp Nou on Sunday 3 May 2026 for the second leg of their UEFA Women’s Champions League semi-final. The teams drew 1-1 at the Allianz Arena on Saturday 25 April — and the result was the calmer half of the story. Bayern’s Franziska Kett scored the equaliser then was sent off; manager Jose Barcala was also red-carded for entering the pitch in protest. Barcelona will fancy their chances at home with the away goal advantage.
For Australian viewers there’s no direct Aussie thread on either team for this tie — both squads have been verified as having no current Australian player — but the football is must-watch: defending Liga F champions Barcelona vs Frauen-Bundesliga heavyweights Bayern, with a place in the final at the Ullevaal Stadion in Oslo on the line.
Match info for Australian fans
- Leg 1 (already played): Sat 25 April 2026, Allianz Arena, Munich. Bayern 1-1 Barcelona (record home WUCL crowd of 31,000)
- Leg 2: Sun 3 May 2026, Spotify Camp Nou, Barcelona, kick-off 16:30 CEST = 00:30 AEST Mon 4 May
- Broadcast in Australia: DAZN’s WUCL stream is the global rights holder for the Women’s Champions League
- WUCL final: Saturday 23 May 2026, Ullevaal Stadion, Oslo
- AU betting markets: Women’s UCL outrights are increasingly available across Australian betting sites
Leg 1 recap — Bayern fight back, then go down to ten
Barcelona’s Ewa Pajor opened the scoring in the 8th minute — her 8th UCL goal of the campaign, putting her firmly atop the WUCL scoring charts. Pajor’s clinical finishing has been the defining story of Barcelona’s run, and her early strike in Munich looked like setting up a comfortable away result.
Bayern levelled in the 69th minute through left-back Franziska Kett. The equaliser came against the run of play but was richly deserved given Bayern’s intensity in the second half. Within minutes, however, Kett had picked up a second yellow card for a hair-pulling foul on Salma Paralluelo — one of the more unusual red-card causes in WUCL history. Coach Jose Barcala then advanced onto the field of play to protest and received his own marching orders.
Bayern saw the rest of the match out with ten players and no head coach on the touchline to draw 1-1. Per UEFA’s leg 1 report, the result is a tactical victory for Bayern given the circumstances and an unusual setback for Barcelona at one of European football’s most fortified away venues.
FC Barcelona Femení — defending European champions
Barcelona Femení are the defending UEFA Women’s Champions League holders and have been the dominant force in European women’s club football. They:
- Won Liga F for the seventh consecutive season on 22 April 2026.
- Lifted the 2026 Supercopa de España Femenina on 24 January 2026.
- Lost the 2024-25 UWCL final 1-0 to Arsenal — the only domestic-or-European title they failed to retain.
Ewa Pajor is the engine of their attack. Add Aitana Bonmatí and Salma Paralluelo through midfield and front-line creativity and Barcelona have a roster that few in Europe can match player-for-player. The away goal at the Allianz means Barcelona only need to avoid a 0-0 home draw to progress (any score-draw advances Barca on away goals; a 1-1 forces extra time per current WUCL rules — note: UEFA scrapped the away-goals rule for 2021-22 onwards, so Barcelona need to win OR force aggregate parity into ET). At home, with their full squad, that’s their day.
Australian connection at Barcelona Femení: None confirmed. Caitlin Foord is at Arsenal, Sam Kerr is at Chelsea (out injured for the season), and Mary Fowler is at Manchester City. No Matilda has played for Barcelona in 2025-26.
Bayern Munich Women — Frauen-Bundesliga power, knockout grit
Bayern Frauen reached a record home crowd of 31,000 for leg 1 — a measure of how big the women’s game has become at the Allianz Arena. They sit at the top end of the Frauen-Bundesliga and arrived in the semis after a strong group-stage run. Coach Jose Barcala will need to navigate a touchline ban for leg 2 after his red card.
Without Kett through suspension, Bayern’s defensive shape in Barcelona will be the central question. Going forward, Bayern have produced enough threat throughout the campaign to keep this tie open — they need a goal at Camp Nou to force aggregate parity, or a multi-goal performance to win outright.
Australian connection at Bayern Frauen: No specific Australian player identified in the 2025-26 squad based on public roster sources. Bayern Frauen had 30 players with 17 foreign nationalities listed, none of which are flagged as Australian in publicly available data. For Aussie women’s-football punters, market liquidity is thinner than the men’s UCL — our AU bookmaker ranking flags which brands carry WUCL prices.
Key players to watch
- Ewa Pajor (Barcelona): 8 UCL goals this campaign. The leg 1 opener was vintage Pajor — first to the cross, no hesitation.
- Aitana Bonmatí (Barcelona): the orchestrator. Two-time Ballon d’Or Féminin winner. Her ability to dictate tempo at home is a structural advantage Barcelona always lean into.
- Salma Paralluelo (Barcelona): raw pace + finishing. Was the player fouled by Kett.
- Pernille Harder (Bayern): technical attacker. Capable of single-handedly shifting tight matches.
- Glódís Viggósdóttir (Bayern): Icelandic centre-back, the spine of Bayern’s defensive structure.
How Australians can follow live
The Women’s Champions League is broadcast globally on DAZN’s free WUCL stream, available in Australia. Leg 2 kicks off at 00:30 AEST Monday 4 May — late-night viewing for east-coast Aussies, with replays available on demand.
Odds: Bayern Munich Women vs Barcelona Femení
Leg 2 match-winner pricing in public odds feeds is thin (women’s match-by-match prices are less liquid than men’s), but the aggregate / advance markets, outright winner, and top scorer give a clear picture. Sources: Oddschecker WUCL odds + OddsPortal Champions League Women + Sportytrader WUCL odds + Opta UWCL supercomputer + UEFA WUCL top scorers.
1. Where to bet — AU sportsbooks for WUCL leg 2
Match-by-match women’s UCL pricing is thin across most AU sportsbooks — outright tournament markets, top-scorer and to-reach-final lines are more liquid than the leg-by-leg 1X2. Some brands open the market 24-48h before kick-off; others price it from the morning of the match.
For live Bayern vs Barcelona pricing as it opens, compare brands at our 2026 ranking of the best Australian betting sites — 15 AUD-friendly bookmakers reviewed for women’s market depth, fast payouts (PayID + crypto) and welcome offers.
2. To reach the final + UWCL outright winner (4 semi-finalists)
| Team | Outright UWCL (sample) | Status after leg 1 | To reach final (consensus) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Barcelona Femení | Favourite (~2.00-2.50 dec) | Drew 1-1 away with away-equivalent edge | ~70% — heavy favourite |
| Bayern Munich Women | ~13.00 | Drew 1-1 home, lose Kett to suspension | ~30% |
| OL Lyonnes | ~6.00 | Lost 2-1 away at Arsenal | ~25-30% (separate tie) |
| Arsenal Women (defending champion) | ~3.50-4.00 | Won 2-1 home over Lyon | ~70-75% (separate tie) |
Barcelona’s home advantage at Camp Nou + their domestic title-clinching form + Bayern’s Kett suspension and Barcala touchline ban combine to make Barcelona heavy favourites for this tie. Bayern’s path requires either a win outright or a 2-2-or-higher score-draw to take it to extra time — both are possible given their leg 1 character; neither is favoured by the market.
3. WUCL top scorer race
Per UEFA’s running stats and pre-leg-1 odds:
| Player | Goals | Club | Status |
|---|---|---|---|
| Ewa Pajor (Barcelona) | 8 | Barcelona Femení | In semi |
| Alessia Russo (Arsenal) | 8 | Arsenal Women | In semi |
| Pernille Harder (Bayern) | 7 | Bayern Frauen | In semi |
| Caitlin Foord (Arsenal) | 3 | Arsenal Women | In semi (Matilda) |
Pajor’s leg 1 strike against Bayern moved her into a tie at the top of the chart with Alessia Russo of Arsenal. With Bayern still alive, Harder sits one back at 7 — three goals across leg 2 + final could put her in the conversation. Caitlin Foord sits further down with 3 goals but remains an outside live name for Australian fans tracking the Boot. WUCL Top Scorer odds are slim across AU sportsbooks — only the larger brands price women’s tournament Boot markets.
18+ only. Please gamble responsibly. Odds are accurate at the time of publishing and subject to change before kick-off. AU users should always check responsible gambling resources at Gambling Help Online before placing any bet.
Compare the best AU sportsbooks for Women’s Champions League markets
The Women’s Champions League is increasingly available on Australian betting platforms — outrights, leg result, top scorer, and cards markets are all in play for the bigger ties. Different brands offer different prices on the same outcome, so it pays to compare.
Compare the best Australian betting sites for WUCL odds →
Our 2026 ranking covers 15 brands with welcome offers, AUD-friendly payment rails (PayID + crypto), and per-sport breakdowns including Women’s UCL outrights.
B-ALIS — Tactical analyst, australiafootball.com