When the clock ticked up in 90 minutes at Gamla Ullevi, the national arena for the Swedish women's national team, Barcelona players cheered from the bench and waved their club jerseys.

After two minutes of extra time, the referee blew off and there was a great Spanish cheer with rushing players hugging each other.

Back Jonna Andersson and goalkeeper Zecira Musovic were benched, they stayed there the whole match, when dreams were shattered already in the first half.

Even then, Barcelona had killed the match 4-0.

The second half was as exciting as trying to see artificial turf grow.

Barcelona's entourage kept going well and there was still a certain atmosphere in the arena that was closed to the public.

It was a tough weekend for the London club.

Yesterday, the men's team lost the FA Cup final against Leicester 1-0.

Already after 26 seconds, Barcelona's Lieke Martens hit the crossbar and things went awry in the Chelsea defense.

Francesca Kirby unlucky shot by teammate Melaine Leupolz in an attempt to clear and the ball went in an arc over his own goalkeeper Ann-Katrin Berger.

That goal was scored after 34 seconds and the Swedish team Chelsea got off to a nightmare start.

Marta fastest final shooter

However, it was not the fastest goal of the Champions League final.

Marta did it for Umeå after twelve seconds against Frankfurt in the first match in 2008.

Before a quarter was played, Barcelona had increased to 2-0.

Leupolz was again involved and hooked Hermoso at the moment of the shot.

After a careful VAR check, the penalty that Alexia certainly sent in goal after Berger went into the wrong corner, the right, was approved.

Despite the lengthy VAR review, several experts questioned the penalties.

A few minutes later, it was time again for a Barcelona goal.

Aitana Bonmatí won a counterattack, tore herself free and scored 3-0.

Ten minutes before the break, windy Lieke Martens came through on the left wing.

The Dutchwoman angled the ball down at the short line and Caroline Graham Hansen could easily push in 4-0 from close range.

4-0 is the biggest winning margin in a Champions League final since the one-match format was introduced in 2010.