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UEFA Champions League round of 16 by numbers

UEFA.com has the key figures from the second legs, including quarter-final records for FC Barcelona and FC Bayern München and more away-goals joy for AS Monaco FC.

Andrés Iniesta (left) and Javier Mascherano celebrate Barcelona's victory
Andrés Iniesta (left) and Javier Mascherano celebrate Barcelona's victory ©Getty Images

FC Barcelona's elimination of Manchester City FC means the Catalan club are in the UEFA Champions League quarter-finals for a record eighth successive season. They previously shared the mark of seven with Manchester United FC (1996/97–2002/03) and Real Madrid CF (1997/98–2003/04).

FC Bayern München's defeat of FC Shakhtar Donetsk also set a new competition record as the German team reached the quarter-finals for the 14th time. They previously shared that distinction with Manchester United, who have now also been joined on 13 last-eight appearances by Barcelona and Real Madrid.

• Five of the quarter-finalists from last season are involved again this term – Bayern, Barcelona, Real Madrid, Club Atlético de Madrid and Paris Saint-Germain. Of the other three qualifiers, Juventus last featured at the last-eight stage in 2012/13, FC Porto in 2008/09 and AS Monaco FC back in 2003/04.

• There are two quarter-finalists from France for just the third time, the preceding occasions being 2003/04 and 2009/10, while Spain lead the way again with three quarter-finalists for the third campaign in a row. England have no last-eight participants for the second time in three seasons.

Messi on Barcelona's win

• Iker Casillas is back level with Xavi Hernández on a record 146 UEFA Champions League outings. Real Madrid found parity with Barcelona in another category as Cristiano Ronaldo's double against FC Schalke 04 placed him alongside Lionel Messi (who failed to score at home to Manchester City) at the top of the competition's all-time goal charts with 75.

• Those strikes against Schalke were Ronaldo's 77th and 78th in UEFA club competition, surpassing the tally of Raúl González to set a new record.

• Bayern's 7-0 home success over Shakhtar matched the biggest win in a UEFA Champions League knockout phase game – one set by Bayern themselves when they beat FC Basel 1893 by the same scoreline at the same stage three seasons ago. It is the seventh 7-0 scoreline in the competition, group stage to final, the biggest victory margin remaining Liverpool FC's 8-0 triumph over Beşiktaş JK in 2007/08.

• Bayern's five second-half goals also equalled a knockout phase record, the only side to have previously achieved that feat being Barcelona en route to a 7-1 home win over Bayer 04 Leverkusen in 2011/12.

• Shakhtar defender Olexandr Kucher's sending-off in the 7-0 reverse at Bayern was the fastest in UEFA Champions League history. Clocked at three minutes 59 seconds, it took almost two minutes off the previous record – set by SV Werder Bremen's Valérien Ismaël against FC Internazionale Milano in September 2004.

• The Atlético-Leverkusen tie produced the competition's 14th penalty shoot-out. The game at the Estadio Vicente Calderón was also the 24th UEFA Champions League match to go to extra time, the 23rd having come a week earlier at Stamford Bridge.

• That Chelsea-Paris tie was the 25th in UEFA Champions League history to be decided on away goals but the very first to have that rule come into force after extra time.

• The away goals rule also favoured France over England a week later as Monaco eliminated Arsenal FC. It was the fourth time that Monaco have qualified via that tie-breaking method. Only Bayern, with five away-goals victories, have used the rule to their advantage more often.

• Arsenal, on the other hand, have now been knocked out three times on away goals – the same number as Manchester United. Only Internazionale, on four, have been more frequent victims.

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