#4 Hit: Alphonso Davies
Having to balance defence with attack and learn contrasting responsibilities as a key part of an ambitious Bayern side, Alphonso Davies again displayed why he's more than up for the task at Stamford Bridge.
He made a handful of important defensive interventions and while he lacks the defensive-minded brain to spot potential danger seconds before it occurs, his blistering acceleration more than makes up for that flaw. Mason Mount and his teammates found that out the hard way.
If you've watched the Bavarians this season, it's nothing new. He might switch off or not stick tight enough to his man all the time, but even with a five-minute head start, Davies effortlessly recovers almost every time while crucially maintaining the composure not to dive in and give away silly fouls near dangerous areas.
His frightening pace and deceptive levels of strength is why stats show he only had to make one clearance and tackle over the 90 minutes because for large periods of this encounter, he was either retaining possession (91.2% success, 62 total passes) alongside David Alaba and Thiago Alcantara or spreading his wings in the final third.
He won eight of ten duels contested, six successful dribbles and completed two key passes too - including the marauding run which resulted in Lewandowski's close-range finish. With a quartet of Alaba-Davies-Thiago-Gnabry down the left-hand side, Chelsea simply couldn't cope. It's no wonder they all flourished.