With some fresh faces setting sights on a European record, we look at the youngest scorers in Champions League history.


  1. Ansu Fati (Barcelona vs Inter, 10 December 2019) – 17 years, 40 days old
  2. George Ilenikhena (Royal Antwerp vs Barcelona, 13 December 2023) – 17 years, 119 days old
  3. Antonio Nusa (Club Brugge vs Porto, 13 September 2022) – 17 years, 149 days old
  4. Peter Ofori-Quaye (Olympiacos vs Rosenborg, 1 October 1997) – 17 years, 194 days old
  5. Mateo Kovacic (Dinamo Zagreb vs Lyon, 7 December 2011) – 17 years, 215 days old
  6. Cesc Fàbregas (Arsenal vs Rosenborg, 7 December 2004) – 17 years, 217 days old
  7. Bojan (Barcelona vs Schalke, 1 April 2008) – 17 years, 217 days old
  8. Martin Klein (Sparta Prague vs Panathinaikos, 27 February 2002) – 17 years, 240 days old
  9. Breel Embolo (Basel vs Ludogorets, 4 November 2014) – 17 years, 263 days old
  10. Warren Zaïre-Emery (Paris Saint-Germain vs Borussia Dortmund, 13 December 2023) – 17 years, 280 days old
  11. Jude Bellingham (Borussia Dortmund vs Manchester City, 14 April 2021) – 17 years, 289 days old)
  12. Aaron Ramsey (Arsenal vs Fenerbahçe, 21 October 2008) – 17 years, 300 days old
  13. Pedri (Barcelona vs Ferencváros, 20 October 2020) – 17 years, 330 days old
  14. Marc Guiu (Barcelona vs Royal Antwerp, 13 December 2023) – 17 years, 343 days old
  15. Rico Lewis (Manchester City vs Sevilla, 2 November 2022) – 17 years, 346 days old
  16. Karim Benzema (Lyon vs Rosenborg, 6 December 2005) – 17 years, 352 days old
  17. Roony Bardghji (FC Copenhagen vs Manchester United, 8 November 2023) – 17 years, 358 days old
  18. Jamal Musiala (Bayern Munich vs Lazio, 23 February 2021) – 17 years, 363 days old
  19. Alex Oxlade-Chamberlain (Arsenal vs Olympiacos, 28 September 2011) – 18 years, 44 days old
  20. Marian Ognyanov (Levski Sofia vs Chelsea, 27 September 2006) – 18 years, 59 days old

Fati enjoyed a remarkable 2019-20 season, breaking into Barcelona’s first-team as a 16-year-old before becoming the youngest goalscorer in Champions League history a little over a month after turning 17.

Unfortunately, his career has been blighted by injuries since showing incredible promise during the early months of his time in Barcelona’s senior team.

When making his mark in the Champions League, he needed roughly a minute and a half to stamp his authority on proceedings after coming off the bench in San Siro against Inter back in December 2019. He played a give-and-go on the edge of the box before slamming into the bottom-left corner from 20 yards.

In doing so, he secured Barcelona a 2-1 win and broke a record that stood for 22 years.

Ansu Fati celebrates first Champions League goal

Scoring a winner against Barcelona in added time is something most footballers can only dream of, but it became reality for 17-year-old George Ilenikhena in December 2023. It secured a famous win for Antwerp, with his strike coming just 86 seconds after another 17-year-old, Marc Guiu, thought he’d rescued a point for the Spanish giants.

Ilenikhena – who was born in Lagos, Nigeria but has played youth football for the French national teams – became the youngest French player to score in the UCL, overtaking PSG’s Warren Zaïre-Emery, who had only set a new record half an hour prior to Ilenikhena’s strike.

It was a memorable night for Antwerp’s youngsters. While he didn’t make this list, Arthur Vermeeren also became the youngest Belgian player to score a goal in the UEFA Champions League (18y 309d) when he netted the first goal of the match.

Porto’s defence was caught high and Antonio Nusa exploited the space in behind, latching on to a through ball and showing great composure to roll it home in an emphatic 4-0 win in Portugal early in the 2022-23 Champions League season.

It may not have earned him the record, but there aren’t many players who can say they’ve ever been the second-youngest goalscorer in Champions League history.

Now 19, Nusa has continued to make strides in his fledgling career, earning a move to RB Leipzig in 2024.

It may have been a consolation in a 5-1 hammering, but Peter Ofori-Quaye’s turn and finish in October 1997 ensured he’d hold the record for youngest Champions League scorer for more than two decades.

Despite the early promise suggested by such a feat, Ofori-Quaye never quite hit the heights people might’ve expected back in 1997. He remained at Olympiacos until 2003 but only turned out for modest clubs thereafter.

Dinamo Zagreb is one of Europe’s best talent factories, and Mateo Kovacic ranks among their greatest ever academy products.

He’s obviously gone on to enjoy a fine career at the top of the game, winning the Champions League four times: on three occasions with Real Madrid, and once with Chelsea.

But it all began with this close-range finish in 2011 – otherwise it was a match to forget for Dinamo, who lost 7-1.

Mateo Kovacic against Lyon for Dinamo Zagreb

Fábregas was an Arsenal regular just a few months after turning 17; it’s a huge achievement in any era, but the fact he established himself in a team that had gone the previous season unbeaten gave his accomplishment real gravity.

And even in those early months, he looked set to be a bona fide star. His first Champions League goal was a fine example of the quality he possessed, particularly as more of an attacking midfielder in his youth.

Robert Pires knocked down a lofted pass, putting it into Fábregas’ path in the box, and the Spaniard took a touch before impudently flicking it over a defender and firing the bouncing ball beyond the helpless goalkeeper.

Despite his presence at several of Europe’s biggest clubs, Fábregas never won the Champions League, going closest in 2005-06 when part of the Arsenal side that lost 2-1 to his former – and future – club Barcelona.

Bojan was immensely well thought of at Barcelona as he rose through the ranks of La Masia and he even became the club’s youngest ever La Liga goalscorer – at the time – (17 years, 19 days) in September 2007, breaking a record held by Lionel Messi.

That debut season appeared to promise much for the young forward as he scored 12 goals in all competitions, including one in the Champions League that ensured he was the club’s youngest scorer in the competition for over a decade.

He won’t have scored many easier throughout his career either, as Thierry Henry collected Andrés Iniesta’s pass and tested Manuel Neuer, before flicking the follow-up to Bojan for a tap-in.

Bojan went on to win it all for Barcelona, but individually his career never quite hit the dizzying heights many first predicted, retiring in 2023 at the age of 32 after spells with Vissel Kobe, Montreal Impact and Stoke City.

Bojan Krkic at Barcelona in the Champions League

You’ll be forgiven for not remembering this one; that’s the goal or the player, with all due respect to Klein. The centre-back’s goal was a late consolation header in a defeat that Sparta were seemingly lucky was so slender.

Klein’s impact on the Sparta first team was otherwise minimal, going on to spend the biggest chunk of his career at Teplice. He also represented clubs in Hungary, Kazakhstan, Malta and Turkey.

Embolo enjoyed something of a breakout season in 2014-15, scoring 17 goals in 40 matches across all competitions for Basel, including his first in Europe during a comfortable win over Bulgaria’s Ludogorets.

A fine first touch on the chest – plus an excellent display of strength – from Fabian Frei’s lofted through ball put Embolo in on goal, and although his finish may not have had the cleanest of connections, he got enough on it to direct home. Embolo also got himself an assist for Shkelzen Gashi’s goal later on.

He’s since gone on to carve out a decent career in the top European leagues, playing for Schalke, Borussia Mönchengladbach and now Monaco.

Exciting youngster Warren Zaïre-Emery scored the first of what surely will be many UEFA Champions League goals in his career, with a crucial equaliser in PSG’s final 2023-24 group game versus Borussia Dortmund in Germany. His strike in December 2023 made sure of PSG’s progression to the last 16.

His goal also meant he became the youngest scorer for PSG in the UEFA Champions League, breaking Kylian Mbappé’s record (18 years, 266 days) from September 2017 vs Celtic. Zaïre-Emery was 72 days younger than Karim Benzema when he scored his first UCL goal (17y 352d) for Lyon in December 2005, and set a new record for the youngest Frenchman to score in the UCL, only for that record to be broken by Antwerp’s George Ilenikhena 30 minutes later.

English football fans were already well aware of Bellingham’s abilities; after all, by the time he fittingly scored his first Champions League goal against English opposition, he’d already been capped at senior level by England, with only Wayne Rooney and Theo Walcott doing so at a younger age.

His first goal in the Champions League was further proof at the time – if it was needed – of Bellingham’s prodigious talent, as he pounced on a blocked shot in the box and guided into the top-left corner of Ederson’s net after showing great composure to set himself under pressure.

That gave Dortmund a 1-0 lead in Germany in the second leg of the tie, levelling the aggregate score at 2-2, though City went on to win 2-1 on the day and progress.

Nevertheless, Bellingham made his mark and has continued to raise the bar ever since, now doing so at Real Madrid.

Ramsey’s first goal in an Arsenal shirt came in an entertaining Champions League victory in Istanbul, scoring the Gunners’ fifth right near the end.

The Welshman found a pocket of space on the edge of the box and, after being found by Emmanuel Eboué, he took a touch and let fly, his effort going in off the post.

Of course, it didn’t make him Arsenal’s youngest ever Champions League scorer, as Fábregas’ strike against Rosenborg came when the Spaniard was 83 days younger, but Ramsey’s goal was the first moment of real note in a largely positive 11-year spell in north London.

Who Could Be Next?

Well, during the 2023-24 season, everything seemed set up for Lamine Yamal to break Fati’s record. The Barcelona phenomenon enjoyed an astonishing breakthrough season as a 16-year-old and need only score once in Europe’s top competition to comfortably set a new record.

However, and as surprising as this seems considering how good he was at Euro 2024, Yamal didn’t manage to net in the 2023-24 Champions League season, meaning he’s missed his opportunity to set a new record.

Lamine Yamal in the Champions League for Barcelona

On 22 August 2024 he reached the exact age Fati was (17 years, 40 days old) when he scored his first UCL goal – of course that was before the draw for the 2024-25 edition had even taken place.

Yamal still has a few months to slip into second place ahead of Ilenikhena, however, while there are likely a few other teenagers hoping to write their names in the history books in 2024-25.


Enjoy this? Subscribe to our football newsletter to receive exclusive weekly content. You should also follow our social accounts over on XInstagramTikTok and Facebook.