The Brazilian capitalised on a
defensive error to drive forward and slot in the bottom corner in the 61st
minute, notching his 25th goal of the season and ninth in the Champions League
campaign.
Raphinha also came to the rescue for five-time
winners Barca in January when the two sides met in the league group phase,
scoring a 96th-minute winner in a nine-goal thriller.
Meeting again at this knockout stage of the
competition, Barcelona had to play with 10 men from the 22nd minute after
teenager Pau Cubarsi brought down Benfica striker Vangelis Pavlidis on the edge
of the penalty box but, as the last man, received a straight red card.
The Portuguese hosts thought they had a
penalty in the 82nd minute after the otherwise faultless Wojciech Szczesny
brought down Andrea Belotti, but the spot-kick was overturned for offside in
the build-up.
Barcelona held on to take a narrow lead to the
Camp Nou for the second leg on Tuesday 11 March (17:45 GMT).
Szczesny's redemption after Lisbon horror show
It was a frantic, dramatic
encounter back in January when the two sides last met in Lisbon and Raphinha's
winner settled the outcome at 5-4.
The opening period showed promise of a similar
enthralling tie as Kerem Akturkoglu's drilled shot forced Szczesny into an
early save, before Dani Olmo went close at the other end.
Anatoliy Trubin made a brilliant triple save,
denying both Robert Lewandowski and Lamine Yamal before catching the final
attempt.
But Benfica had chances up against Barcelona's
high defensive line, which ultimately resulted in Cubarsi's last-ditch
challenge on Pavlidis and the 18-year-old's early dismissal.
The red card turned the tie into a scrappy
affair with neither side able to make their shots count as the first half
concluded under a cloud of smoke from the home fans' pyrotechnics.
Pavlidis, who scored a hat-trick in that 5-4
defeat and has scored 10 goals in his last seven appearances in all
competitions, should have put Benfica ahead early in the second half.
But he scooped over the bar from Alvaro
Carreras' cutback, before Barca keeper Szczesny made a brilliant reaction save
moments later to deny the Greek forward.
The home side were dominant in the second half
and recorded 15 shots with five on target, but it was forward Raphinha who
struck the decisive blow to give Barcelona a slim advantage with their only
second-half effort on target.
In stark contrast to his horror show in
January, when he was responsible for two of Benfica's four goals, Szczesny made
another excellent save from Renato Sanches during the hosts' final flurry of
corners. The Polish stopper was fortunate the late penalty award was overturned
by the offside decision and it left Benfica with a tough task in the return.
For La Liga leaders Barca, an assured and
professional performance extended their unbeaten run to 16 in all competitions.
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