Tuesday, 17 December 2013

Liverpool Will Win the Champions League Before Manchester United

For far too long, Liverpool supporters have had to make do with merely the chase of the Champions League, rather than actually competing in it.


Britain's most successful club on the European stage, Liverpool most recently won ' big ears back in 2005, but for almost half a decade thereafter were one of the most consistent and feared clubs around the Continent.



Alex Livesey/Getty Images


With the likes of Xabi Alonso, Fernando Torres and Steven Gerrard at the top of their game, the Reds travelled under Rafa Benitez to the likes of the San , the Santiago and the Camp -and conquered them all.


Those times have passed, though, and now Liverpool have much work to do to take their place among those heady names once more.


In 2013-14, Brendan Rodgers has led his side to second place in the Premier League at almost the halfway stage; another 22 games at the same level of consistency and intensity, and perhaps the fanbase can finally rest easy in the knowledge that its side will be competing at the top level again next term.


Given the uncertainty, the upheaval and the inconsistency from the sides around them, Liverpool will not get a better chance to re-establish themselves as one of the Premier League's top four teams.


But if they do?


If Liverpool do finish in the top four, it's likely to be at the expense of perhaps their greatest rivals of recent times, Manchester United. While Liverpool have taken several seasons to overcome their malaise and begin to re-establish themselves as a contender for the top four, you suspect United will be able to absorb a season of (relative) failure rather more easily.



Alex Livesey/Getty Images


Success has been ingrained in the staff and the players of the club over a period of 20 years or more, and though United look fallible and beatable right now, it's likely they'll bounce back quickly.


However, Europe has not always been their friend, or indeed the scene where they perform to their utmost ability-whereas Liverpool have often performed above themselves in the competition in the relatively recent past.


Rodgers will have to restructure his squad a little if the Reds make it back into the Champions League, to allow the team to compete on two fronts, but the style of play Liverpool are imposing more and more often domestically is also one which will allow them success in Continental terms: pressing, possession and quick penetration.


Sitting second in the Premier League table, it's inevitable that questions will eventually arise about whether Liverpool can stunningly and suddenly be considered title challengers, especially if they pull another impressive win out of their next two away games and maintain their home form.


However, the league run is so long and so demanding that it is probable that Liverpool's squad will be caught short in that regard at some point, compared to the likes of Manchester City or even Arsenal.


Such depth is still some way off for Liverpool, and that will have to be redressed over time.


The Champions League, though, is a competition where a settled XI (or 15-16, more probably) can flourish, the manager can prepare for specific home and away challenges and, for Liverpool, playing at Anfield will be once more a major, major boost.


Even qualifying for the Champions League this season will be only a single, yet significant, step for Rodgers and Liverpool. They'll have to spend and improve the squad to cope with both competitions and make sure they do it all over again, qualifying next year, to keep that circle of improvement going.



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There's another point to consider in that the Reds' coefficient will have dropped so much over the past few seasons that they could face an extremely tough group first time back. Manchester City and Dortmund both took time to progress past that stage, though both are now considered among the favourites at the beginning of each season.


All things considered, it wouldn't be a surprise to see Liverpool repeating their feat of 2005 and winning the Champions League before they manage the Premier League.


And in terms of their rivals, it's perhaps more than conceivable that- if they go on to secure a top-four place this season-some distance further along the Rodgers plan than Manchester United are down the path with David , they'll get around to lifting their sixth European Cup before United get the chance to repeat their 2008 victory.


Barcelona and Manchester City to Meet


Manchester City was matched against Barcelona on Monday in the draw for the knockout round of the UEFA Champions League, with the first leg in England in February and the return game in Spain in March.


"It should be a beautiful game," said Manuel Pellegrini, the Chilean coach who was appointed to City last summer. Pellegrini's name was linked a year ago with Barcelona because that word - beautiful - is very close to his philosophy.


For Barcelona, the ball must flow. For Pellegrini, the ball must flow. The way both teams go at it, with attack favored over defense, should mean goals at both ends.


For Ferran Soriano and Txiki Begiristain, two former Barcelona officials recruited to shape Manchester City on and off the field, the intrigue runs deep.


They recruited Pellegrini, and the players, on behalf of City's Middle Eastern owners. And Begiristain, who played on Barcelona's left wing from 1988 to 1995 and is now City's director of soccer, said at the draw in Nyon, Switzerland: "It will be very tough, but I'm very confident because Pellegrini knows Barcelona perfectly. It's true, it could be better, but if you want to win the Champions League, you have to beat the biggest ones - and Barcelona is one of the biggest."


The teams' two Argentine stars, City's Sergio Agüero and Barcelona's Lionel Messi, are injured, but each should be recovered and well rested by February.


The draw produced a similar sensation of the familiar for other teams. Health permitting, Galatasaray's Didier Drogba will return to Stamford Bridge, where he led Chelsea's attack for eight years, to face one of his former coaches there, José Mourinho.


Two seasons ago, Drogba scored the tying goal for Chelsea against Bayern Munich in the final of this tournament, and then scored the penalty kick to win the cup in his last game for Chelsea.


After a brief side trip into Chinese soccer, he moved to Turkey. He has been joined there by Wesley Sneijder, who in 2010 had helped Inter Milan (then coached by Mourinho) win the 2010 Champions League final.


They, too, will meet again, and this is the pattern of the tournament.


Because so few clubs can afford to be real contenders, and because players and managers move on whether they win or lose, their paths are certain to cross.


Bayern Munich overcame its losses to Drogba's Chelsea and Sneijder's Inter to win the trophy last May. Along the way, it met Arsenal. Bayern won handsomely in London but, with qualification assured for the German team and impossible for Arsenal, it lost the return leg in Munich.


The clubs were drawn as adversaries Monday. Bayern is the favorite to win again, but nobody rules out Arsenal at any time, against any foe.


The other matchups drawn Monday were Olympiakos versus Manchester United; A.C. Milan versus Atlético Madrid; Bayer Leverkusen versus Paris St.-Germain; Schalke versus Real Madrid; and Zenit St. Petersburg versus Borussia Dortmund.


Borussia Dortmund will face a tricky task in the Champions League last 16 ...

Champions League | 16.12.2013 12:27:50


Nyon - Last season's UEFA Champions League runners-up Borussia Dortmund face a tough test at the last 16 stage in the form of FC Zenit.

The St. Petersburg based outfit qualified from Group G as runners-up behind Club Atlético de Madrid and Dortmund will have to travel to the Northern Russian city in the midst of winter.bundesliga.com summarises the reaction from the Signal Iduna Park...Hans-Joachim Watzke (CEO): "Zenit have got a high-quality squad and are joint top of the Russian league at the moment. We qualified from perhaps the toughest group as winners with twelve points, though. Staying in the Champions League until this stage was our aim and we've met that. We'd have been pleased with any opponent at this stage to be honest."Michael Zorc (Sporting Director): "Zenit have developed into one of the top Russian teams over the last few years and posses high-quality stars like Hulk and Axel Witsel. It's similar to our match-up against Shakhtar Donetsk at this stage last year because the Russian league restarts on 8 March. We're obviously hoping for the weather conditions to be fairly normal by that stage."Jürgen Klopp (Head coach): "I've never been to Russia before and I'm really looking forward to the games. We'll prepare very well. Everyone at this stage is a good side and I certainly don't want to judge Zenit - we've got two months to go into detail.": "It certainly could have been a worse draw for us. The conditions will be tough there, though. I think we've got a really good chance of getting to the next round. I'd say it's a minor advantage to be playing away first - and we're just really looking forward to it.": "I really wanted to play AC Milan! Zenit's a really interesting draw, though. They've got Hulk - a really strong opponent and we'll have to take the game by the scruff of the neck if we want to qualify. They're a first-class side, regardless of how their group stage went"


Everything about the Champions League >


UEFA Champions League Round of 16 Predictions


Barcelona's Lionel Messi points after he scored against AC Milan during a group H Champions League soccer match ...


COMMENTARY I Arsenal was doomed to a bad Round of 16 match-up. A draw in Naples would have been good enough to avoid Europe's ultra-elite, but Napoli beat the Gunners 2-0 on the final match day of group play, and the only Round of 16 options for the North London club were Atletico Madrid, Bayern Munich, Barcelona, Real Madrid and Paris Saint-Germain.

As luck had it, Arsenal drew Bayern Munich, the defending European champion.


Bayern collected 15 points in the group stages. Save for three dropped points against Manchester City on the final match day, Bayern was blemish-free entering the knockout rounds. Without a doubt, the German powerhouse was the least desirable draw in the Round of 16.


With both Atletico Madrid and Real Madrid collecting 16 of the possible 18 group stage points, both Madrid-based clubs boasted the best records in group play.


Of the two Madrids, Atletico is considered to be the more dangerous side at the moment due to a slight lead in the domestic league and head-to-head wins in the last two Madrid derbies. Arguably, Atletico was even a tougher draw than Barcelona, but two months before the return of the Champions League affords enough time for form to slide. At the moment, however, not many consider AC Milan lucky or give the only Italian side remaining in the competition much of a chance to progress.


Bayern will best Arsenal, Atleti will ax Milan, and Real will roll through Schalke.


Paris Saint-Germain, or PSG, also packs a punch in the knock out rounds. Zlatan Ibrahimovic and Thiago Silva look to avenge last year's heartbreak elimination in the quarterfinals of the competition.


Against Barcelona, PSG drew 2-2 in Paris and 1-1 in Spain. Barcelona advanced on the away goals tie-breaker, and PSG was eliminated despite not suffering a loss in either leg. This time around, the French champions have added Edinson Cavani to the superstar strike force with the hopes that his quality will knock in that necessary extra European goal.


Although Bayern Leverkusen is second in Germany and playing well, PSG's quality should overcome its German opposition.


With four quarter-finalists selected, eight teams fight for the final four spots.


By not being allowed to face any British sides this early in the competition, Manchester United was guaranteed to miss out on the two toughest group runner-ups, Arsenal and Man City.


Galatasaray, Schalke and Olympiakos represented three group runner-ups that all group winners were hoping to draw. The Turks lost three of their six group stage matches and somehow still managed to qualify for the knockout rounds. The Germans and Greeks both lost twice in the group stages, and all three sides lost on home soil during group play.


As luck had it, Manchester United drew Olympiakos. Although United is in no state to take anything for granted, manager David Moyes probably clicked his heel in delight when United's draw was announced. Even this lackluster group of Red Devils should manage an appearance in the quarterfinals.


Chelsea stammered through a dark spell in November. Once the smoke cleared, though, Jose Mourinho's men still finished top of their group and were within striking distance of the top of the Premier League. Drawing Didier Drogba's Galatasaray will produce plenty of story lines, and the fan atmosphere at Stamford Bridge should be electric for this tie.


Ultimately, Mourinho's experience in the competition provides the Blues enough of an edge to advance.


Last season's runner-up, Borussia Dortmund topped the "group of death." With a disintegrating backline, Dortmund will welcome the two-month gap before the Champions League returns for the knockout rounds. Dortmund lucked out by drawing arguably the weakest side remaining in the competition, Zenit St. Petersburg.


With only one win in group stage play, Zenit was extremely fortunate to advance. The Russian club collected only six points in six group stage matches. Without being too bold, one would expect Dortmund to defeat the Russians.


With seven quarter-finalists chosen, only one spot remains. However, the final tie of the Round of 16 is the most intriguing and toughest to predict: Manchester City and Barcelona.


After dominating Arsenal in domestic play and coming from behind in Munich on the final match day of group play, Manchester City was not on anyone's Christmas wish list. As luck would have it, Barcelona drew the Citizens in a mouth-watering fixture. Picking between the quality of Barcelona and Man City is a near impossibility, and the eye-watering fact that this match is two months away is painful to acknowledge.


When pushed to make a prediction, it is always difficult to bet against Lionel Messi. Neymar is progressing and growing in Messi's absence, but ultimately, the edge is Messi.


The first legs of the UEFA Champions League Round of 16 will be held at the end February, and the deciding second legs will be in early March.


Shahan Ahmed is a Yahoo Contributor in Sports and has covered the English Premier League, Spanish La Liga, Italian Serie A, German Bundesliga, and UEFA Champions League for the past four seasons. You can follow Shahan on Twitter @perfectpass and @ShahanLA

Monday, 16 December 2013

Barcelona Draws Manchester City In Champions League Round Of 16 Showdown


Barcelona's Neymar celebrates after scoring his side's fourth goal during a Group H Champions League soccer match between FC Barcelona and Celtic FC at the Camp Nou stadium in Barcelona, Spain, Wednesday Dec. 11, 2013.(AP Photo/Emilio Morenatti)AP2013


Barcelona was drawn Monday to face Manchester City and its strong contingent of Spanish internationals in the last 16 of the Champions League.


The Spanish champions will first travel to Etihad Stadium, where Manchester United and Arsenal have already been routed in the Premier League this season.


Chelsea will have an emotional reunion with former striker Didier Drogba when it plays Galatasaray, and defending champion Bayern Munich was paired with Arsenal in the last 16 for the second straight year.


Both Man City and Arsenal ended up with tough draws after finishing second in their Champions League groups.


"No one of the (seeded teams) wanted to find Man City or Arsenal," said former Barcelona playmaker Luis Figo, who helped conduct the draw. "It's bad luck for Barcelona and Bayern Munich."


Also, nine-time winner Real Madrid will face Schalke, Manchester United got a favorable draw against Olympiakos, Borussia Dortmund will face Zenit St. Petersburg, AC Milan will play Atletico Madrid, and Paris Saint-Germain will meet Bayer Leverkusen.


The first legs will be played Feb. 18-19 and 25-26, with the return matches set for March 11-12 and 18-19.


Man City opens the program against Barcelona at home, where the team is scoring on average more than four goals a game.


"(Manuel) Pelligrini is a very, very good coach," Barcelona director Amador Bernabeu said. "We know from his coaching in Spain that when we play him we have problems all the time."


Manchester City's director of soccer is Txiki Begiristain, who joined the English club from Barcelona.


"If you want to be champions you need to beat the best ones," Begiristain said. "We have to score in away games in the Champions League."


Chelsea coach Jose Mourinho said last week that Drogba should return to Stamford Bridge. The Ivory Coast forward's last kick as a Chelsea player was the penalty shootout winner in the 2012 final against Bayern.


The German champions have a re-match with Arsenal, which won 2-0 in Munich last season after Bayern had cruised to a 3-1 win in London.


"The toughest opponent we could get," Bayern defender Jerome Boateng said. "They are going to be highly motivated after last year."


Madrid continues its quest for a record 10th European title with a relatively low-key pairing against Schalke.


"On paper, yes, but that is only theory," Real Madrid director Emilio Butragueno said. "Football is unpredictable. It's a German team with a great mentality."


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Champions League: Arsenal


NYON, Switzerland (AP) -- Barcelona was drawn Monday to face Manchester City and its strong contingent of Spanish internationals in the last 16 of the Champions League.


The Spanish champions will first travel to Etihad Stadium, where Manchester United and Arsenal have already been routed in the Premier League this season.


Chelsea will have an emotional reunion with former striker Didier Drogba when it plays Galatasaray, and defending champion Bayern Munich was paired with Arsenal in the last 16 for the second straight year.


Both Man City and Arsenal ended up with tough draws after finishing second in their Champions League groups.


"No one of the (seeded teams) wanted to find Man City or Arsenal," said former Barcelona playmaker Luis Figo, who helped conduct the draw. "It's bad luck for Barcelona and Bayern Munich."


Also, nine-time winner Real Madrid will face Schalke, Manchester United got a favorable draw against Olympiakos, Borussia Dortmund will face Zenit St. Petersburg, AC Milan will play Atletico Madrid, and Paris Saint-Germain will meet Bayer Leverkusen.


The first legs will be played Feb. 18-19 and 25-26, with the return matches set for March 11-12 and 18-19.


WILSON: Storylines galore in CL round of 16


Man City opens the program against Barcelona at home, where the team is scoring on average more than four goals a game.


"(Manuel) Pelligrini is a very, very good coach," former Barcelona vice president Amador Bernabeu said. "We know from his coaching in Spain that when we play him we have problems all the time."


Manchester City's director of soccer is Txiki Begiristain, who joined the English club from Barcelona.


"If you want to be champions you need to beat the best ones," Begiristain said. "We have to score in away games in the Champions League."


Chelsea coach Jose Mourinho said last week that Drogba should return to Stamford Bridge. The Ivory Coast forward's last kick as a Chelsea player was the penalty shootout winner in the 2012 final against Bayern.


The German champions have a rematch with Arsenal, which won 2-0 in Munich last season after Bayern had cruised to a 3-1 win in London.


"The toughest opponent we could get," Bayern defender Jerome Boateng said. "They are going to be highly motivated after last year."


Madrid continues its quest for a record 10th European title with a relatively low-key pairing against Schalke.


"On paper, yes, but that is only theory," Real Madrid director Emilio Butragueno said. "Football is unpredictable. It's a German team with a great mentality."


Copyright 2013 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.


Champions League draw: Manchester City faces Barcelona, Bayern takes on ...


(CNN) -- It was the first tie out -- and it's the tie everyone is talking about.


Manchester City will face Barcelona in the last 16 of the European Champions League in what promises to be one of the most eagerly awaited contests in this year's competition.


City, which has been in irrepressible form at home in the English Premier League and won at defending champion Bayern Munich last week, had failed to reach this stage in each of its previous two attempts.


Now it will face a Barcelona side which has won the tournament on four occasions -- but director of football Txixi Beguiristain says City will not fear his former club.


"I think it will be a great match," he told City's official website.


"Ours is a team with a lot of confidence especially after winning against the champions in Munich -- that will give us a lot of confidence. Not just at home but away as well.


"We have to be confident because of the way we are playing. We are showing that we can score in all matches. This is important in the Champions League.


"We scored in Plzen, in Moscow, in Munich -- it should give us confidence to play against a team who have been champions many times.


"Our manager knows Barcelona perfectly because he managed in Spain for a long time. In this sense, we are confident.


"I think the text messages will be flying between Manchester and Barcelona now between Sergio and Lionel! If you want to win the Champions League you have to beat the biggest teams, Barcelona are one of the biggest teams."


City has spent the past few years modeling itself on Barcelona -- now it is aiming to supplant it in Europe's top club competition.


Under the management of Manuel Pellegrini, the former Villarreal and Real Madrid coach, City has progressed to the last 16 of the competition for the very first time.


Backed by the riches of Sheikh Mansour, the deputy prime minister of the United Arab Emirates, City has used its financial muscle to lure those who enjoyed great success at Barcelona.


Barcelona, great draw! Any footballer should want play those games. First things first, tomorrow big game v Leicester! #MCFC


- Vincent Kompany (@VincentKompany) December 16, 2013

Beguiristain worked at the Camp Nou from 2003-10 before joining City to work alongside Ferran Soriano, who joined following a spell with the Catalan club as vice-president.


Only last January, Barcelona president Sandro Rosell accused City of trying to poach players and coaching staff from the Camp Nou.

One former Barcelona player who is expected to star for City is Yaya Toure -- the midfielder who left for England in July 2010.


The contest will also see City's Argentine striker Sergio Aguero, who will hope to have recovered from a calf injury after being ruled out for up to a month, go up against international teammate Lionel Messi.


And while neutrals will be salivating at the prospect of the two heavyweight giants going head-to-head, Barcelona coach Gerardo Martino says both teams would have rather avoided one another.


"City will not have wanted to play against Barcelona either," he told reporters.


"What we need to concentrate on is being in good shape when February comes around. We need to have a high level and sustain it.


"They are scoring goals with ease so we are not going to discover them now. We want to play well in the tie and obviously win it."


Elsewhere, defending champion Bayern Munich will take on Arsenal in a repeat of last season's clash at the same stage.


Bayern triumphed 3-1 in north London before squeaking through to the quarterfinals on away goals following a 2-0 home defeat.


Arsenal, which sits top of the Premier League despite Saturday's 6-3 defeat at Manchester City, will provide a tough test for Bayern, according to chief executive Karl-Heinz Rummenigge.


"They are the leaders in the Premier League and so we have been warned," he told reporters.



"A few months ago we lost to them in Munich. They are a very tough team."


In 2012, Didier Drogba struck the winning penalty as Chelsea pulled off an unlikely Champions League triumph by defeating Bayern in the final in Munich.


Now at Galatasaray, Drogba will return to Stamford Bridge to face his beloved Blues in what promises to be an emotional reunion.


Chelsea manager Jose Mourinho had predicted that his side would be paired with the Turkish club, which defeated Juventus in a dramatic final group game to seal its place in the last 16.


Real Madrid has been paired with German side Schalke, with Carlo Ancelotti's men still harboring ambitions of winning "La Decima" -- the club's 10th title.


Real, which sits third in Spain, has not won the competition since 2002 and was beaten by Borussia Dortmund in last year's semifinal.


Dortmund, which was beaten in last season's final by Bayern, will travel to Russia to take on Zenit St Petersburg in the first leg.


Manchester United will be favorite to progress to the quarterfinal stage after being paired with Greek side Olympiakos.


David Moyes' side, which finished top of its group despite unconvincing domestic form, last won the competition in 2008.


Seven-time winner AC Milan has been handed a testing tie against Atletico Madrid.


Milan, which has endured a dismal season in Serie A, will face an Atletico side sitting level on points with Barcelona at the top of La Liga.


Elsewhere, French champion Paris Saint-Germain will travel to Bayer Leverkusen for its first leg tie.


Last-16 draw:

Manchester City vs Barcelona


Olympiakos vs Manchester United


AC Milan vs Atletico Madrid


Bayer Leverkusen vs Paris Saint-Germain


Galatasaray vs Chelsea


Schalke vs Real Madrid


Zenit vs Borussia Dortmund


Arsenal vs Bayern Munich


Ties to be played February 18/19 and 25/26 with second leg games on 11, 12, 18, 19 March.