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Across Europe the camera crews are getting ready, the pundits are out in force, and the rustle of money, lots of money, is in the air. The Champions League is back after its winter hibernation – and some of the most glamorous and evocative names in European football are going head to head over the next two nights to determine which half of the 16 survivors will be culled and which half will progress to the last eight.
The answers will be known in a fortnight’s time, after the second-legs, for from now on the Champions League is no longer a league but a straightforward, sudden-death knock-out competition, as it was originally conceived when launched as the European Champion Clubs’ Cup in the Autumn of 1955.
Real Madrid won the first tournament, and the next four, beating Reims (twice), Fiorentina, AC Milan and Eintracht Frankfurt in those first five finals that cemented both their reputation as a great club side and the popularity of the European Cup as a football event.
Real were successfully challenged, and the likes of Benfica, Milan, Internazionale, Ajax, Bayern Munich, Liverpool, Nottingham Forest, Juventus, Manchester United and Porto have all subsequently lifted the giant trophy on more than one occasion.
Of the last 16 in this season’s campaign, ten are previous winners: Real (9 wins), Milan (6), Bayern and Liverpool (4 each), Inter, Juventus, Manchester United and Porto (two each), Barcelona and PSV Eindhoven (one apiece). Of the six who have never won this most prestigious European club trophy, four (Arsenal, Bayer Leverkusen, Werder Bremen and Chelsea) have won other European competitions; only the two French representatives (Monaco and Lyon) are yet to lift silverware at international club level – though Monaco reached last season’s Champions League final.
A field of such pedigree almost guarantees some titanic clashes, and the draw for this second round did not disappoint. The stand-out ties are Real Madrid versus Juventus (which pits the peerless Zinedine Zidane against his former club), Barcelona against Chelsea (with both clubs well out in front of their respective domestic leagues, and Jose Mourinho relishing a return Catalonia to take on his former employers) and Manchester United at home to Milan (remarkably, a first meeting of these two giants in this competition, and one that should offer a fascinating contrast of styles).
Elsewhere, resurgent Bayern Munich host Arsenal, who are unbeaten in this year’s CL campaign without ever looking comfortable during it. Another Anglo-German tie sees Bayer Leverkusen travel to unpredictable Liverpool, weakened by suspension, injury and ineligibility. And Germany’s other representatives, Werder Bremen, host French champions Lyon. PSV Eindhoven entertain last year’s finalists Monaco, whose victors last May, FC Porto, are at home to Inter Milan.
Mouth-watering ties all; and while the first legs alone will not decide anything, they will establish advantages – both actual and psychological – that will prove influential in the final reckoning of this second round. They should also provide some gripping entertainment….




Jaszalcatraz wrote:Bayern Munich vs Arsenal :
3-1
Liverpool vs Bayer Leverkusen :
3-1








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