Champions L eague Qiu Qiu semifinals preview
Old acquaintances meet again
The semifinal clashes in this season’s Champions League have joined old foes who have run against one another many times in the European competitions.
Manchester United and Barcelona have played seven games in the UEFA’s competitions while Liverpool and Chelsea have met on six occasions, all of them in the last three years.
United and Barcelona have a very evenly balanced Qiu Qiuscore with two wins for each team and three draws. The Red Devils have been a bit more successful as they achieved a better score on two occasions, with one tie and one loss.
Their first encounter took place in the Cup Winners’ Cup quarterfinals in 1983/84, when United performed a sensational comeback against total favorites that Barcelona were at the time with Diego Maradona and Bernd Schuster in their ranks. The first leg on Camp Nou ended 2-0 for the Catalans, but a young Mark Hughes helped United towards an unlikely 3-0 at Old Trafford in the return match.
After surviving infamous episodes at Barcelona and Bayern, Hughes returned to Manchester in 1988, in time to lead play bazaar his old club to another unexpected triumph. With two goals the Welshman knocked down Cruyff’s Barcelona in the 1991 Cup Winners’ Cup finals.
Hristo Stoichkov and Romário gave Barça a wonderful 4-0 win over United in the 1995 Champions League group stage, which ultimately cost the English side a place in the quarterfinals.
Finally, in 1998/99 these two teams played two spectacular 3-3 draws in the group stage, but these scores favoured United, who went through together with Bayern, and in the end beat no other than Bayern in the finals at Camp Nou.
In the previous three seasons Liverpool topped Chelsea twice in Champions Cup semifinals and between those matches other two encounters ended with goalless draws. Amazingly, in the six games only three goals were scored, two for Liverpool and one in Chelsea’s favour. One of these goals, scored by Liverpool’s Luis García in 2005, was in fact illegal, which makes the two teams’ scoring output even more miserable.
Liverpool after “Croatian Cruyff”, Luka Modric
Dinamo Zagreb have received the first formal offer for their star midfielder
Luka Modric. The offer came from five time European champions, Liverpool, according to leading Croatian daily, Vecernji list.
The Croatian press recently published reports that Newcastle, Tottenham,
Chelsea and Arsenal all expressed interest in the 22-year-old midfield schemer,
but Liverpool seems to have made the first concrete move to seize Modric. The
player carries a 23 million euros price tag, but Dinamo may be willing to offload him for a mere 20 million.
Should the prospective buyers wait until the end of the European Championship, the price could rise in accordance to Modric’s performance.
The youngster bearing an uncanny physical resemblance to Johan Cruyff is a creative, goal-scoring midfielder who has won so far two League titles, one FA Cup and one Croatian supercup, and a third consecutive league championship is virtually secure, as well as a second successive place in the FA Cup finals.
“I am truly honoured if it is true that Liverpool want me. I watched them break Arsenal. That was a magnificent game. Only the biggest teams can play so well against an opponent as strong as Arsenal,” said Modric.
Porto celebrate title, but is it too early?
FC Porto have become the first team from a major European soccer league to have secured this season’s title…unless the Portuguese FA strip them of six points as punishment for attempted corruption.
Porto have already celebrated their third consecutive title after beating Estrela Amadora 6-0 last Sunday, but the celebrations could prove premature if the disciplinary procedure within the FA is finalized during the next couple of weeks. It seems that during the 2003/04 season Porto arranged for certain referees to direct two of their League games, which in the eyes of the FA constitutes an attempt at corruption.
Maximum punishment for this is the subtraction of six points, but Porto are certain to clinch the title even without these points seeing that their advantage over Benfica and Sporting is so huge.
The club’s chairman Pinto da Costa on the other hand faces a two year suspension.