Champions League: City take on Barcelona, looking to defy history

The English champions have never overturned a 2-1 first leg deficit

The English champions were outplayed at home for the second season in a row at this stage of the competition three weeks ago and could have been even further behind travelling to the Catalan capital had Joe Hart not saved a Lionel Messi penalty in stoppage time at the Etihad. PHOTO: REUTERS

BARCELONA/DORTMUND:
Manchester City need to rewrite history if they are to reach the last-eight of the Champions League for the first time ever by overturning a 2-1 first leg deficit when they travel to an in-form Barcelona side on Wednesday.

The English champions were outplayed at home for the second season in a row at this stage of the competition three weeks ago and could have been even further behind travelling to the Catalan capital had Joe Hart not saved a Lionel Messi penalty in stoppage time at the Etihad.

Both sides also come into the game at the Camp Nou in contrasting form domestically. City's title challenge appears all but over after a shock 1-0 defeat at relegation threatened Burnley on Saturday, whilst Barca have soared to the top of La Liga in recent weeks on a run of 16 victories in their last 17 games.

Yet, City boss Manuel Pellegrini is insistent that his job is not on the line should elimination at the Camp Nou all but seal a trophy-less season. "I have no sense whatsoever that my job's at risk," the Chilean told The Guardian. "The Champions League is very important but it can't distort everything."

Pellegrini was criticised by many for his over-eager attacking intent in the first leg, which allowed Barca's star front three of Messi, Luis Suarez and Neymar to prosper.

However, he believes that philosophy still gives them a chance despite the daunting prospect of having to win at the Camp Nou.

"The starting point is that it is possible to go to Barcelona and win. We have to have that mentality, our mentality,” he said. "Our identity is to have a big-team mentality, to go to win. And now losing 2-1, we have to attack."

By contrast, Barcelona now have a treble in their sights with a potentially decisive La Liga clash with eternal rivals Real Madrid on Sunday and a Copa del Rey final against Athletic Bilbao to look forward to at the end of the campaign.

The backbone of the upturn in form from Luis Enrique's men has been Messi's incredible form as the Argentine took his tally for the season to 43 goals in just 39 games with a double against Eibar at the weekend.


However, Suarez has also begun to make his presence felt after a club record move from Liverpool as last season's Premier League Player of the Year has struck six times in his last five games, including both his side's goals in the first leg.

"It is pleasing to help the team with important goals," said Suarez. "Players like me get inspired when fans boo them — it helps motivate you a bit more."

 

Klopp confident Dortmund can end Juventus home jinx

Borussia Dortmund coach Jurgen Klopp is confident his side can reach the Champions League quarter-finals and in the process record their first ever home win over Italian opponents Juventus.

Dortmund, who beat Juventus to secure their sole Champions League trophy in 1997 in Munich, trail 2-1 after the first leg. "The aim remains to reach the Champions League's quarter-finals and the boys can do it," he said.

On the other hand, Juventus are looking to reach the quarter-finals for only the second time since 2006, exiting at the last eight stage in the 2012/13 campaign at the hands of Bayern Munich, who went on to beat Dortmund in the final.

But Juve have a strong record over two legs against German opposition and have won 12 of their 15 European matches with three defeats.

 

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