[EU] Champions League 06/07 (13 Viewers)

Marc

Softcore Juventino
Jul 14, 2006
21,649
And again a nice "thank you" goes out to our management for not following Nedved's advice to sign Rosicky. The player is owning once again out there, almost with two goals thus far in this respective match.
That was a Moggi fault.


What do you guys think of Salihamidzic?? IMO He had a very decent game. He runs a lot, passes and crosses pretty good, in defense he is not naive and he works well with his team-mates.

I think if he keeps on playing on the highest level, he could be a very good addition to our squad....
 

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sateeh

Day Walker
Jul 28, 2003
8,020
That was a Moggi fault.


What do you guys think of Salihamidzic?? IMO He had a very decent game. He runs a lot, passes and crosses pretty good, in defense he is not naive and he works well with his team-mates.

I think if he keeps on playing on the highest level, he could be a very good addition to our squad....
So i guess if the team signs someone good then its "not him" that makes all the decisions, but if we pass on a player then its his fault.

Salihamidzic did well imo, got that right hand side energized a bit.

overall the game was more real's than bayern's. imo Bayern got lucky with their goals and were just pathetic.

always glad to see Arsenal lose, and i hope Koemen's men finish up the job in the 2nd leg.
 

Marc

Softcore Juventino
Jul 14, 2006
21,649
So i guess if the team signs someone good then its "not him" that makes all the decisions, but if we pass on a player then its his fault.
Well who´s fault is it then?? Nedved recommended him to Lippi and he would accept it, but in the end we didn´t sign him.

And let me ask you one thing. Who creates the squad? Coach or General Director?
 

Maher

Juventuz addict
Dec 16, 2002
13,521
CL Preview: Barcelona – Liverpool

The last two winners of the tournament clash at a 98,000-strong Camp Nou in the mother of all ties!

When: 2045 CET, Wednesday, February 21, 2007
Where: Camp Nou, Barcelona

Spanish Flavour
The match takes place in Spain, but that will have little to do with the Spanish flavours available on the menu.

What will, are the Spanish roots – and philosophies, despite recent formations suggesting otherwise – of a certain Senor Rafael Benitez.

That Xabi Alonso will line up right against international midfield teammate Xavi, will add more Spanish sizzle to the dish.

On the side, we have 'Pepe’ Reina looking to outdo Victor Valdes, the man who has taken charge of the Catalans’ goal since the former was unceremoniously deported to Villarreal three-and-a-half years ago.

Dessert, as it should be, is optional. Benitez, the master tactician that he is, is set to throw Alvaro Arbeloa in at right-back, to take charge of Ronaldinho.

Why? You might ask! Because the former Deportivo centre-half-cum-right-right-back, who just moved this winter, fared superbly against Barcelona in a very recent La Liga clash at the Riazor.

No point throwing a clueless Steve Finnan into the fray when you have a specialist for the job, particularly when in Arbeloa, you also have a charged up former Real Madrid youth team player to send out at the Camp Nou!

Finnan will also be thrown in, but let me hold that back for a while!

Crisis? Where?

Barcelona have had the whole Eto’o fracas to contend with, while Liverpool have had the Bellamy incident, and it would be unfair to say that the two incidents have not played a significant part in the build-up.

While questions on that will again be asked of whoever comes off worse tomorrow, it will really only detract from our focus on the game if we were to belabour that here.

Once the two teams step on the pitch, one fails to see how anybody will have time to think of what Eto’o said or whom Bellamy reportedly hacked.

Tactics

What will be spoken and thought about, will be Rijkaard and Benitez playing cat-and-mouse with each other. Rest assured, that is what it will be, even though Barcelona will go about playing their passing game, looking to slice Liverpool open.

Rafa has insisted they will not go just to defend, but believe that at your own peril. That, is just what he will do! It would almost be suicidally stupid if he did anything else!

The quick breaks and the dead ball situations will be Liverpool’s chances for glory. To earn those, they will have to stop Xavi, Deco, Messi and Ronaldinho dead in their tracks, first.

Suicidal, it will also be, for Rijkaard to believe Barca need to win, and win big, ahead of the Anfield leg. Liverpool might be favourites at home, but Barcelona are capable of scoring once in any stadium in the world, and going for broke would just play into Rafa’s hands.

Not that there is any indication Rijkaard will do that!

While it might not be the best advert ahead of the game, do not be disappointed if the two sides spend time sizing each other up on the pitch.

Team News, More On Tactics

Barcelona

Samuel Eto’o has been left out of the squad, in what has come as a huge surprise. However, it might just be the prudent decision again, for if he was only fit to play 25 minutes, it would have tied Rijkaard’s hands just that bit.

However, Lilian Thuram has been passed fit, and is expected to step into the defence alongside Carlos Puyol after Edmilson’s shambolic show against Valencia. The French veteran will be asked to square up against the lanky Peter Crouch.

Two out of Gio, Zambrotta and Oleguer will win the race for the wide spots – Zambrotta and Oleguer could get in ahead of Gio, with aerial ability dominating the criteria for selection. The objective also is to keep it tight at the back, so that Ronaldinho and Messi have some freedom. Thus, it is safe to assume that the likes of Belletti will remain parked on the bench.

Rafael Marquez should once again anchor the midfield, and will be charged with the task of staying with Steven Gerrard.

Deco and Xavi will be responsible for running the Barcelona show, with Messi – who will start – and Ronaldinho for spice. Watch out for Xavi to be heavily marked, though, as that was the one thing that characterized Benitez’s clashes against Barcelona when with Valencia.

Gudjohnsen is once again likely to get a nod ahead of Saviola, firstly because of his aerial ability – perhaps used for marking Hyypia – and because of his Premiership experience.

You can expect Andres Iniesta to come on at half time with a defender being sacrificed and Marquez dropping back, as Barcelona look to get more aggressive.

Probable Line-ups: Valdes – Oleguer/Zambrotta, Thuram, Puyol, Zambrotta/Gio – Xavi, Marguez, Deco – Messi, Gudjohnsen, Ronaldinho.

Liverpool

There are some very interesting indications coming from the Liverpool camp, with suggestions of one of the most defensive XIs ever being sent out by the shrewd Rafa.

Yes, most defensive ever, so prepare to be shocked! Benitez is expected to play two overlapping wing-backs on both sides, in a bid to have one each man-mark Ronaldinho and Messi, and the other cover the flanks zonally. The width of the Camp Nou pitch also seems to have played a part in the decision.

Riise and Aurelio could start on the left, with Arbeloa and Finnan on the right. Incredible indeed! There is more to come. Gerrard and Xabi Alonso will be accompanied by Momo Sissoko in midfield, leaving just one up front – likely to be Crouch for his aerial prowess.

The idea is simple – to shut shop from minute one, frustrate Barcelona, and pick up the pieces on the break and in the air. Rafa believes Barca will concede at least once given their recent defensive woes, but he is unlikely to be too disappointed if Liverpool were to draw blanks.

If any anyone can, Liverpool – arguably the best defensive outfit in the world at the moment – can.

Probable Line-up: Reina – Arbeloa, Carragher, Hyypia, Aurelio – Finnan, Gerrard, Sissoko, Alonso, Riise – Crouch/Kuyt.

PLAYERS TO WATCH

Barcelona: Lionel Messi

He has been thee best player on the pitch since coming on as a substitute over the last two games. His continued improvement has convinced the management to hand him a start against the Reds, particularly with Eto’o missing. The diminutive Argentine – fiercely protected and supported by the rest of the squad – will be given the license to kill, with Oleguer likely to anchor himself in the Barca half, behind him.

Liverpool: Steven Gerrard


With the Reds likely to keep the Kuyt-Crouch partnership for the Anfield leg, there is little doubt as to who will be handed charge of barging up the field and supporting the lone striker. With the pace of the likes of Aurelio and Riise on the left, the precision of Xabi Alonso behind him, and Crouch to hold it up, expect him to keep the shots coming!

PREDICION

Barcelona will hog possession, no doubts about that. However, their ability to get through the Reds remains a huge question on the eve of the game. Their biggest benefactor could be the Camp Nou, as much the crowd as the wide pitch. There will be plenty of spaces to squeeze into, no matter how many defenders are packed into defense.

They have scored 5 goals against Chelsea in the 3 home games, and could well score two more. Can they keep it scoreless? I don’t think so!

A 2-1 Barcelona win to leave the tie tantalizingly poised
 

sateeh

Day Walker
Jul 28, 2003
8,020
Well who´s fault is it then?? Nedved recommended him to Lippi and he would accept it, but in the end we didn´t sign him.

And let me ask you one thing. Who creates the squad? Coach or General Director?
well am not saying its not his fault all am saying is that UR saying its not him who gets the credit for signing some great players but its him who you blame.

a combination ofcourse Italy but its different in other places. It would be ridiculous to think that someone in management would act by himself without the checking with the coach first.

Also we were strongly linked with him last year before demotion until disaster struck. How do u know that Moggi wouldn't have signed him then?

and in the past Dortmund were clinging on to him and weren't as bad as they were last season.His price was too high straight after euro2004(wasn't that the time Neddy recommended him) thats why he stayed with Dortmund imo
 

Marc

Softcore Juventino
Jul 14, 2006
21,649
well am not saying its not his fault all am saying is that UR saying its not him who gets the credit for signing some great players but its him who you blame.

a combination ofcourse Italy but its different in other places. It would be ridiculous to think that someone in management would act by himself without the checking with the coach first.

Also we were strongly linked with him last year before demotion until disaster struck. How do u know that Moggi wouldn't have signed him then?

and in the past Dortmund were clinging on to him and weren't as bad as they were last season.His price was too high straight after euro2004(wasn't that the time Neddy recommended him) thats why he stayed with Dortmund imo
:sigh: I don´t know why I even enter this kind of discussions, nevermind. :)
 

peckface

approaching curve
Oct 3, 2004
2,357
Good games yesterday, I don't think there was any real suprises though some things dissapoints me.

Real Madrid for example, shape up damnit and build an okay team. Never liked them, but they are one of the biggest commercial pools of football and are important to the sport. Now they look pretty certain to leave the race. They've been this shaky for the last couple of years, only when it really matters, the big stars have stepped up. This time there are no big stars, just to be. Instead of Zidane they have Gago, who puke of nervousity face to face with a challenge. Instead of Ronaldo they got Higuain, who is decent but thats it. Instead of Beckham they got Beckham, who is just as bad as himself. :p

I hate the way Man Utd won, those freekicks shouldn't happen. It's a shame to this sport. Every team should be able to sett their wall up in peace and they should decide when the second signal should come.

Good performance by PSV, but it won't cut it at Emirates stadium. Same goes for Celtic when they visit San Siro.

And there are even better games today. Go Chippen vs Källström! Go Zlatan vs Villa! Go Ronaldinho vs Gerrard! Go awful dull chelsea game no one gives a horses ass gogogo
 

Bisco

Senior Member
Nov 21, 2005
14,420
this is specially for vlatko:

Previous meetings:

Valencia 2 Inter Milan 0 1961-62 Fairs Cup quarterfinal
Inter Milan 3 Valencia 3 1961-62 Fairs Cup quarterfinal

Inter Milan 1 Valencia 1 2001-2002 UEFA Cup quarterfinal
Valencia 0 Inter Milan 1 2001-2002 UEFA Cup quarterfinal

Inter Milan 1 Valencia 0 2002-2003 Champions League quarterfinal
Valencia 2 Inter Milan 1 2002-2003 Champions League quarterfinal

Valencia 1 Inter Milan 5 2004-2005 Champions League Group G
Inter Milan 0 Valencia 0 2004-2005 Champions League Group G

Round 1: Valencia Knock Out Inter

Valencia first dropped in on the Giuseppe Meazza stadium way back in 1962 in the now-defunct Fairs Cup – the UEFA Cup going on to take over as the European Cup’s (now Champions League) 'little brother’.

The Spaniards had hosted the first leg at Mestalla and had won 2-0 despite the presence of a duo that would make history at the Nerazzurri club: Coach Helenio Herrera and Spanish star Luis Suarez. The second leg was played out on the almost forty-five years ago on the 21st of March 1962.

Helenio Herrera was quite upbeat about the chances of going through despite the 2-0 disadvantage the Nerazzurri brought back from Spain. The tactician famed for his adaptation of the so-called Catenaccio (deadbolt) system was adamant that the Chés wouldn’t score on their first visit to San Siro.

Unfortunately for local fans he was wrong as Valencia slammed three goals in thanks to Chicao, Recamán and Ficha, equalising a tough battle on the pitch that seemed to have sunk the visitors before an hour was up as a Bettini brace and a Suárez penalty put Inter three up.

Valencia continued their (until then) unbeaten run in Europe at the expense of an Inter who went out 3-5 on aggregate:

21.03.1962 – [San Siro] Inter Milan 3 - 3 Valencia CF

Goals: Bettini (6), Luis Suárez (pen.) (26), Bettini (52), Chicao Dos Santos (21), Decio Recamán (34) and José 'Ficha' (86)

The second time both sides clashed would be almost forty years later and in a new century. It was another quarter-final, this time valid for the 2001-02 UEFA Cup.



Round 2: Inter Knock Out Valencia

Inter Milan 1 Valencia 1 2001-02 UEFA Cup quarterfinal

14.03.2002 - 21:00 San Siro (Attendance: 26000)

Valencia threw away a great chance to go forward in the UEFA Cup that would finally land in Mestalla a few seasons later. As today, Valencia took to the Meazza pitch to face the Italian league leaders, although at that time the Chés were also Liga leaders.

On the benches were Héctor Cúper and Rafa Benítez, the Argentine having taken his chest-slapping and Marlboros to Inter from Valencia and the Spaniard on his way to reformulating Cúper’s close-but-no-cigar squad into UEFA and Liga winners.

The first half was a leaden affair that had nothing to do with the first san Siro clash between the two clubs. Nevertheless, the Spanish visitors were on top of the Nerazzurri despite 'Kily’ Gonzalez (who’d go on to play for Inter) getting red carded in the 54th minute.

Materazzi had put Inter ahead three minutes earlier but Rufete evened it up for the ten-man Chés by finishing off an Angulo move with 26 minutes to go. The Italian spectators began to boo their own players as they were incapable of finishing the wounded visitors off.

The second leg at Mestalla a week later would leave the Italians laughing last and longest as a Ventola goal in the second minute of play was enough to see Inter Milan through to the semis, although, alas, they went out to eventual Dutch champions Feyenoord.

Referee: Markus Merck (Germany)

Goals: Materazzi (51) Rufete (64)

INTER (1): Fontana; J.Zanetti, Cordoba, Materazzi, Simic, Conceição, Di Biagio, Seedorf, Guly
Ventola and Kallon

VALENCIA (1): Santi Cañizares; Mauricio Pellegrino, Roberto Ayala, David Albelda, Gonzalo De los Santos, John Carew, Pablo Aimar, Curro Torres, Amedeo Carboni, Kily González and Francisco Rufete

Substitutions

Dalmat -> Guly (72)
Recoba -> Sergio Conceiçao (79) Vicente Rodríguez -> Pablo Aimar (59)
Miguel Ángel Angulo -> John Carew (63)
Juan Sánchez -> Francisco Rufete (92)

Yellow Cards: Sergio Conceição (49) Amedeo Carboni (49), Vicente Rodríguez (61) and David Albelda (88)

Red Card: Kily González (55)



Round 3: Inter Knock Out Valencia

The third and penultimate clash between Inter and Valencia was – again – in quarterfinal action as both sides met in April 2003. This time it was a Champions League quarterfinal with the first leg played in the northern Italian city.

A 14th minute goal from Christian Vieri gave Inter Milan the 1-0 win over Valencia and both teams were forced to play for over half an hour with 10 men after Valencia's David Albelda and Inter's Belozoglu Emre were sent off after facing off.

The Spaniards, who had been quiet up until the incident, piled on the pressure in the latter stages as they searched, in vain, for an equalizer and a vital away goal.

Valencia would turn the tie around a fortnight later but the sending off hurt the Italians more than the visitors as the former Galatasaray man (now at Newcastle) set up a chance for Vieri which the burly striker blasted straight at Valencia keeper Cañizares, and also had a big hand in the goal.

Running on to a pass from Francesco Coco, Emre broke to the byline and Hernan Crespo flicked his cross into the path of Vieri, whose diving header flew past Canizares. Valencia almost equalized in the 38th when Albelda's low shot forced Toldo into a full stretch save.

What had been a surprisingly low key game turned nasty though in the 57th minute when in an off-the-ball incident Albelda kicked Emre and the Turk reacted angrily, confronting the Spaniard and attempting to headbutt him before Materazzi’s chest became a universal head magnet.

After a scuffle involving at least 10 players, German referee Markus Merk dismissed the pair and the San Siro crowd rained plastic bottles and fruit down from the stands towards Albelda as he headed for the tunnel but thankfully the mood on the pitch was calmer.

Hector Cúper had surprisingly left out Italy defender Fabio Cannavaro (now at Real Madrid) and Uruguayan striker Alvaro Recoba, bringing back Materazzi and Crespo, who were both returning from injury. Cannavaro was called on seven minutes from the end, replacing a tired Crespo and adding an extra man to an under-pressure defence as Inter clung to their lead.

There was more controversy at the end when Aimar went down in the Nerazzurri box after a challenge from Buruk but Merk ruled that the Argentine had dived and instead of a penalty the Valencia playmaker (now at Zaragoza) saw yellow.

Goal: Christian Vieri 14

Red cards: Belozoglu Emre (Inter Milan) 57, David Albelda (Valencia) 57

Attendance: 52,623

INTER MILAN (1): 1-Francesco Toldo; 4-Javier Zanetti, 23-Marco Materazzi, 2-Ivan Cordoba, 77-Francesco Coco (26-Giovanni Pasquale 31); 7-Sergio Conceicao, 6-Cristiano Zanetti, 14-Luigi Di Biagio, 5-Belozoglu Emre (22-Buruk Okan 66); 32-Christian Vieri, 9-Hernan Crespo (13-Fabio Cannavaro 84).

VALENCIA: (1) 1 -Santiago Canizares; 3-Anthony Reveillere, 4-Roberto Ayala, 12-Carlos Marchena, 15-Amedeo Carboni; 19-Francisco Rufete (20-Mista 81), 6-David Albelda, 8-Ruban Baraja, 21-Pablo Aimar, 14-Vicente (3-Fabio Aurelio 85); 7-John Carew (10-Miguel Angulo 65).

Referee: Markus Merk (Germany).



Round 4: Inter Knock Out Valencia

The most recent San Siro meeting was another nil-nil stalemate, Claudio Ranieri making a hugely unsuccessful return to Mestalla after Liverpool had bagged Benítez, but this time in the initial Group Stage that Inter ended up topping while Valencia spun out into the UEFA Cup.

Three weeks earlier Valencia had received a humiliating pounding from Inter at Mestalla, going down 1-5 in flames that signified the beginning of the end for Ranieri in his second stint at the Túria club. Pablo Aimar scored a lonely consolation as Stankovic (47), Vieri (49), Van der Meyde (76), Adriano (81) and Cruz (91) buried Valencia.

The visitors’ return performance, far from cathartic, was nothing short of atrocious as they didn’t so much as put a single shot on target. Fontana could have quite happily pulled up a deck chair and started flipping through a magazine while nursing a cold beer.

Inter hogged possession with stats showing a 70% domination of the ball, although the Nerazzurri couldn’t score. Marchena was perhaps the 'star’ of the evening as he cleared an Adriano shot that had already beaten Cañizares, the Spaniard shushing the terraces with an index finger to the mouth.

Referee: Valentin Ivanov (Russia)

INTER (0): Fontana; Córdoba, Materazzi, Zanetti, Davids, Adriano, Verón, Cambiasso, Stankovic, Martins and Zé Maria

VALENCIA (0): Cañizares; Marchena, David Albelda, Rubén Baraja, Mista, Di Vaio, Caneira, Curro Torres, Carboni, Miguel Ángel Angulo and Francisco Rufete

Substitutions

Recoba -> Martins (77)
C. Zanetti -> Verón (78)
Pasquale -> Stankovic (88) Bernardo Corradi -> Marco Di Vaio (70)
Momo Sissoko -> Rubén Baraja (73)
Emiliano Moretti -> Miguel Ángel Mista (84)

Yellow Cards: Rubén Baraja (55), Marco Caneira (92)

Red Cards: Adriano (90)



APM
 

Bisco

Senior Member
Nov 21, 2005
14,420
CL Preview: Inter Milan - Valencia

Who: Inter (1st Serie A, 63 points) vs Valencia (3rd Primera Division, 42 points)
When: Wednesday February 21st 2007, 20:45 local
Where: Stadio Giuseppe Meazza, Milan

Inter Not Content With Domestic Success



With Inter holding the most comfortable lead on top of the table of all the European leagues and currently on a run of 16 consecutive Serie A victories, they will be quite confident of making a run deep into the Champions League, and they will be able to focus almost entirely on that, unlike most other teams in the competition.



However, if they do not make an impressive run in Europe, Inter’s achievement of winning ”only” the Serie A title, even if they earn 100 points in the process, will surely be diminished by some who will claim they had it “easy” because of the relegation of Juventus and the point deductions to Milan, Fiorentina, and Lazio.



But objectively that would not make much sense as the only team missing compared to other years are the Turin giants. The reality is that Inter have finally found back their winning spirit after many, many years of suffering and are like an awakening giant, a volcano in eruption after laying dormant for a very long time. With two world-class players for every position, they have what it takes to be the dominant side in Italy the next few years and perhaps in Europe as well. However, that will become clearer after these two games against Valencia.



In the group stage Inter overcame a shocking start that included two defeats to Sporting Lisbon and Bayern Munich, to qualify as the second-placed side in Group B behind the German champions with three consecutive victories and a draw.



Valencia Confident Ahead Of San Siro Clash



Inter’s strength will be tested to the fullest in this tie by a solid and condifent-looking Valencia side. After their impressive 2-1 home victory over Barcelona last weekend, “Los Ches” are back in the Spanish title race, which is incredibly unpredictable and exciting this season, with no team looking like they are dominating the championship.



While as a name Valencia might not inspire the same sort of dread as Barcelona or Real Madrid, that might make things more tricky for Inter, although there is little danger of underestimation. Last season it was exactly that which ultimately caused their demise against “lowly” (at least, that’s probably what the players though) Villarreal in the quarter-finals.



The two sides know each other quite well, although Inter in particular are a team in constant evolution and change. It will be the fourth meeting between the teams in the last six European seasons, with Inter having had the upper hand in all occasions.


Injury Ravaged

Valencia's season appears to be back on track after almost being de-railed by an extensive injury list that saw coach Quique Sánchez Flores have to call upon several B team players to pad out his squad. Asier Del Horno, Edu, Mario Regueiro and Jaime Gavilán are all long-term injury victims, while David Albelda, Carlos Marchena and Emiliano Moretti have all missed a large chunk of the campaign, although three have now returned.

Rubén Baraja and Vicente have both suffered from more than one blow and have been in and out of the side. Despite all that, the team has stayed in touch at the top of the table and now, with several players back in action, they are serious contenders for the title.

The return to form began in mid-December when los Ché finished 2006 with three straight victories. Three more consecutive wins after the Christmas break saw the club move back into the top and, despite two defeats in their last four outings, Valencia are now just four points behind league leaders FC Barcelona. With the key players back, Flores has been able to tighten his defence and Inter may well recognise the strategy of playing deep and breaking out as the Spanish side's tactics have been compared to those commonly employed by Serie A teams.



Rich Recent History



In the 2001/2002 Uefa Cup, Inter and Valencia met in the quarter-finals and the Spaniards, who had reached the Champions League final the year before, seemed to have the upper hand after the first leg as they obtained a 1-1 draw at San Siro, but Inter scored an early goal at the “Mestalla” and survived relentless pressure from the hosts to qualify with a 1-0 away win. Their coach at the time, Hector Cuper, had just come over from Valencia the previous summer.



In the 2002/2003 Champions League history repeated itself somewhat as the teams once again squared off in the quarter-finals. A Vieri goal gave Inter a 1-0 win at San Siro, and in the return the ex-Italian international scored early, but almost immediately after that Valencia took complete control of the game and relentlessly assaulted the Inter goal once again. But like the year before, goalkeeper Francesco Toldo had a fantastic game, and managed to keep the score at 2-1, which was just enough for his side to qualify. In both occasions Cuper admitted Inter were very lucky to progress and the team were heavily criticised for their play by the media. Both times Inter failed to progress beyond the semi-final stage.



In the 2004/2005 Champions League group stage, current coach Roberto Mancini had just taken charge of Inter when they visited the Mestalla. It was a memorable night, for he led them to one of their best performances under his tenure, as they romped to a 5-1 victory, with five different players getting the goals (including current players Stankovic, Adriano, and Cruz). In the return Valencia restored some pride with a 0-0 draw which qualified Inter to the knockout stage with two games to spare, while Valencia, then coached by Claudio Ranieri, finished third in the group.





FORM GUIDE



Inter



17/02: Inter-Cagliari 1-0 (Serie A)

11/02: Chievo-Inter 0-2 (Serie A)

01/02: Inter-Sampdoria 0-0 (Coppa Italia)

28/01: Sampdoria-Inter 0-2 (Serie A)

24/01: Sampdoria-Inter 0-3 (Coppa Italia)



Valencia



18/02: Valencia-Barcelona 2-1 (Primera Division)

11/02: Getafe-Valencia 3-0 (Primera Division)

03/02: Valencia-Atletico Madrid 3-1 (Primera Division)

28/01: Real Betis-Valencia 2-1 (Primera Division)

21/01: Real Sociedad-Valencia 0-1 (Primera Division)





TEAM NEWS



Inter



Only Vieira and Recoba are out injured.



Possible Starting XI: Julio Cesar; Maicon, Materazzi, Burdisso, Maxwell; Zanetti, Cambiasso, Dacourt; Stankovic; Adriano, Ibrahimovic.



Valencia




One major decision for Flores is whether to risk goalkeeper Santiago Cañizares, who missed the Barça win with flu, or whether to continue with Frenchman Ludovic Butelle. Baraja is definitely out through injury, while Del Horno and Vicente did not make the squad, despite both being back in full training.




Possible Starting XI: Cañizares or Butelle; Miguel, Albiol, Ayala, Moretti; Angulo, Marchena, Albelda, Silva; Villa, Morientes.




PLAYERS TO WATCH



Zlatan Ibrahimovic (Inter)



The brilliant Swedish striker has been in blistering form this season for Inter. With his skill, vision, technique, and unique style he has scored many important goals and provided many decisive assists for Inter. If he can display this kind of form in the Champions League too and lead Inter far in the competition, he might be one of the front-runners for the Ballon D’Or award.



Fernando Morientes (Valencia)



The veteran Spanish striker is a seasoned campaigner in the Champions League, having scored many goals in this competition. Along with David Villa he can form a deadly partnership. If there’s anyone that can get a crucial away goal for Valencia in this game, it’s Morientes.





PREDICTION



Valencia’s away form hasn’t been great recently, with two losses on their last two travels in La Liga. Meanwhile, Inter have won all but two of their matches in all competitions since beating Livorno 4-1 on October 25th. On paper, then, Inter are favorites, but perhaps their lucky streak against Valencia may come to an end. In any case, the game will probably be decided at the Mestalla, with Inter getting a narrow win at San Siro.



Inter-Valencia 1-0



Danilo Pochini
 
OP

ReBeL

The Jackal
Jan 14, 2005
22,871
  • Thread Starter
  • Thread Starter #1,040
    Who do you think, Buffon, Balzaretti & Cobolli cheer for in this season??

    --------------------------------

    la Juve tifa e non guarda


    Nessuno è contro le italiane, ma in tv meglio cambiare canale... Buffon: «Lasciamo spazio agli altri...». Cobolli Gigli è curioso di vedere se l'Inter tiene anche in Europa.

    Non tutti a Torino ce la fanno, il martedì e il mercoledì sera, a mettersi davanti al televisore, dopo esserci stati dentro per tanti anni. Gigi Buffon, per esempio, è dall'inizio della stagione europea che organizza serate alternative a metà settimana. E come lui altri compagni, quelli che hanno maggiori rimpianti per la Champions,come Camoranesi, Trezeguet, Nedved e Del Piero. Se lo spogliatoio è compatto nel tifare per le squadre italiane, anche per l'Inter pur a denti stretti, l'interesse scema davanti al teleschermo. «Se capita facendo zapping guarderò gli highlights prima di andare a dormire», confessa Buffon, che indica nell'Inter la favorita, senza invidia né rancori. «Ogni tanto è giusto staccare la spina, lasciare spazio anche agli altri...».

    Pure Federico Balzaretti ieri sera era davanti alla tv... «Sì ma su Canale 5, per "Ris-Delitti imperfetti". Sarebbe stato il mio primo vero anno in Champions, da titolare. Mi auguro che vinca un'italiana visto quello che sta accadendo in Spagna: il Barcellona va a singhiozzo e il Real è una polveriera». Unico controcorrente Alessandro Birindelli che consiglia, agli amanti del bel calcio, Roma-Lione: «Sono le squadre che stanno esprimendo il calcio più spettacolare. Ci vorrebbe una bella prestazione delle nostre, un messaggio positivo dopo gli ultimi episodi poco edificanti». Dimostra grande fair play, come sempre, il presidente Giovanni Cobolli Gigli, che si è perso il Milan per uno sciopero dei controllori di volo: «Detto che in questo caso tifo per le tre italiane, perché è fondamentale che il nostro calcio vada bene in Europa, sono tre le curiosità che ho per gli ottavi di Champions: la tenuta della difesa del Milan, la ripresa della Roma dopo l'episodio di Empoli e vedere se la corazzata Inter conferma la sua marcia anche in Europa».

    (Gazzetta dello Sport)
     

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