..::Football IV::..

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    Marseille 5 RB Leipzig 2 (5-3 agg): Garcia's men triumph in seven-goal thriller



    Dimitri Payet gave a match-winning performance as Marseille clinched a place in the last four of the Europa League by beating RB Leipzig 5-2 in a thrilling quarter-final second leg at Stade Velodrome.

    Trailing by a single goal after a disappointing display at Red Bull Arena a week earlier, Marseille put an early setback behind them to progress 5-3 on aggregate, with Payet's sensational strike proving decisive.

    When Bruma doubled Leipzig's lead in the tie after just two minutes of the game things looked tough for Marseille, the away goal seemingly giving the visitors a huge advantage.




    But anything Ralph Hasenhuttl's men could do, Marseille could do better on a night when Rudi Garcia's attack was irrepressible and they scored twice in quick succession through a Stefan Ilsanker own-goal and Bouna Sarr's strike, before Florian Thauvin gave them the advantage in the tie before half-time.

    Jean-Kevin Augustin silenced the crowd when he levelled matters early in the second-half but when Marseille needed a talisman, Payet did not let them down and he scored the pick of the evening's goals on the hour mark to spark wild celebrations around the ground.

    Hiroki Sakai added late gloss in stoppage time as Leipzig chased an equaliser, leaving Marseille to dream of reaching the final of this competition for the third time in their history.


    Backed by cacophonous support, Marseille began the game looking confident but were immediately pegged back when Bruma picked the ball up in the centre of the penalty area after good work by Augustin and slammed it beyond Yohann Pele.

    The goal should have given Leipzig the impetus but Marseille stormed forward and forced an equaliser when Kostas Mitroglou bundled a corner towards goal. It was saved by Peter Gulacsi but bounced in off the knees of Ilsanker.

    The third goal of the evening came after a sweeping Marseille move that began with Mitroglou and went out wide to Payet, who crossed for Morgan Sanson to have two attempts on goal saved by Gulacsi before Sarr followed up with a first-time shot into the far left corner.

    Payet then hit the net himself with a thunderous left-footed strike from the edge of the box but it was ruled out for an infringement in the build up by Mitroglou, before Marseille were dealt a blow when Sarr had to leave the field with a dislocated shoulder.

    Adil Rami replaced Sarr and the change did not hinder the home side, who took the lead in the tie for the first time after 38 minutes when Thauvin met Payet's long, curling free-kick with a delightful cushioned volley into the bottom right corner of the net.

    Gulacsi made a brilliant double save early in the second half, stooping to block Mitroglou's close-range shot after Thauvin's low cross and then stretching to push Jordan Amavi's follow-up shot away.Payet put Mitroglou through for a one-on-one moments later but he dragged his shot wide to the left of the target and five minutes later Marseille were punished for the Greek striker's wastefulness.

    Naby Keita embarked on a jinking run that took him all the way into the Marseille area, where he back-heeled the ball to Augustin whose shot clipped the leg of Boubacar Kamara on its way over the head of Pele and into the net.

    But Marseille would not be deterred and Payet made amends for the goal he had ruled out by turning the tie back towards the hosts, the skipper Ilsanker with a step-over before hooking the ball into the top left corner of the net with the outside of his right boot from just inside the box.

    Rami's backwards header almost presented Emil Forsberg with the chance to steal the tie for Leipzig 15 minutes from time, but Pele snatched the ball just as the substitute was about to pounce.

    As Leipzig pushed for a late goal - which would have sent them through on away goals - Marseille wrapped things up on the counter attack, Sakai firing into an unguarded goal from 30 yards after Gulacsi had gone up for a corner.
     

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    Red Bull Salzburg 4 Lazio 1 (6-5 agg): Austrians produce remarkable turnaround to book semi-final spot


    Three goals in the space of four second-half minutes helped Red Bull Salzburg to an incredible 4-1 win over Lazio to book their place in the Europa League semi-finals.

    Ciro Immobile's superb strike 10 minutes after the interval put the Italians 5-3 up on aggregate and looked to have all-but sealed a last-four berth.But in a week of stunning European comebacks, Salzburg added their own to the collection with a scintillating reversal to turn the tie on its head.




    Munas Dabbur gave them hope through a deflected effort before Amadou Haidara kicked off the four minutes of madness with wonderful long-range drive after 72 minutes.With momentum squarely on their side, the hosts then pulled level on aggregate, with Hwang Hee-chan the latest Salzburg man to benefit from a deflection.

    Stefan Lainer then had the final say with a back-post header to complete a remarkable turnaround and leave Italian hearts broken for the second time this week.


    As expected, Salzburg started with a spring in their step and were nearly rewarded with the game's opening goal after five minutes.Hwang latched on to Xaver Schlager's through ball but his first-time effort was too close to Thomas Strakosha, allowing the Albanian to safely parry away from danger.

    The Italians weathered that early Salzburg storm and comfortably kept them at arm's length for most of the opening period, with only Duje Caleta-Car's header from a corner causing minor concern.Their own attacking intent was limited, but Immobile could – and perhaps should – have put the tie to bed moments before the interval.

    First, he failed to make a clean connection with Sergej Milinkovic-Savic's looped through ball from close range and then could only shoot straight at Alexnader Walke after being wonderfully picked out by Luis Alberto's impudent back heel.

    Immobile was denied again by Walke shortly after the break, but he finally got the better of the Salzburg stopper with a glorious finish after 55 minutes.Alberto's incisive pass carved open the home defence, allowing Immobile an unimpeded run towards goal that culminated with a sensational whipped effort into the far top corner.

    Any designs Lazio had of seeing the game out at a canter were extinguished 85 seconds later, though, as Dabbur weaved his way around a host of defenders on the edge of the penalty area and a left-footed shot was diverted past Strakosha by Stefan Radu.Schlager then crashed a rasping long-ranger against the post as the rejuvenated hosts cranked up the pressure, while Hwang headed wide from a teasing cross.

    Luis Alberto wasted a glorious opportunity to kill the game in the 72nd minute, shooting straight at Walke after a three-on-one counter.The Spanish forward could never have anticipated how harshly his profligacy was to be punished.

    First, Haidara's 30-yard drive into the bottom corner cut the deficit to just one before Hwang's deflected strike pulled the Austrian club level overall.

    That goal meant the Salzburg were going through on away goals but Lainer made sure of it, heading in at the back post from a corner to book their last-four spot in the most dramatic of circumstances.
     

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    Sporting CP 1 Atletico Madrid 0 (1-2 agg): Simeone's side into semis despite defeat

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    Atletico Madrid edged through to the semi-finals of the Europa League despite a 1-0 defeat away to Sporting CP.

    A 2-0 lead from the first leg in the Spanish capital a week ago put Diego Simeone's men in a strong position ahead of the return match at a wet Estadio Jose Alvalade on Thursday.

    But on a week that Barcelona and Real Madrid were on the end of staggering Champions League comebacks, Atletico - champions in 2010 and 2012 - failed to heed those twin warnings and were fortunate to progress with a 2-1 aggregate victory.




    Jan Oblak made a world-class save to keep out a Sebastian Coates header but a rare mistake from the Slovenia goalkeeper allowed Sporting back into the quarter-final.The goalkeeper could only tip a Bruno Fernandes cross back into the danger zone and Fredy Montero was on hand to place his header over the prone Oblak and into the goal.

    Oblak had to save twice from Bryan Ruiz to protect Atletico's slim lead but Simeone's side head through despite seeing their 100 per cent Europa League record this season come to an end, although their progression came at the cost of injuries to Lucas Hernandez and Diego Costa.


    Marcos Acuna sent an early header over the crossbar before Oblak made a magnificent save to deny Coates, the goalkeeper plunging to his right to tip away the header.

    But Sporting's pressure told with the opening goal in the 28th minute.The hosts worked a short right-wing corner back to Fernandes, with Oblak only able to touch the resulting deep cross out for Montero to guide a clever header over the Atletico goalkeeper.

    Oblak had to be alert to keep out a pair of efforts from Ruiz as Sporting, still a goal down on aggregate, grew in confidence.And Gelson Martins should have levelled the scores on the stroke of half-time, somehow heading wide from a sensational left-wing cross delivered by Acuna.

    Injuries to Lucas and Costa gave Atletico further cause for concern, Simeone turning to Fernando Torres for his first appearance since confirming he will leave at the end of the season.



    Atletico finally recorded their first shot on target in the 58th-minute, Antoine Griezmann unable to beat Rui Patricio with a shot from a tight angle on the left side of the penalty area.Torres flashed a near-post header over the crossbar as Atletico threatened to pull away, but Montero's tame effort warned the visitors the tie was not over yet.

    Griezmann arrowed a 77th-minute free-kick narrowly over the angle and wasted two fine late one-on-one chances, but, although Sporting continued to threaten, Simeone's side held firm at the back as they look to book a place in their third European final in five seasons.
     

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    'Buffon should have punched the ref' - Red card restraint hailed by Juventus legend Tacconi


    Gianluigi Buffon’s restraint after being shown a red card by Michael Oliver has been hailed by Stefano Tacconi, with the Juventus legend admitting that he would have “punched his face in”.

    An iconic goalkeeper of the modern was dismissed in controversial fashion as the closing stages of the Bianconeri’s Champions League quarter-final clash with Real Madrid descended into chaos.

    After seeing Medhi Benatia pulled up for a stoppage-time push on Lucas Vazquez, Buffon was sent off for contesting Oliver’s decision – with the English official later accused of having “a garbage bin instead of a heart”.

    It could be that a memorable European career is now over, with a 40-year-old performer seemingly heading for retirement, and Tacconi admits that he would have acted differently had he been in Buffon’s boots at Santiago Bernabeu.

    A man who made over 200 appearances for Juve in his playing days, told RMC Sport: “Knowing I was going to stop, I’d have punched [Oliver’s] face in.“It would have been a great end to a wonderful career. You can’t give a penalty like that in the 95th-minute. Psychologically everyone is tense and you can’t give a penalty like that.”

    Tacconi has also hit out at referee chief Pierluigi Collina and the wider world of Italian football following two dramatic nights for elite Serie A sides in Europe – with Juve’s heartbreaking exit coming on the back of an unlikely away goals triumph for Roma over Barcelona.

    “Collina is in bad faith, there was a referee who was corruptible, just as he was against Juventus in Perugia,” said Tacconi.“He’s in bad faith and you have to change the referee designator every two or three years.

    “When Roma won all the Italian teams congratulated them, when Juve lose everyone is against them and I’m disappointed by that.”
     

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    ‘Buffon went beyond his bound’ – Gigi deserves to be sent-off, says Moses Adebanjo


    Retired Fifa referee Moses Adebanjo claims Gianluigi Buffon deserved to be sent packing in Wednesday’s Champions League clash between Real Madrid and Juventus.

    The cracker at the Santiago Bernabeu was poised for extra-time before Medhi Benatia fouled Lucaz Vazquez with referee Michael Oliver awarding a penalty for Zinedine Zidane’s men.This sparked a frantic protest from the Italian football icon, who was shown a red card having confronted referee Oliver.

    Reactions have continued to trail the harsh dismissal of the 40-year-old, the chairman of Lagos State Referees Council feels the English arbiter’s was on point because Gigi ‘went beyond his bound’. “I thank him for his courage. To be honest with you, it will be difficult for a lot of people to take such decision at that period of time being human. He took the right decision sincerely speaking,” he told Goal.

    “As a captain, you are responsible for your team and not to the referee.Captainship does not give you any extra right to influence the referee’s decision.“Buffon went beyond his bound. The referee took a decision and he was going to him. Was he going to change his decision? The law does not permit that.

    “However, in some situations, maybe some referees would have managed that situation differently. That would then be based on individual leverage. But for Oliver to follow the rule of the game, he was entirely right.”
     

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    'Pogba an alien genius but must do more' - Man Utd star annoys Dugarry


    Manchester United’s Paul Pogba has been branded “an alien” and “a genius” by Christophe Dugarry, but has also been told he is capable of “a hundred times more”.

    Since being acquired by Manchester United for £89 million in the summer of 2016, expectation levels around a superstar midfielder have risen considerably.Pogba is yet to deliver the level of consistency demanded of him, with the 2017-18 campaign proving to be particularly frustrating at Old Trafford.




    He was, however, to show what he is capable of during a talismanic two-goal showing for United in a stunning 3-2 derby win over Premier League champions-elect Manchester City and has been urged to perform at his full potential on a more regular basis.

    Former France international Dugarry has been an outspoken critic of the 25-year-old, and told RMC in his latest rant: “He’s an alien, a player out of the ordinary, but he annoys me, because I know he’s capable of doing a hundred times more.
    “He’s a genius, but when is he going to realise it? “When he started becoming a marketing player, he lost that rage he had at Juventus.”It is the off-field antics alluded to by Dugarry which are proving to be part of the problem for Pogba.

    His social media activity, garish clothing and flamboyant haircuts have all been called into question by those who feel an exciting talent has too many distractions.

    Dugarry has already pulled Pogba up on his non-football commitments, with the making of a TV documentary after an international friendly defeat to Colombia branded “stupid”.
    The Euro 2000 winner said: “You are not starting for Manchester United, you just lost a game with the France national team. You send out this program that doesn't make sense. You have just lost. That tells us that you're not concentrating.“Things aren't going well for you and you make us your Pogseries. What kind of madness is that?

    “You just lost 2-3 against the Colombians and you were missing for an hour. You have a whole country behind you, a country that wants to do well at the World Cup, and you make these stupid things for us.”
     

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    'Sell Hazard and buy three players' - Desailly sees Chelsea transfer benefit


    Chelsea could benefit from selling Eden Hazard, says Marcel Desailly, with the funds brought in allowing them to strengthen elsewhere.The Blues have often looked to their Belgian forward for inspiration, with the 27-year-old having worked his way into a position alongside the global elite.

    Hazard has, however, been generating transfer talk for some time now, with European heavyweights such as Real Madrid and Paris Saint-Germain often linked with big-money bids.

    Desailly believes that Chelsea could be open to a sale this summer, on the back of a failed top-four bid in the Champions League, and feels parting with one star turn may be no bad thing.The former Blues defender told the Daily Mail: “[Roman] Abramovich is passionate and he will be disappointed [at missing out on Champions League] but they will still be able to get some good players.

    “If tomorrow you sell Hazard, you can sign another three players who can step up.
    “And Willian, for example, is brilliant but he's just one of those players. He can lift his level and bring a new dimension and become another first-class player.”While Desailly believes Hazard could be moved on by Chelsea, the ex-France international hopes there will be no more changes in the dugout.

    The Blues have made 12 coaching alterations during Abramovich’s time at the helm, with Antonio Conte being tipped to take that figure to 13 this summer.The Italian has failed to oversee a Premier League title defence, but he is considered by many to still be the right man for the job.

    Desailly said: “What was working last season with Conte cannot suddenly not work this season.“Before they've changed the coach, and kept the players. This time they should keep the coach and look to move four to five players on.

    “Your best players' performances have dropped and Chelsea did not get the correct players with the correct strengths or another top player in the summer.“Players like [Victor] Moses and [Marcos] Alonso played a magnificent season last year but they were in need of support this year.

    “It's been a collective failure at Chelsea this season. I don't think the situation that Chelsea are in is Conte's fault - you must give him that season.”Rather than pointing the finger of blame at Conte, Desailly believes that sales in the summer of 2017 have hampered the Chelsea cause – with Diego Costa and Nemanja Matic proving to be big misses.

    The World Cup winner said: “Costa would have scored 10 goals more than [his replacement] Alvaro Morata. So maybe that's five more wins and that's a big difference.“And the system of three at the back did not work this season because Conte lost Matic.

    “Matic fitted with N'Golo Kante at the time and Cesc Fabregas fitted better in that system with him too. Together they protected the defence like it was needed.”
     

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    Champions League final a dream for Liverpool, says Oxlade-Chamberlain


    Alex Oxlade-Chamberlain is dreaming of reaching the Champions League final with Liverpool after overcoming Manchester City to book a place in the last four.
    Liverpool dispatched City in the quarter-finals, following up their 3-0 victory at Anfield in the first leg by triumphing 2-1 in the return match at the Etihad Stadium on Tuesday.

    Oxlade-Chamberlain joined Liverpool from Arsenal for a reported £35 million in August and is elated the switch has put him in a position to achieve one of his major goals."It is massive. It is everything you dream of when you are a young lad," he said."You want to play in finals and they don't come much bigger than the Champions League final.

    "We've made my dream that one step closer by getting into the semi-finals. We have given ourselves a great opportunity." Liverpool have been joined in Friday's semi-final draw by Bayern Munich, Roma and Real Madrid.

    The successive triumphs over City, as well as a 4-3 victory over the Premier League champions-elect in January, have buoyed Liverpool, who Oxlade-Chamberlain suggested fear no one in the final four."To beat City twice is no easy feat. We did it twice in a week and we also did it at an earlier stage this season," said the England international.

    "It just shows to us that when we are at the races and at the right level we can beat anyone in this league."Now it is on us, whoever we get in the next round, to go and prove that we can beat people in Europe as well. It's going to be tough whoever you play. People might say Roma [are the preference] but look what they did [eliminating Barcelona], they performed amazingly well and look a great side."It doesn't matter who we get now, we have to make sure we are ready for anyone and can beat anyone."
     

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    Man Utd move for 'huge talent' Bale backed by Ferdinand


    Gareth Bale remains a “huge talent” despite his Real Madrid struggles, says Rio Ferdinand, with the time right for Manchester United or a Premier League rival to make a move.The Wales international has enjoyed a trophy-laden spell in the Spanish capital, collecting the La Liga title, Club World Cup and three Champions League crowns.

    He has, however, endured fitness issues throughout his time at Santiago Bernabeu and often seen his value called into question – with Zinedine Zidane hauling him off at half-time during a thrilling European clash with Juventus on Wednesday.

    Ferdinand believes the former Tottenham star would be a welcome addition to the English top-flight if approaches are made this summer, with his former employers at Old Trafford among those reported to be leading the chase for a long-standing target.The ex-Red Devils defender told BT Sport on Bale and whether he would sign him: “For his talent, 100 per cent [I would want him].

    “If you get him at a decent price, but talent-wise there’s not doubting this guy.
    “But it’s just getting him out on the pitch every week is the problem. He hasn’t been able to do that.“He’s a huge talent. He’s had a bad season by all accounts from what they’re saying, their fans are disgruntled and not happy about him. He’s got 16 goals.“In the Premier League, I’d love to see him here.”

    On top of his goal return, Bale has also provided four assists across La Liga and Champions League competition.He has, however, started just 19 games in those competitions as injury or the form of others has left him frustrated on the sidelines.

    At 28 years of age, he should be at his peak, so it could be that a Premier League suitor gets quite the bargain if they are able to put a deal in place for a man who headed to Spain in a record-breaking €100 million transfer back in 2013.
     

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    Allegri defends Buffon's 'human reaction' to Champions League heartbreak


    Massimiliano Allegri defended Gianluigi Buffon's reaction after the Juventus captain and goalkeeper was sent off for protesting Real Madrid's stoppage-time penalty in the Champions League.

    Juventus were eliminated 4-3 on aggregate in the quarter-finals, despite Wednesday's 3-1 victory over Madrid, who benefited from a dramatic last-gasp penalty at the Santiago Bernabeu.

    Buffon and Juve were poised to force extra time after remarkably erasing Madrid's 3-0 first-leg lead, until Cristiano Ronaldo broke their hearts with a spot-kick at the death.

    Two-time reigning champions Madrid were awarded a penalty after Lucas Vazquez was fouled by defender Medhi Benatia, sparking a furious protest from Buffon, who was shown a red card having confronted referee Michael Oliver."There was too much confusion, and this is what happened," Allegri said. "Gigi had that reaction but it's understandable.

    "I don't know if this will be Gigi's last Champions League game but there were three seconds left and we were close to a historical result, something he saw slip from his fingers.

    "That was a human reaction and I think he should have been understood. In that moment there was a lot of confusion and the referee took out the red card. I never talk about single episodes.

    "The penalty... the referee saw that and gave the penalty. There’s nothing left to say. There's a lot of regret on our part, the team played very well tonight and in Turin for 60 minutes they also played well."The result condemned the performance of the team but that's not what it was. That's why I was very confident on tonight’s performance."

    "There's no VAR so we lost," Allegri added. "There's not much to say. This is UEFA's problem. I always said that VAR is a very important tool on objective and important decisions. But there's no VAR and we have to deal with that."
    Allegri was seen in conversation with Sergio Ramos, having walked over to Madrid's bench to speak to the suspended captain following the awarding of the penalty."Ramos said the penalty was 'claro' [clear] and I told him: 'Not so 'claro', let's say grey'. I also told him that in the first leg at minutes 92 there was a penalty on [Juan] Cuadrado," Allegri said.

    "I only told him that. But it's normal, there has to be some anger and regret because at that point Buffon was also sent off. Also, Benatia should have been sent off because he already had one yellow card. So let's just say there was general confusion overall."
     

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    ‘He’s got a garbage bin instead of a heart’ – Buffon’s astonishing rant at referee Oliver


    Gianluigi Buffon has launched an astonishing broadside on referee Michael Oliver after his Juventus side exited the Champions League at the hands of Real Madrid.

    Few gave the Italians a chance following their 3-0 first-leg defeat in Turin, yet they battled back to draw the tie level at the Bernabeu thanks to a double from Mario Mandzukic and another goal from Blaise Matuidi.The quarter-final, however, was decided in stoppage-time through a Cristiano Ronaldo penalty, with the 40-year-old goalkeeper dismissed for protesting Michael Oliver's decision to award the spot-kick.

    Buffon stands by his reaction to the award, which saw Lucas Vazquez go down under a challenge from Mehdi Benatia.

    “A quality referee does not destroy the dream of a team that has put everything on the field for 90 minutes,” he fumed to Mediaset Premium. “He wanted to play the part of the protagonist.

    “A human being cannot whistle for an incident so doubtful after a game like that, unless you have a garbage bin instead of a heart. If you do not have personality, you should be in the stands eating chips with your family. This referee did not have the courage or the personality for this level.

    “I could’ve told the referee anything at that moment, but he had to understand the degree of the disaster he was creating. If you can’t handle the pressure and have the courage to make a decision, then you should just sit in the stands and eat your crisps.

    "If you don't have the personality needed for certain levels, it's better to watch the game in the stand with your wife, maybe eating chips. It's a question of the kind of sensitivity that every man must have, knowing whether to officiate or not. It means not knowing where you are, what teams are playing. In practice, it means you don't know shit."The veteran, who was chasing a first Champions League title, reserved praise for his opponents, and he believes Zinedine Zidane’s men will go on and win a third successive title.

    "For me it has always been an honour to face Real Madrid, who will win the Champions League,” he added. “They are truly great, a great team, a great club, and a great crowd. But tonight, we deserved at least extra time. “We started with little chance of doing so, which was understandable after the first leg. But I play with guys that are capable of any feat. I'm proud to be part of a team like that.

    “It disappointed me to leave the boys with 10 men, but I said objectively Real Madrid deserved the victory, we shake their hands and move on. We will be furious when stepping on to the pitch in Serie A this weekend. Furious.”
     

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    Marcelo: What happened to Barcelona wasn't going to happen to us


    Marcelo insisted Real Madrid were never going to capitulate like fierce rivals Barcelona after the Champions League titleholders dramatically survived against Juventus.

    Madrid kept their quest for a European three-peat alive with a 4-3 aggregate victory over Juventus in the quarter-finals, despite Wednesday's 3-1 loss to the Italian champions.

    Zinedine Zidane's men were poised for the semi-finals following last week's 3-0 win in Turin, only for Juve to mount a remarkable comeback in the return leg as they levelled the tie thanks to Mario Mandzukic's double and Keylor Navas's fumbled cross.

    But Madrid managed to deny the rallying visitors after Lucas Vazquez was fouled by Medhi Benatia – Cristiano Ronaldo stepping up to convert the stoppage-time goal.

    Marcelo – the captain in the absence of suspended skipper Sergio Ramos – could not help himself from having a dig at Barca, who surrendered a 4-1 first-leg advantage in a stunning 3-0 collapse against Roma on Tuesday."We should face and we did everything possible to go through," the Brazil international full-back said.

    "What happened to Barcelona wasn't going to happen to us because we're Real Madrid."There were dramatic scenes at the death when referee Michael Oliver pointed to the spot after substitute Vazquez was brought down by Benatia.

    Juve goalkeeper and captain Gianluigi Buffon angrily protested the decision before he was sent off for the first time of his storied career in the Champions League.Asked about the penalty, Marcelo said: "The penalty was very clear."Madrid will face either Liverpool, Bayern Munich or Roma in the final four.
     

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    Barca defeat was a warning to Bayern – Robben


    Bayern Munich had Barcelona's Champions League collapse in mind as they closed out a semi-final place at Sevilla's expense, according to experienced winger Arjen Robben.

    A goalless draw on Wednesday at the Allianz Arena was enough to seal a semi spot for the sixth time in the past seven seasons for Bayern, who were 2-1 winners against the La Liga side last week.Jupp Heynckes' men join Liverpool, Roma and Real Madrid in the semi-finals.

    Madrid needed a controversial stoppage-time penalty from Cristiano Ronaldo to see off a phenomenal Juventus comeback, while Roma's 3-0 win at the Stadio Olimpico on Tuesday saw them improbably dump out Barcelona on away goals."Of course that was a warning," Robben told reporters. "It shows that everything can happen in football.

    "If you play at this level, you need a top performance. That will be the case in the semi-final. "We are now in the semi-finals in the Champions League and in the DFB-Pokal. We have to go a bit further.

    "In the semi-finals there are no favourites. We have to see who we get tied up with and then prepare well. There are only good teams left."Robben conceded it was not a vintage Bayern performance but the Bundesliga champions rarely lost control of the action.

    "From the outside, maybe 2-1 away felt as if it was almost done but we knew that they have a good team," he added."In the first half we had some trouble in midfield. Then they have quality and they can play.

    "They had a few chances. In the end we had more chances, but what was missing was a goal. We should have scored a goal."
     

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    'Mkhitaryan could return for Europa League semis' - Wenger


    Arsenal boss Arsene Wenger is hopeful Henrikh Mkhitaryan will be fit to return in two weeks, placing him in contention for the Gunners' upcoming Europa League semi-finals.

    Mkhitaryan suffered knee ligament damage in the 4-1 quarter-final first-leg win over CSKA Moscow and Wenger was concerned the Armenia international could be out for several weeks.Some reports suggested the January signing from Manchester United could even miss the remainder of the campaign after an encouraging start to his career in north London.

    However, speaking after his side claimed a 2-2 draw in Moscow on Thursday to secure a 6-3 aggregate win, the Gunners boss was more optimistic ahead of Friday's last-four draw.

    "Yes, [it's a] ligament strain and he should be out for two more weeks," Wenger told a news conference. "Don't be too worried. We have good medical staff and he's very serious in his rehab."

    Arsenal were in danger of throwing away their first-leg lead, with CSKA taking a 2-0 lead into the final 15 minutes of the match before Danny Welbeck and Aaron Ramsey snatched a draw. Wenger was impressed with Viktor Goncharenko's side but reserved special praise for the way in which Welbeck started the move that led to his well-taken goal.

    "You could see when you have a big difference after the first game it's difficult to turn up with the same urgency than if a difference is very small and that played a part in the way we played in the first half," said Wenger.

    "I congratulated him [Goncharenko] because I felt that, in the two games, they played well. Especially tonight, they made my heart beat much quicker than I expected it to be. I wished him good luck as well for the rest of the season.

    "I would say as well, above all, the qualities Danny Welbeck [has] – when you have your back to the wall, he looks like he has extra special motivation in his body and his head that can give you something extra special.

    "That is something that is really exceptional that you do not find in many players."Goncharenko was proud of the way his side threatened to produce another stirring comeback in a week that has seen Roma overturn a first-leg deficit to knock Barcelona out of the Champions League and Juventus come close to doing the same to Real Madrid.

    "I can say that, until 75 minutes of the match, we played extremely well and we were winning in a very justified way," he said. "We took the lead and we were so close to winning this match.

    "We tried to improve the game level and improve our performance thanks to the substitutions but after 75 minutes, the tempo of the match began going down and down. We were hoping we could recover thanks to the substitutions but unfortunately it didn't happen.

    "The speed that Arsenal was playing was extremely high and the schedule that our team is playing at the moment is also very tough, so we were hoping that we could speed up with the substitutions, but it didn't happen."
     

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    Bale will only leave Real Madrid for 'giant club' - Coleman


    Gareth Bale would join another "giant club" if he were to leave Real Madrid, according to former Wales coach Chris Coleman.

    Bale was withdrawn at half-time as Madrid lost 3-1 to Juventus in Wednesday's Champions League quarter-final, Cristiano Ronaldo's dramatic stoppage-time penalty securing progression for the holders.The Wales star has endured another injury-affected season, starting only 16 La Liga games, and appears to have been usurped by Isco in Zinedine Zidane's preferred starting line-up.

    Bale's early substitution against Juve prompted a fresh round of stories about his future, although the player's agent Jonathan Barnett claims the speculation is being driven by the Spanish media.

    Zidane has indicated he expects Bale to be at Madrid next season and Coleman - in charge of Wales when the 28-year-old fired his country to the semi-finals at Euro 2016 - thinks the forward will stay put."How long has he been there? Five years, has he?" Coleman, now in charge of Sunderland, said.

    "After his first year when I used to do the Welsh press conferences, they always used to ask, 'The Spanish press are not very happy with him, has he got a future there?' I think he's won three Champions Leagues there."All right, he's done a good stint there, but the last time I spoke to him, he was very happy in Madrid, his family is settled there.

    "Where does he go from there that's bigger? There's nowhere bigger, so if he does leave Madrid, where's he going to go?"It's going to have to be another giant club."Manchester United are among the clubs to have been linked with a move for Bale, who has a contract with Madrid until 2022.
     

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    Arsenal were on the ropes against CSKA, admits Wenger


    Arsene Wenger admitted Arsenal were "on the ropes" against CSKA Moscow before a late salvo secured a 2-2 draw in Thursday's second leg and a 6-3 aggregate win in the Europa League quarter-final.

    The Gunners took a 4-1 first-leg lead to Russia but found themselves 2-0 down and on the back foot early in the second half, with Fedor Chalov and Kirill Nababkin taking CSKA to within one goal of going through.Wenger had switched to a five-man defence at the break but his side were consistently under pressure, until Danny Welbeck struck a fine goal 15 minutes from time to kill the home side's momentum.

    Aaron Ramsey levelled the second-leg scoreline in injury time to spare the Gunners' blushes further, but Wenger accepted the tie could have run away from his side."Maybe we were a bit surprised by the intensity of the game and were not at the races, in the first half especially," he told BT Sport.

    "They scored the second and Ignashevich had a chance to score goal three, then we were a bit on the ropes. But we had a good response: we were better organised in the second half than in the first, our distances were too big.

    "If you look at the game, we were in trouble in the first half. Once we moved to a five [at the back], we were more stable and didn't give so many chances away. The second goal comes from a long-distance shot but, in the box, we didn't give anything away any more."We have players who can always score. Once we scored the 2-1, it was a big blow for them, and they didn't recover from that."

    Laurent Koscielny thinks Arsenal need to have more confidence in their play as they aim to win the trophy and book a place in next season's Champions League.
    "No, it was not the plan [to sit back]," he said. "I think we missed a bit of movement to be available for our team-mates, we didn't win the duels, so it was hard.

    "They played well with the ball and they had some opportunities and scored two goals. After, we had some pressure on us because, if they'd scored the third, we're out."We need to have more confidence in our game. It's a big competition for us because it's our last chance to qualify for the Champions League next season."

    Arsenal go into Friday's draw for the semi-finals along with Atletico Madrid, Marseille and Red Bull Salzburg, who overcame Lazio 6-5 on aggregate after a thrilling 4-1 second-leg win.It is Diego Simeone's Atletico, though, who Wenger singled out as the top opposition as his club prepares for their first last-four tie in Europe since 2009.

    "It should be every year and it's never enough, but you could see again this week in Europe that we had a lot of turnarounds and you have to be completely focused in every single game," Wenger said when asked if Arsenal had disappointed by not reaching this stage more often.

    "So, let's prepare well for the semi-final and see who we play. Maybe [Atletico] are the strongest on paper but let's just play well against the team we get."
     

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    Messi can't win the World Cup alone, says Argentina FA chief


    Lionel Messi cannot win the World Cup on his own and needs his Argentina team-mates to raise their game to help him, says Argentina FA president Claudio Tapia.Messi cut a folorn figure as Argentina were beaten 1-0 by Germany in the 2014 World Cup final, leaving him without the winners' medal that would help to cement his place in history alongside Pele and Diego Maradona as one of the game's greatest players.

    Tapia – the president of the Argentina Football Association - acknowledged that this might be the 30-year-old's last opportunity to win the tournament, but said even the five-time Ballon d'Or winner wouldn't be able to guide Argentina to glory if his team-mates didn't perform at their best.

    "Football has evened itself out," Tapia told La Nacion. "We have the best player in the world but we have to help him, he cannot to do it alone."He's very mature and to have him is a privilege. He's number one, he has the ambition and the need to win this World Cup."

    The two-time tournament winners will face Croatia, Iceland and Nigeria in a group they will be clear favourites to win, but Tapia said that falling short of the semi-finals would not constitute a failure for Argentina. Since Alejandro Sabella's departure in the aftermath of the 2014 World Cup, Argentina have been coached by Gerardo Martino, Edgardo Bauza and Jorge Sampaoli, and Tapia is not expecting miracles from the latter.

    "We're the only team that has had three coaches and reached the World Cup," said Tapia. "The other teams have had work that has been going on over four years."
     

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    Champions League semi-final draw: Liverpool land Roma, with Real Madrid facing Bayern Munich

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    Liverpool will face Roma in the Champions League semi-finals, with Real Madrid taking on Bayern Munich.

    The Reds stunned Premier League leaders Manchester City in the last eight, and have been rewarded with a meeting against Serie A opponents who caused their own shock at the quarter-final stage.Roma trailed La Liga giants Barcelona by three goals heading into the second leg of a heavyweight encounter, but produced a stirring fightback on Italian soil to progress on away goals .

    Liverpool also did much of their best work in front of their own supporters to reach this point, with City thumped 3-0 at Anfield.Jurgen Klopp’s side then won 2-1 at the Etihad Stadium to remain in the hunt for a sixth European crown.

    A meeting with Roma will see the Reds reunited with a side they faced in the 1984 final and a foe they last met at the second group stage back in 2001-02.
    Mohamed Salah will also find himself up against familiar faces, with the 39-goal Liverpool forward having left Stadio Olimpico for Merseyside in the summer of 2017.

    On the other side of the draw, reigning champions Real Madrid continue to chase down a remarkable hat-trick.Zinedine Zidane’s side have conquered the continent in each of the last two seasons, and three times in four years.Cristiano Ronaldo has remained a talismanic presence for the Blancos, with his European goal haul for 2017-18 taken to 15 .

    The latest of those efforts fired Real past Juventus in dramatic fashion , with a stoppage-time penalty downing the Serie A leaders following a surprise collapse by the Spanish giants on home soil.They got over the line in the end and now have Bayern blocking their path to the final in Kiev.

    Real faced the Bundesliga champions at the quarter-final stage last season, with a 4-2 extra-time victory in the second leg of a thrilling encounter at Santiago Bernabeu seeing them through.Bayern will have revenge in mind this time around, as they seek to build on the domestic dominance which has already been secured in Germany.​