Global Times - Weekend

Madrid giants to renew their hostilitie­s

Atletico hope to bid farewell to stadium with win over rivals

- AFP

Holders Real Madrid face Atletico Madrid in the Champions League semifinals as the rivals do battle once more and French surprise-package Monaco take on Juventus, following the draw on Friday.

The all-Madrid showdown is a rerun of the 2014 and 2016 finals in Europe’s top club competitio­n, with a Cristiano Ronaldo-inspired Real victorious on both occasions in cagey affairs that they failed to settle after 90 minutes each time.

Real – aiming to become the first team to retain the Champions League – will host Atletico at the Santiago Bernabeu on May 2 and a free-scoring Monaco side brimming with some of Europe’s hottest talent are home to Juventus on May 3, with the second legs the following week.

Real Madrid director and former striker Emilio Butragueno said, “We know each other very well, this is the fourth time we meet Atletico in the Champions League but it will not be a final this time.

“Every detail will count and we will have to be very careful, they defend very well and have high-quality players who know how to take advantage of mistakes,” he told BeINSports.

Atletico, who boast one of soccer’s most deadly strikers in Antoine Griezmann, will move next season from the Vicente Calderon, their home for 50 years, to a new stadium.

Clemente Villaverde, a former Atletico player and now a director, said the Real clash would be a fitting farewell.

“Our fans and players have experience­d two final defeats and know what it means and takes to get there – a lot of work,” he said. “Hopefully we can give the Vicente Calderon the goodbye it deserves.”

Going into the draw at UEFA headquarte­rs in Nyon, Switzerlan­d all four teams were making the usual noises: There is nothing to choose between any of them.

But the 39-year-old Juventus goalkeeper Gianluigi Buffon broke ranks, saying that he would prefer to avoid a wily Atletico side because they are out of the La Liga title race so can rest players for Europe.

Buffon, one of the best goalkeeper­s of all time but who has never won the Champions League, got his wish in missing out on Diego Simeone’s side, who would dearly love to get one over Real this time.

But instead he must face teenage striking sensation Kylian Mbappe, 18, and a rejuvenate­d Radamel Falcao in a last-four encounter that will be an interestin­g contrast – Juventus with their dogged, brilliant defense and a Monaco team that loves scoring goals.

The French side – Buffon labeled them “feisty” – are full of attacking vim and have hit a staggering 141 goals in all competitio­ns this season.

Juventus were hugely impressive in beating Barcelona 3-0 in the first leg and then holding the Spanish champions to a 0-0 draw at the Camp Nou on Wednesday in a defensive master class.

The final is in Cardiff on June 3.

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