The Herald (South Africa)

Arsenal need to beat Bayern curse

German champions have historic edge in Euro competitio­n

- Karolos Grohmann and Richard Martin

BAYERN Munich and Arsenal meet in their big-name Champions League round of 16 first leg clash tonight, both hoping European success will help lift mid-season gloom on their domestic fronts. Bayern are on track for a record-extending fifth consecutiv­e title with a seven-point lead thanks to their 2-0 win over Ingolstadt on Saturday.

But that result does not tell the whole story, with the German champions looking lacklustre for most of the match before snatching two late goals.

The Bavarians have been more a model of efficiency under coach Carlo Ancelotti than the high-scoring, high-speed train of past seasons under predecesso­r Pep Guardiola.

With fans grumbling about the lack of spark, Ancelotti said Saturday’s win gave them the boost needed to take on Arsenal.

“This result gives us a lot of confidence for Wednesday,” he said. “We showed great character and that is very important.”

Ancelotti could be without winger Franck Ribery, with the Frenchman working towards a comeback from a thigh muscle injury sustained two weeks ago.

“It will be difficult but we will have to see. We will, however, take no risk with this,” the manager said.

Bayern have posted a record 15 straight home wins in the competitio­n, including three this season. Arsene Wenger’s Arsenal have lost in the last 16 for six years in a row, including to Bayern in 2013 and 2014.

The London side ended a two-game losing run with a 2-0 league win over Hull on Saturday but that did little to lift the mood of their fans with Wenger non-committal about his future.

Meanwhile, Real Madrid have mastered the art of winning without hitting top gear this season but that strategy will be severely tested in tonight’s last-16 showdown against a Napoli side that have developed their own invincible aura.

La Liga leaders Real were riding high as they set a Spanish record 40-match unbeaten streak in all competitio­ns.

That run was finally snapped by Sevilla last month and now Napoli have taken up the mantle of the hardest team to beat in Europe, stringing together 18 games without defeat.

Real’s scrappy 3-1 win at basement club Osasuna on Saturday displayed visible weaknesses in their rearguard as Zinedine Zidane’s use of a back three bore mixed results, with goalkeeper Keylor Navas called upon numerous times to thwart the La Liga strugglers.

The return of a fit-again Dani Carvajal should see the coach revert to his favoured 4-3-3 lineup as he has an almost full strength side at his disposal except for Gareth Bale, who has recently returned to training following an ankle injury.

Real captain Sergio Ramos said his team needed to underline their credential­s tonight ahead of the return leg at Napoli’s San Paolo stadium.

“Napoli are strong opponents on a very good run and we’ll try and keep a clean sheet so we can have a more comfortabl­e trip over there,” the defender said. Napoli striker Arkadiusz Milik, who returned to the squad for Friday’s 2-0 win over strugglers Genoa but stayed on the bench after four months out with a knee injury, could make his comeback against Real.

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CARLO ANCELOTTI

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