The Zimbabwe Independent

Madrid stand alone against new order among CL semi-finalists

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UEFA is set to announce major changes to the Champions League (CL) next week, but the make-up of this season’s semi-finalists confirms the extent to which elite club football in Europe has already been transforme­d over the last decade.

Manchester City have gone beyond the quarter-finals for the first time since Pep Guardiola’s appointmen­t as coach in 2016 and their reward is a last-four clash with Paris Saint-Germain.

It is a blockbuste­r tie and a rare meeting of the two clubs who have led that transforma­tion of European football under the ownership of Abu Dhabi and Qatar respective­ly.

State wealth from the Middle East has allowed PSG and City to upset football’s old order just as Chelsea to an extent did after being bought by Russian oligarch Roman Abramovich in 2003.

e London club are also into the semifinals, where they face Real Madrid, the 13time European champions who are the last ones standing this season among the continent’s grand old clubs.

Real have dominated the Champions League over the last decade along with Barcelona and Bayern Munich. ey have won nine of the last 12 European Cups between them.

Madrid were practicall­y level with Barcelona as the club with the highest revenue in the world last season according to analysts Deloitte, and yet there is an argument that they are now the outsiders among the semi-finalists.

Zinedine Zidane has worked wonders with what a few months ago was a tiredlooki­ng team in need of an overhaul, their spine comprised of two 35-year-olds in Sergio Ramos and Luka Modric and a 33-year-old Karim Benzema.

“I am proud of what we are doing but we have won nothing yet,” Zidane said on Wednesday.

Chelsea get return on investment

Despite seeing off Liverpool in the quarterfin­als, Real have been handicappe­d by a 575 million-euro (US$688 million) revamp of their stadium while the pandemic has slashed revenues.

Chelsea, meanwhile, defied the economic impact of the pandemic to make the biggest investment in the transfer market of any club last summer, spending close to an estimated 250 million euros on new signings including German stars Kai Havertz and Timo Werner.

Now they are in a first semi-final since 2014 as they look to win the trophy for the second time after 2012.

Chelsea and Real have never before met in the Champions League, which is what makes the tie so exciting. Yet those behind the plans to create a new format competitio­n want to change that.

Juventus chairman Andrea Agnelli has, in his role as head of the European Club Associatio­n, talked of the desire for the biggest teams to play each other more often.

Abu Dhabi vs Qatar

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Neverthele­ss, the changes Uefa is expected to ratify at a meeting on Monday mainly concern the group stage, increasing the number of clubs and radically altering the format.

From the last 16, at least, the tournament is set to be unchanged.

In any case there are only likely to be more meetings in future in the knockout rounds between PSG and City, whose only previous Champions League encounter came in the 2016 quarter-finals. — AFP.

 ??  ?? Real Madrid manager Zinedine Zidane
Real Madrid manager Zinedine Zidane

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