The New Zealand Herald

Top sides ease into knockout stage

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Juventus, Barcelona, Chelsea and Sevilla have all reached the knockout stage of the Champions League with two matches to spare.

Alvaro Morata scored in injury time to send Juventus through with a 2-1 win at home over Hungarian team Ferencvaro­s, ensuring the Italian champions will finish at least second in Group G.

Barcelona tops the group and booked its spot in the last 16 for the 17th straight season with a comfortabl­e 4-0 victory over Dynamo Kyiv despite the absence of Lionel Messi, Frenkie de Jong and the injured Sergio Busquets, Gerard Pique and Sergi Roberto.

Martin Braithwait­e scored twice and Antoine Griezmann and Sergino Dest grabbed the others as Barcelona secured its fourth win in four games from Group G to hold a three-point lead over Juventus.

Both Chelsea and Sevilla left it late to advance from Group E. Olivier Giroud came off the bench to score an injury-time header as Chelsea won 2-1 at Rennes, and Munir El Haddadi scored in the final minute of stoppage time as Sevilla defeated Russian newcomer Krasnodar 2-1 away.

Elsewhere, Erling Haaland maintained his remarkable scoring pace with two goals to put Borussia Dortmund in touch of reaching the last 16 with a 3-0 win at home over Club Brugge.

No Europa league

Sevilla qualifying for the last 16 means the Spanish side cannot defend its Europa League title, as only the thirdplace finishers in each group enjoy the cushion of playing in Europe’s secondary competitio­n.

It will be a strange feeling for the Spanish side, which already has a record six Europa League titles, all since 2006. Julen Lopetegui’s team defeated Inter Milan 3-2 in last season’s final. Both Sevilla and Chelsea have 10 points in Group E, while Krasnodar and Rennes stayed at one point each after four matches.

Goal machines

Haaland took his tally to 16 goals in 12 Champions League games in Dortmund’s 3-0 win over Brugge, while Jadon Sancho scored an eyecatchin­g free kick to put the German side on course to qualify from Group F.

Dortmund next take on secondplac­ed Lazio on December 3. Former Dortmund forward Ciro Immobile scored twice on his return from the coronaviru­s in Lazio’s 3-1 win over Zenit Saint Petersburg.

Immobile has 46 goals in 53 appearance­s in all competitio­ns for Lazio since the beginning of last season. Only Robert Lewandowsk­i (68 goals) has scored more in Europe’s five top leagues over the same period.

Dortmund has nine points, Lazio eight, Brugge four and Zenit one.

Fernandes leads United

Bruno Fernandes scored two early goals in Manchester United’s 4-1 win over Istanbul Basaksehir, keeping the Premier League team on track to qualify from Group H.

Fernandes might even have scored a hat trick, but he handed over spot-kick duties to Marcus Rashford, who had been brought down for the penalty, and the England forward converted to make it 3-0 at an empty Old Trafford. Daniel James scored the fourth as United made up for their surprise 2-1 loss in Istanbul.

United now has nine points, three more than both Paris Saint-Germain and Leipzig.

A penalty from Neymar was enough for PSG to scrape a 1-0 win against Leipzig, who wasted a number of chances to equalise.

 ?? Photo / Getty Images ?? Club Brugge goalkeeper Simon Mignolet can’t stop another goal against Borussia Dortmund in their Champions League clash.
Photo / Getty Images Club Brugge goalkeeper Simon Mignolet can’t stop another goal against Borussia Dortmund in their Champions League clash.

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