Business Day

Kings of Europe stand in way of Manchester City

• Pep must find a way past Real Madrid who regard the Champions League as their tournament

- Agency Staff Madrid

Manchester City will be up against both Real Madrid and their reputation on Wednesday as the Champions League’s biggest winners play one of its biggest underachie­vers at the Santiago Bernabeu.

After City’s win over Leicester on Saturday, Pep Guardiola said: “We will try to be ourselves. We can win and we can lose but we must try to be ourselves.”

Yet in some ways, City will seek a role reversal too. Madrid’s record is the envy of Europe but particular­ly of teams such as City, whose financial might and technical talent have translated only into disappoint­ment outside domestic competitio­n.

In the time City have won three Premier League titles and five domestic cups, they have gone past the Champions League’s quarterfin­als only once, reaching the last four in 2016, only to be beaten by Madrid.

Zinedine Zidane’s side, meanwhile, have surrendere­d dominance in La Liga to Barcelona in recent years but made amends for one Spanish league title in seven by winning four Champions Leagues out of the last six.

Few would argue that quality explains the difference. Madrid’s success has certainly been due in part to the brilliance of Cristiano Ronaldo but City have perhaps boasted an even better allround collection of players and their excellence in England points to a club well-equipped to excel in Europe.

Guardiola has been accused of overthinki­ng against elite opposition too, yet City’s lethargy encompasse­s nine seasons in the Champions League and Guardiola has only been in charge for three.

Instead, Madrid ’ s habit of coming through the kind of crunch games that have so often proved City’s undoing suggests each club’s identifica­tion with the Champions League has become something of a selffulfil­ling prophecy.

Madrid believe this tournament is their tournament, a conviction based on historic success that makes them assured under pressure and ruthless in the decisive moments. “When you have a history of the [Alfredo] Di

Stefano period, winning five or six European Cups at that time, it means a new player that comes to Real Madrid and puts on that shirt knows ‘we have to defend our history’,” said Guardiola.

“That gives them a boost because they live that history.”

When Madrid last won the Champions League by beating Liverpool in the final in 2018, their advance to the trophy seemed to rely on a number of crucial interventi­ons falling their way. In the semifinal against Bayern Munich, they progressed after an error from Bayern’s goalkeeper Sven Ulreich. In the quarters, they were awarded a fortuitous 97th-minute penalty to beat Juventus.

Even in the last 16, they faced a Paris Saint-Germain side without the injured Neymar. Yet where some saw luck, Madrid’s coach and their players saw a refusal to give in.

“The point is Madrid never give up,” said Zidane after their last-gasp triumph over Juventus. “We came up against a number of obstacles but we believe in the goals we want to achieve and we achieve them because we fight.”

For City, that refusal to accept defeat is still to be establishe­d and with every year that victory evades them, doubts grow too. “It’s a real, real test,” said Guardiola. “The king of this competitio­n against a team who are not used to playing this kind of game much, because our best performanc­e was one semifinal. So, in a marvellous stadium we have to show our personalit­y.”

Personalit­y to Guardiola means a certain style as well as attitude but to Madrid, the objective is more straightfo­rward.

“At Real Madrid, every season, you have to go for everything and win everything,” said Zidane last summer. “And more importantl­y, we believe we can do it.”

 ?? /Reuters /Reuters ?? Serial winners: Zinedine Zidane says Real Madrid never give up.
Up against history: Pep Guardiola points out Real Madrid have history on their side.
/Reuters /Reuters Serial winners: Zinedine Zidane says Real Madrid never give up. Up against history: Pep Guardiola points out Real Madrid have history on their side.

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