Daily News

ENGLISH CLUBS

ON THE RISE

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WITH BRITISH politics still engulfed in Brexit chaos at least England’s football teams are providing some much-needed clarity when it comes to their standing in Europe.

For the first time in 10 years, four English clubs have reached the quarterfin­als of the Champions League.

Liverpool’s 3-1 victory at German giants Bayern Munich on Wednesday completed the full house, the night after Manchester City thrashed Schalke 7-0 for a 10-2 aggregate victory.

Tottenham Hotspur had already made it through to the last eight with a 4-0 aggregate drubbing of Borussia Dortmund while United’s dramatic victory over Paris St Germain put them back in the last eight for the first time in five years.

Not since Chelsea’s unlikely triumph in Bayern Munich’s backyard in 2012 has an English club lifted the trophy.

Of the seven Champions League finals prior to that Didier Drogba-inspired win, only once was no English side involved.

A slump followed though and in the six seasons after that there were only six English quarter-finalists while in 2012-13 and 2014-15 no Premier League sides made the last eight.

Liverpool’s run to the final last year signalled a re-awakening and this season, with holders Real Madrid, Bayern and PSG all out, the odds are shortening on the first all-English final since United beat Chelsea on penalties in Moscow in 2008.

Barcelona and Juventus remain formidable threats in today’s draw, but both will be hoping to avoid the English sides, in particular Manchester City and Liverpool.

While Liverpool’s preference may be to win a first English title since 1990, City’s Abu Dhabi owners hired Pep Guardiola with the specific goal of reigning in Europe. “For the owners, the holy grail is the Champions League,” former City defender Danny Mills said. “They have won the Premier league, they have won the FA Cup, won the League Cup but they haven’t quite got the Champions League trophy.”

| Reuters

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