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The ideal Champions League final is within reach if Mbappé and Real Madrid can deliver

- By James Robson

The tantalizin­g prospect of Kylian Mbappé squaring up to Real Madrid in the Champions League final looms large.

Mbappé becomes a free agent at the end of the season when Madrid is favorite to finally land the forward it has coveted for so long.

Before that there are trophies to be won, with none bigger in club soccer than the Champions League.

Madrid has dominated the competitio­n with 14 wins, while Paris SaintGerma­in and Mbappé are still waiting for their first.

Mbappé’s imminent departure has partly been attributed to PSG’s failure to transfer its domestic dominance to the continent. How ironic then if the France forward triumphed in his final year at the club, especially against the team he looks likeliest to join.

Conversely, a record-extending 15th crown for Madrid at the expense of PSG would serve only to confirm to Mbappé that his ambitions are best served at Santiago Bernabeu Stadium.

With PSG and Madrid kept apart in the draw, either narrative is in play, but the Champions League has a habit of getting in the way of such well-laid plans.

REVENGE MISSION

A repeat of the 2013 final anyone?

Bayern beat Dortmund the last time the final was staged at Wembley Stadium, which is the venue again this year. How Dortmund — then coached by Jurgen Klopp — would love to avenge that loss 11 years on.

Dortmund is the outsider to win the trophy having unexpected­ly advanced to the semifinals in a season when it trails German champion Bayer Leverkusen by 23 points and may have to rely on a bonus fifthplace spot to qualify for next year’s Champions League.

PERFECT SENDOFF

Mbappe isn’t the only person targeting a fairy tale finale. Bayern coach Thomas Tuchel is stepping down at season’s end after the German giant’s 11year Bundesliga title-winning streak was broken by Leverkusen.

In a summer when big jobs will be available at the likes of Liverpool and Barcelona, Tuchel could do with rebuilding his reputation

by winning a second Champions League trophy, having previously lifted it with Chelsea in 2021.

KANE’S WAIT

Harry Kane was expected to finally end his wait to win major silverware when he joined Bayern from Tottenham last summer.

It hasn’t worked out that way so far. Despite the England striker continuing his outstandin­g scoring form in Germany with 39 goals in all competitio­ns, the Champions League is his last chance of a trophy in his first season at the club.

What better place to end that drought than at English soccer’s national stadium?

FALLEN CHAMPION

Manchester City’s hopes of starting a new period of European dominance

were ended by the all-time king of Europe, Madrid.

Despite dominating the semifinals second leg, Pep Guardiola’s team could not take advantage, drawing 1-1 through extra time and 4-4 on aggregate before losing in a penalty shootout 4-3.

A lack of cutting edge at Etihad Stadium proved City’s undoing and continued a theme against elite teams this season. City has not won in seven games against Madrid, Arsenal and Liverpool this term. Having lost key players such as Ilkay Gundogan and Riyad Mahrez after last season’s treble of trophies, it was revealing the lack of game-changing players Guardiola could summon from the bench against Madrid.

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