Irwinwastheking
Gimpier than Alex and Feeky
Frankenref
I'm pretty sure I remember reading where Giggs was asked about that, and he replied that he was telling Ronaldo to make sure he didn't have to wait a decade for a second one like he (Giggs) himself had to.^ Just wondering what Giggsy was saying to Ronaldo at about 5:25? Reckon it could have been something like "you won't find anywhere else that compares to United you know lad!"
I would say that if we're talking in musts against Barcelona, then Fletcher would be close to that, fitness and some sort of form depending. He brings so much work-rate and the positional discipline that Giggsy sometimes lacks (see 2009 final).
Ban them all I say. Except Pinto.Real Madrid have appealed against Uefa's decision to reject complaints about the behaviour of Barcelona players in their Champions League semi-final first leg.
Barca were accused of "unsportsmanlike behaviour" by Real but Uefa said there was "no common strategy to provoke".
Uefa will hear the appeal on 16 May.
Real face their own hearing on Friday over midfielder Pepe's red card and coach Jose Mourinho's sending off and post-match comments.
The initial decision to reject Real's complaints was taken by the Uefa disciplinary panel on Monday.
In the bad-tempered match, which finished 2-0 to Barcelona, Barca's reserve keeper Jose Pinto received a red card for a confrontation as the teams left the pitch at half-time. Pepe was sent off for a tackle on Dani Alves and Mourinho was sent to the stands after protesting decisions on the touchline.
After the final whistle, the Real coach continued his complaints, suggesting in his post-match press conference that Barcelona were favourably treated by referees.
Barcelona claimed Mourinho had "crossed the line" with the remarks. Madrid responded, accusing Barca's players of "consistently feigned aggressions with the sole purpose of misleading the referee of the match".
The second leg on Tuesday ended in a 1-1 draw at Barcelona's Camp Nou stadium, allowing the Catalan side to advance to a meeting with Manchester United in the final in London on 28 May.
This seems a good place for posting this amazing video![]()
This seems a good place for posting this amazing video![]()
and 2009.The route to the final is interesting ... United unbeaten again, just like 2008![]()
The route to the final is interesting ... United unbeaten again, just like 2008![]()
and 2009.
FC Barcelona and Manchester United FC will descend on Wembley Stadium, London on Saturday 28 May each seeking to write another chapter in their long and rich history.
In a city resonant with past glories, these modern-day superpowers have their eyes on European club football's greatest prize. It was the same two years ago, when goals from Samuel Eto'o and Lionel Messi earned Barcelona victory against United in Rome. As UEFA.com delves through the archives, however, it is abundantly clear there really is little to choose between the sides.
1 Previous encounters
United and Barcelona have met on ten previous occasions, winning three games apiece and drawing the other four since beginning their rivalry in the 1983/84 UEFA Cup Winners' Cup quarter-finals. They have also met in two UEFA finals; aside from Barcelona's 2009 triumph, they also met in the 1991 UEFA Cup Winners' Cup final in Rotterdam when United ran out 2-1 winners – Sir Alex Ferguson's first European trophy at Old Trafford. Former Barça striker Mark Hughes was the United hero, twice beating goalkeeper Carlos Busquets, father of Sergio.
The sides were paired in the UEFA Champions League group stage in 1994/95 and 1998/99, drawing three games with Barcelona winning the other, and United prevailed when they met in the 2007/08 semi-finals. Barcelona enacted swift retribution in their last meeting in Rome though ominously for Barça, neither side has ever won back-to-back meetings.
2 Wembley experience
United are obviously no strangers to Wembley, scene of nine of their FA Cup final victories, though the north London venue also commands a place in Barcelona's affections. Indeed, as Europe's premier club competition returns to Wembley for a record sixth time – the first in the UEFA Champions League era – fate has pitted together the two sides that claimed their maiden European Cups there.
In 1968 United became the first English club to lift the trophy with a 4-1 extra-time victory against a Eusébio-inspired SL Benfica. The Catalan giants also needed an additional 30 minutes when they met UC Sampdoria 24 years later in the last final before the dawn of the UEFA Champions League era. With Josep Guardiola among the starting XI, Dutch international Ronald Koeman finally broke the deadlock in the second period of extra time with a trademark free-kick.
3 European pedigree
Both sides have three titles apiece and are aiming for a fourth to move level with AFC Ajax and FC Bayern München in the all-time list – behind only Liverpool FC, AC Milan and Real Madrid CF. United had a 100% record in finals before Rome in 2009, defeating Benfica (1968), Bayern (1999) and Chelsea FC (2008).
Barcelona have won three out of six, victories against Sampdoria (1992), Arsenal FC (2006) and United balanced out by losses to Benfica (1961), FC Steaua Bucureşti (1986) and Milan (1994). For the Blaugrana, triumph would bring their third European Cup in six seasons, making them the first team to win the UEFA Champions League three times this century.
4 Sir Alex v Guardiola
Guardiola was seven when a 36-year-old Sir Alex embarked on his first European campaign as a manager with Aberdeen FC in 1978/79. What followed for both men is well documented, and victory at Wembley would give the Scot his third European Cup – equalling a record held by compatriot Bob Paisley, who guided Liverpool to glory in 1977, 1978 and 1981.
Guardiola is one of only six men to win the European Cup as player and coach, adding his name to the pantheon of greats in 2009: Miguel Muñoz, Giovanni Trapattoni, Johan Cruyff, Carlo Ancelotti and Frank Rijkaard preceded him. Of those, only Muñoz and Ancelotti guided sides to two titles.
5 Anglo-Spanish finals
English and Spanish sides have met in 15 UEFA club competition finals, Spain winning seven and England eight since Tottenham Hotspur FC got the ball rolling with a 5-1 victory against Club Atlético de Madrid in the 1962/63 Cup Winners' Cup. England initially held sway, prevailing in six of the first eight meetings including Liverpool's 1-0 victory over Real Madrid CF in the 1980/81 European Cup.
Spain, though, have had the better of recent contests. Sevilla FC swept aside Middlesbrough FC 4-0 to claim the 2005/06 UEFA Cup, their first major honour, and a week later in Paris, Barcelona beat ten-man Arsenal in the UEFA Champions League showpiece, winning 2-1. The Catalan giants repeated the dose three years later, with Manchester United the unwilling recipients, while Atlético defeated Fulham FC in the first UEFA Europa League final in Hamburg last May.
I quite like this pic:
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The L and the I together look like a 4. Has anyone else noticed this?
Good lord. There's a 19 hidden in that one. Had you seen that Levi_Jm?
Um.....errrr.... that's WHY I love it.....
Just like the
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Am I the only one who thinks that looks like a logo of a cheese maker that I cannot remember the name of?
I think it's this one!
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Just set off the fire alarm.
Celebrate. Give us a one day off!Now can we relax and look forward to the final now that the league is more or less put to bed?
Wonder if Fergie has traveled for the Levante match going on right now. No clue how the game is going but, gamecast shows Barca with about 90% of the ball in the first 20+ minutes but, no shots yet - Levante already has 4 with one on target.
Fergie is watching Reserves at Old Trafford.Wonder if Fergie has traveled for the Levante match going on right now. No clue how the game is going but, gamecast shows Barca with about 90% of the ball in the first 20+ minutes but, no shots yet - Levante already has 4 with one on target.