UEFA Champions League
BEHOLD THE GLADIATORS AS UEFA CHAMPIONS LEAGUE MINI TOURNAMENT KICKS OFF
MANCHESTER CITY
Manchester City have never won the Champions League in their history, but they will be bullish about their chances of finally lifting the prestigious trophy this time around.

Pep Guardiola’s men are in superb form, despite missing out on retaining their league title and suffering disappointment in the FA Cup, and demonstrated their newfound maturity on the European stage by easing beyond Real Madrid.
City fully deserved to progress at the expense of the 13-time winners, and should even have scored more goals across both legs of their last-16 tie.
After their 2-1 win at the Etihad ensured their flight to Lisbon, Guardiola admitted that evening proved to be a major step towards his goal of experiencing European glory once again.
Their first opponents after touching down will be Ligue 1 outfit Lyon. The French club have proven themselves no pushovers across the tournament, and even knocked out Juventus on away goals despite their narrow defeat in Turin.
But the only remaining Premier League team should have no real cause for concern. City have netted at least twice in 14 of their last 17 matches in Europe, with Gabriel Jesus and Raheem Sterling both boasting a tally of six.
Quite simply, City have to be considered among the favourites.
BAYERN MUNICH
Bayern Munich were able to seal their spot in the quarter-finals after battering Chelsea on Saturday. The Bundesliga champions didn’t appear fazed by the six-month pause between each leg, and went about their business in ruthless fashion.

Their attention had likely already shifted to their upcoming showdown with Barcelona on Friday after they eased two goals ahead in Bavaria. And they will rightly be confident about their chances.
The juggernaut, helmed by Hansi Flick, shows no signs of faltering after the comprehensive thumping. Bayern handed Chelsea their worst-ever aggregate defeat in a European tie, and often didn’t appear to have broken a sweat.
Bayern have also shattered countless records during their run to Lisbon. They became the second-ever team to have won every single Champions League game so far this season. They have also scored the most goals in this season’s tournament, with 31 in total. That tally is sensationally 11 higher than the next closest team, Paris Saint-Germain.
Flick became only the third coach in history to guide his side to a win in his first five Champions League matches. His achievements have been rendered even more impressive considering the mess he had inherited from predecessor Niko Kovac in November.
Of course, it always helps that serial scorer Robert Lewandowski has netted the most goals in the competition with 13. Bayern are the favourites in many peoples’ eyes, and understandably so.
BARCELONA
Barcelona were also forced to wait a painfully long time to ensure they too would be heading to Portugal. Their players may have believed they would be spending time on the beaches of the country on holiday instead, due to the turmoil that has gripped them in recent months, but they eased to a job well done.

The tie with Napoli was effectively ended at half-time in the second leg at the Nou Camp. And once again, Barcelona had the magical Lionel Messi to thank for that. The diminutive superstar managed to curl home a superb effort even while on the turf, another wonder goal to add to his enviable collection.
The dethroned LaLiga giants sealed a 4-2 aggregate win over the Italians and will meet Bayern Munich in a mouthwatering showdown later this week.
The battle between the two European giants has often seen Barcelona progress, but this year the tables have well and truly turned. Bayern will be favourites, and Barcelona must strangely adopt and adapt to their underdogs tag.
It was Messi again who proved the difference when both these clubs clashed in the same competition in 2015. Jerome Boateng was memorably left stranded and flailing on the ground after Messi’s quick jink inside, and it is this kind of magic that Barcelona may be forced to count on again.
‘It’s going to be very difficult,’ Quique Setien has admitted. ‘They finished off their tie with seven goals. They are a fantastic team and we will see a great game.’
The under-fire tactician has been unable to reverse the club’s ailing fortunes, and his time is certain to run out should Bayern’s rampant forces get the better of his team.
PARIS SAINT-GERMAIN
Paris Saint-Germain will hope to put to bed this month the curse that has dogged French clubs in European competitions. Only once has an outfit from that nation won either of the top two continental trophies, with the single success coming from Marseille all the way back in 1993.

This time, no country has more clubs than France in the Champions League quarter-finals – and, of course, it is PSG who are under the most pressure to finally triumph in the most bizarre conditions.
The club, bankrolled by their Qatari owners, have been mercilessly mocked for their inability to reach the final four of the showpiece. It has been well reported that the heavy investment pumped into the club was done so in the hope of lifting the biggest trophy of them all.
But under an assortment of managers and players, PSG have continued to fall woefully short. Now, however, they face a club in Atalanta who are competing in the competition for the first time in their history.
The pain and embarrassment from previous shocking knockouts, particularly Barcelona’s unthinkable and jaw-dropping aggregate comeback in 2017, will surely inspire them to a spot in the final four.
Kylian Mbappe is likely a doubt for the clash after Thomas Tuchel admitted it would ‘take a miracle’ for the mercurial forward to shake off his serious ankle injury. Marco Verratti is also a doubt.
ATLETICO MADRID
Atletico Madrid’s Champions League preparations were thrown into chaos. The LaLiga giants faced a nervous wait to discover which players can fly to Lisbon due to a coronavirus scare.

It was eventually revealed on Monday that Angel Correa and Sime Vrsaljko were the two players who had tested positive for Covid-19, and both will now be forced to miss the quarter-final tie this Thursday due to UEFA’s strict protocols.
Atletico had feared that other players may have been infected, which would have also ruled them out of travelling to Portugal, but no other individual tested returned a positive result in the latest round before their flight out.
The shock news was a dampener for the club, who had knocked out holders Liverpool in dramatic fashion to reach this stage. Marcos Llorente and Alvaro Morata’s last-gasp heroics stunned Anfield and resulted in Diego Simeone’s now-infamous charge down the touchline.
And the man at the helm has been keen for his team to shake off any belief they are among the favourites to win the whole tournament ahead of their meeting with RB Leipzig.
Atletico’s dressing room have thrived off their underdog title and will be keen for this to continue, with the club’s greatest moments on the European stage often arriving due to their sheer willpower to cause an upset.
Despite reaching the final twice in recent memory, Atletico have never won the Champions League. They came agonisingly close in the 2013-14 campaign, but fell short against bitter rivals Real Madrid. It was their cross-city neighbours who also lifted the trophy at Atletico’s expensive in 2015-16.
ATALANTA
Atalanta have been the surprise package of this year’s Champions League and have enthralled neutrals during their passage to the quarter-finals. The Italian side scrapped to this stage after blitzing past Valencia, and now face a testing showdown against Paris Saint-Germain to prolong their fairytale story even further.

Their team have thrived off the free-flowing and fluid style of play that has allowed them to net countless goals this season. They will surely head into the tie full of vigour and ambition, and are more than capable of pulling off yet another shock.
Gian Piero Gasperini’s favoured 3-4-3 system has performed miracles. Atalanta have often been seen hurtling towards their opponents through hordes of devilish attacks and scoring seemingly at will.
They are the most prolific team in Italy, having bagged 96 goals already. A significant amount of those came in the several games in which Atalanta had netted over six.
PSG will likely fear the fact that the Serie A outfit have nothing to lose. Atalanta’s maiden season sitting at the top table has been wonderfully defined by their bullish attitude and thrilling never-say-die nature.
This year’s single-leg format may even hand them further hope. Provided they can remain steadfast in defence and flood forward in the same vein which has seen them bag almost a century of goals, Atalanta will prove a stern challenge.
RB LEIPZIG
This season marks RB Leipzig’s second ever appearance in the Champions League. Their spot in the previous round also made history, as that was the first time the Bundesliga club had reached the knockout stages.

Julian Nagelsmann’s side won just three of their group stages fixtures but edged through with 11 points to set up a meeting with previous runners-up Tottenham.
With their high intensity pressing and cutting edge in dangerous positions, Leipzig blew their opponents away 4-0 on aggregate.
The team are versatile and can be fielded in a variety of systems. It is this unpredictably, and the solid backbone that underlines it all, that has seen them secure their showdown in Lisbon with Atletico Madrid this week.
Their opponents will rightly be fearing a knockout, especially in light of the coronavirus disruption to their travelling roster. Only Bayern Munich conceded fewer league goals this season, with Leipzig shipping just 37.
They also netted the third-highest amount of goals in the top flight, demonstrating their ability at both ends of the field.
But this will be a stern test in maturity for Nagelsmann’s men. Atletico boast a watertight backline, having shipped just seven times in their eight Champions League games. Leipzig will also be without leading ace Timo Werner, who completed his move to Chelsea earlier this month.
LYON
There were fears that the two Ligue 1 clubs remaining in the Champions League after Ligue 1 was called to an early finish would have suffered from a lack of preparation. But Lyon have blown that preconception well and truly out of the water.

They overcame Juventus and sealed a quarter-final spot in what was only their second competitive game in five months. Lyon appeared in top physical condition, despite their defeat in Turin, and deserved their eventual triumph on away goals.
Memphis Depay had bullishly predicted that Lyon were fearless and capable of springing an upset, and he was proved right.
The Dutchman also highlighted the newly-introduced single-leg format and now believes that ‘anyone can be favourites’.
However, that may not be the case for Rudi Garcia’s troops for their next clash. They face Manchester City, one of the favourites to win the competition for the first time in their history.
Lyon will need to replicate the defiance which saw them narrowly lose out to Paris Saint-Germain in the French League Cup final last month in order to pose any real threat of reaching the final four.
UEFA Champions League
Osimhen double guides Galatasaray to 3-1 win over Bodo/Glimt

Galatasaray made the most of a litany of errors by Norwegian visitors Bodo/Glimt as they cruised to a 3-1 home win in the Champions League on Wednesday, with striker Victor Osimhen netting twice for the Turkish side in the first half.

UEFA Champions League – Galatasaray v Bodo/Glimt – RAMS Park, Istanbul, Turkey – October 22, 2025 Galatasaray’s Victor Osimhen celebrates scoring their second goal REUTERS/Umit Bektas
Osimhen wasted no time giving the home side an early lead, sweeping a sumptuous first-time finish past Nikita Haikin in the third minute as the Norwegian side was quickly punished for giving the ball away cheaply in midfield.
Osimhen doubled his tally in the 33rd minute after another error. Under pressure as he ran infield, Bodo left-back Fredrik Bjorkan inexplicably passed the ball straight to Osimhen in a central position, and the forward gratefully tucked the ball away.

UEFA Champions League – Galatasaray v Bodo/Glimt – RAMS Park, Istanbul, Turkey – October 22, 2025 Galatasaray’s Victor Osimhen in action REUTERS/Murad Sezer
Bodo created some decent chances of their own but were made to pay again on the hour mark as centre-back Haitam Aleesami was robbed just outside his penalty area by Osimhen, and Yunus Akgun was able to score at the second attempt to make it 3-0.
Osimhen had plenty of opportunities to complete his hat-trick but he was thwarted by keeper Haikin, and Bodo substitute Andreas Helmersen was able to head home a close-range consolation goal in the 76th minute as his side finished strongly.
With seven games kicking off later on Wednesday, the win leaves Galatasaray on six points from three games, while Bodo/Glimt have two points ahead of their home clash with Monaco of France in two weeks. Galatasaray are next away at Dutch side Ajax Amsterdam.
-Reuters
Victor Osimhen scores their second goal REUTERS/Umit Bektas
UEFA Champions League
Arteta praise for Gyokeres as Arsenal striker ends goal drought

One of the few clouds hanging over Arsenal this season has been the lack of goals from the big-money centre forward Viktor Gyokeres but he erased some doubts with a timely return to form by scoring twice in a 4-0 defeat of Atletico Madrid on Tuesday.
Gyokeres, who Arsenal signed for 64 million pounds ($85.89 million) from Sporting, poached his side’s third and fourth goals to end a nine-game streak without netting for club and country.
The Swede was all smiles as he was substituted late on and manager Mikel Arteta said the 27-year-old fully deserved the ovation he received from the Arsenal fans.
“I think he deserved it because everything that we were seeing in terms of what he was bringing to the team and how much he was helping the team in many areas, apart from scoring goals in the last few weeks,” Arteta told reporters.
“There was no debate about that. It was about keeping that belief in himself, that emotional state that he can enjoy and play freely. I look at his teammates as well, in the picture and the video, they are all so happy for him.”
His opening goal was a messy affair as his weak shot dribbled into the net via a deflection while his second came from yet another Arsenal set piece with Gabriel heading a corner into the path of the Sweden international.
“He makes us a much better team. I think we’ve become much more unpredictable. He’s so physical, the way he presses the ball, holds the ball, that’s phenomenal,” Arteta said.
“He’s scored two very different ones today, and hopefully he starts to get some momentum and a good run of goals.”
Gyokeres now has five for the season, including three in the Premier League, and was clearly relieved to be back on target.
“(It’s reward) for the team, but of course, me as well,” he said of the win that maintained Arsenal’s 100% start in the Champions League. “I do my best all the time, work hard and contribute with different stuff. It’ll come sooner or later.”
-Reuters
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UEFA Champions League
Arsenal run riot to crush Atletico Madrid

Arsenal thrashed Atletico Madrid 4-0 thanks to a devastating second-half broadside at the Emirates Stadium on Tuesday to secure a third successive Champions League victory.
What had been a compelling contest with little between the sides became an Arsenal rout with goals by Gabriel, Gabriel Martinelli and a brace from Viktor Gyokeres leaving Diego Simeone’s side shell-shocked.
Shortly after Julian Alvarez hit the crossbar for the visitors, Arsenal defender Gabriel broke the deadlock by heading in a Declan Rice free kick in the 57th minute.
Martinelli finished off a sweeping move seven minutes later and Gyokeres prodded in his first goal of the night via a deflection as Arsenal ran riot, the Swede ending a nine-game scoring drought for club and country.
Gyokeres bundled in his second as Atletico were again unable to deal with a set piece.
Victory extended Arsenal’s unbeaten run to nine games in all competitions and put them on nine points in the group phase, after three wins without conceding a goal, well on the way to qualifying for the knockout stages.
Atletico, on three points, will have to dust themselves down after their six-game unbeaten run in all competitions came to a juddering halt.
“It was a tough match. After the goal they opened up a bit and it was a little easier for us to find the spaces. Very happy with the result,” Arsenal boss Mikel Arteta said.
“At this level in the Champions League you really need to step up and we certainly did that in every phase of the play.”
Simeone, who also tasted defeat in Liverpool last month, said his side had been punished for individual errors.
“It’s not down to bad luck, it’s down to mistakes,” the Argentine told reporters. “They made the most of our mistakes and all their big chances turned into goals.”
BRIMMING WITH CONFIDENCE
Brimming with confidence after climbing to the top of the Premier League, Arsenal began strongly and almost took the lead when Eberechi Eze’s shot deflected off David Hancko and hit the crossbar with Rice bouncing the rebound over the bar.
Myles Lewis-Skelly dragged a shot wide and Bukayo Saka was denied by a block from Atletico keeper Jan Oblak.
The visitors weathered the storm, though, and were almost gifted a goal when Arsenal keeper David Raya was caught in possession well out of his area and Alvarez had the goal at his mercy but placed his shot agonisingly wide from an angle.
When Alvarez curled a superb effort against Arsenal’s crossbar soon after the restart the outcome was very much in the balance but Atletico then caved in.
Arsenal’s set-piece coach Nicolas Jover would have been purring at the goal that opened the floodgates.
The threat of the Rice-Gabriel combination is hardly a secret but Atletico’s defence seemed transfixed as Rice’s curling free kick delivery was met by the Brazilian who had ghosted clear to glance a header past Oblak.
With Atletico stunned, Arsenal went for the kill and Lewis-Skelly slid in Martinelli to side-foot past Oblak, meaning he has scored in every Champions League game this season.
Gyokeres then got in on the act with two goals that were hardly masterpieces — but will have done him the power of good after a barren spell since his big-money move from Sporting.
“We value a lot of things that he does for the team and it was the biggest smile on his face today,” Arteta said.
“Hopefully this is the start of some beautiful sequences.”
-Reuters
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