Champions League
Pep Guardiola and Rodri disagree over what Real Madrid tie means to Man City

Rodri says Manchester City have the perfect shot at ‘revenge’ against Real Madrid in the Champions League semi-finals, going against sentiments made by his manager Pep Guardiola.
For a second-season running, Los Blancos stand between City and a place in the showpiece final.
Last year’s meetings were two enthralling displays of top-level football. Though City dominated Real Madrid at the Etihad Stadium, the English champions prevailed by just the one goal in a 4-3 thriller.
Back at the Bernabeu, Guardiola’s men led 1-0 on the night and 5-3 on aggregate heading into second-half stoppage time, only for Rodrygo to score two incredibly late goals to send the game and the tie into extra-time.
Karim Benzema then scored the decisive goal from the penalty spot to send Real Madrid through, eventually toppling Liverpool to win their 14th European Cup.
At a pre-match press conference, Guardiola was keen to stress that this year’s tie should not be about ‘revenge’.
“It would be a huge mistake. We are not here for revenge,” he said ahead of the first leg in Spain.
“What happened, happened. Always it happens in football because you deserve it.
“We did more than everything to reach the final but sometimes it’s not enough. The lesson we can learn is to get a good result, perform well and have the opportunity to reach the final in the second leg in Manchester.
“Last year was tough, but we had an exceptional first game in Manchester and a really good game here. But it was not enough, you congratulate the opponent, accept it and now, one year later, we are here again.
“It’s just another opportunity. One day we will get to the final and win it. It didn’t happen last season as they [Madrid] know what they have to do in this competition.”
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However, Rodri did not share Guardiola’s train of thought, instead insisting that this is a great opportunity for Man City to banish their demons.
“We will have the chance for revenge. We have the philosophy that you can learn from past experiences. We did 180 minutes of brilliance [last year] but it wasn’t enough. The last minutes in that second leg…we didn’t handle it the right way,” the midfielder said.
“You have to kill when you can. We respect [Real Madrid] – the king of this competition – but we have weapons. We are in a great moment and we are afraid of nothing. We are here to fight again and of course we have the hunger for revenge.”
Since returning to Europe’s top table, Man City have chalked up a pretty respectable record against Real Madrid.
They have been impossible to split following eight meetings, with both sides taking three wins apiece and playing out two draws.
Prior to last year’s second leg collapse, Man City had been on a three-match winning streak against Los Blancos having won the first leg as well as both matches in their last 16 tie in 2019/20.
Champions League
When Newcastle last played in the Champions League

One of football’s greatest obscurities will forever be that the legendary Diego Maradona made as many appearances in Europe’s premier club competition as the, well, less legendary Titus Bramble.
The unheralded defender may not have twice broken the world transfer record or inspired his own religion – although, Titus does feature in the New Testament – but he was a cog in the last Newcastle team to play in the Champions League during the 2002/03 season.
Eddie Howe – along with the eye-watering millions invested by the club’s controversial owners (and Jason Tindall, of course) – has achieved the “dream” of leading Newcastle back to the continental summit for the first time in two decades.
Here’s how the Magpies fared during their last Champions League run.
𝐇𝐎𝐖𝐀𝐘 𝐓𝐇𝐄 𝐋𝐀𝐃𝐒! ⚫️⚪️
Champions League football will be returning to St James’ Park for the first time in 20 years! ⭐️ pic.twitter.com/CjuQk6sjvK
— 90min (@90min_Football) May 22, 2023
Xavi Hernandez didn’t make it back out onto the pitch for the second half of Barcelona’s trip to St James’ Park in March 2003. 20 years later, Xavi may lead the Blaugrana out in the north eastern cauldron as manager of the La Liga champions.
Barcelona were fortunate to go into the break with the game still goalless as Craig Bellamy squandered Newcastle’s best chances, coming closest with a shot that Victor Valdes tipped onto the post.
Sir Bobby Robson, in charge of his boyhood club and opposite the Catalan side that ruthlessly moved him out of the dugout after just one season, watched on as Patrick Kluivert and Thiago Motta provided Barcelona with the clinical edge which his Newcastle side lacked. Inter’s victory over Bayer Leverkusen rid Newcastle’s game of any consequence but it was a sour end to what had been a thrilling campaign.
After the first three games of the 2002/03 Champions League group stage, Newcastle had zero points and zero goals. No team had ever qualified for the knockout stages of the competition after three opening defeats and only one (Atalanta in 2019/20) has done it since.
Newcastle began their historic turnaround with a narrow 1-0 win at home to Juventus courtesy of the only Champions League goal of Andy Griffin’s career. Second-half strikes from Gary Speed and Alan Shearer completed a comeback win over Dynamo Kyiv, teeing up a grand crescendo to Group E.
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Heading into the final games of the first group stage in November 2002, all four of Feyenoord, Dynamo, Juventus and Newcastle could still qualify – with only the Italian giants guaranteed.
As Newcastle’s match with Feyenoord ticked into the 90th minute, Dynamo were posed to follow the Turin club into the knockout rounds. However, Bellamy was first to the rebound from Kieran Dyer’s shot, firing the ball from a tight angle with so much venom that it squirmed off the midriff of goalkeeper Patrick Lodewijks and over the line.
The 3-2 victory in Rotterdam was widely billed at the time as a £10m jackpot in reflection of the funds Newcastle would earn by finishing second but Robson summed it up much better. “It was a fluctuating and historical evening.”
Newcastle were drawn against Barcelona, Inter and Bayer Leverkusen in the second round of group-stage matches. The Magpies again began with successive defeats – shipping seven goals across heavy losses to Inter and Barcelona.
Robson’s side did defeat the previous year’s finalists Leverkusen home and away before Alan Shearer twice put Newcastle ahead at San Siro, taking his personal haul to six Champions League goals – the same tally as Real Madrid’s latest Galactico Ronaldo. However, the Nerazzurri equalised each time, taking qualification for the quarter-finals out of Newcastle’s hands.
Bellamy may have been wasteful against Barcelona in Newcastle’s most recent Champions League match but it was his goal that saw the Magpies scrawl their name in the competition’s history with that miraculous group-stage rebirth.
Two decades later, Howe has bought tickets for another ride on the European rollercoaster.
Date |
Round |
Result |
---|---|---|
14/08/2002 |
Third qualifying round first leg |
Zeljeznicar 0-1 Newcastle |
28/08/2002 |
Third qualifying round second leg |
Newcastle 4-0 Zeljeznicar |
18/09/2002 |
First group stage |
Dynamo Kyiv 2-0 Newcastle |
24/09/2002 |
First group stage |
Newcastle 0-1 Feyenoord |
01/10/2002 |
First group stage |
Juventus 2-0 Newcastle |
23/10/2002 |
First group stage |
Newcastle 1-0 Juventus |
29/10/2002 |
First group stage |
Newcastle 2-1 Dynamo Kyiv |
13/11/2002 |
First group stage |
Feyenoord 2-3 Newcastle |
27/11/2002 |
Second group stage |
Newcastle 1-4 Inter |
11/12/2002 |
Second group stage |
Barcelona 3-1 Newcastle |
18/02/2003 |
Second group stage |
Bayer Leverkusen 1-3 Newcastle |
26/02/2003 |
Second group stage |
Newcastle 3-1 Bayer Leverkusen |
11/03/2003 |
Second group stage |
Inter 2-2 Newcastle |
19/03/2003 |
Second group stage |
Newcastle 0-2 Barcelona |
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Champions League
Information for Man City vs Inter fans

The first competitive meeting between Manchester City and Internazionale will take place in the final of the 2022/23 Champions League.
For Pep Guardiola’s imperious outfit, the European showpiece could be the last leg in a historic triptych of success with the Premier League and FA Cup potentially in their grasp.
Inter have not been to the Champions League final since becoming the only Italian team in history to win the treble in 2010. Simone Inzaghi’s side also have the small matter of a Coppa Italia final to contest before duking it out on the grandest of continental stages.
Here’s everything you need to know about nabbing a ticket for a night to remember.
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The 2022/23 Champions League final will take place on Saturday 10 June at 20:00 (BST). City will contest the FA Cup final against rivals Manchester United one week beforehand while Inter finish the Serie A season away to Torino on Sunday 4 June.
Just as in 2005, the Ataturk Olympic Stadium in Istanbul will host a Champions League final between teams from England and Italy. Almost two decades ago, the 75,000-seater venue was the setting for arguably the greatest final in the competition’s history as Liverpool infamously overturned a 3-0 half-time deficit before defeating AC Milan in a penalty shootout.
The venue had been scheduled to play host to the 2020 Champions League final before COVID-19 swept across the globe, hitting Turkey particularly hard. That year, the competition was reformatted from the quarter-finals onwards into an eight-team mini-tournament held in Portugal.
Manchester City made the 2021 final which was also set to be held in Istanbul only for another alteration due to COVID-19 restrictions. City lost to Chelsea in Porto’s Estadio do Dragao that summer.
The cheapest available ticket, the first of four categories, for the biggest game in club football this season will set you back £61 – although, the next most reasonable price range is a steep £156. Category Three tickets go for £425 while a spot in the Ataturk this June could cost as much as £599.
Season ticket holders at Manchester City have priority access in the first round of sales. There is guaranteed to be a second opportunity to secure a spot in Istanbul but prices will be considerably heftier than the initial figures.
Category One: £61
Category Two: £156
Category Three: £425
Category Four: £599
Despite the Ataturk boasting a capacity of 74,753, Manchester City and Inter fans have only been allotted 19,926 tickets each. City have averaged 51,000 fans at their Champions League home games this season, with Inter boasting more than 71,000 for the majority of their European clashes at San Siro this term.
Once City and Inter’s allocations have been filled, there will still be 34,901 seats at the Ataturk. After a public ballot on UEFA’s website, 7,500 of those remaining chairs will be warmed by the general public.
Local organisers, UEFA officials, national football associations, commercial partners and broadcasters will take up the remaining 27,401 seats.
For the second time in three years, Manchester City will be lining up for a Champions League final. City’s success in this year’s competition has undoubtedly been underpinned by their imperious home form.
In the knockout stages, City put a combined 14 goals past RB Leipzig, Bayern Munich and reigning champions Real Madrid without conceding at the Etihad. However, since defeating Sevilla at the Ramon Sanchez Pizjuan in September, City have drawn their subsequent five Champions League games away from home.
While City’s caution on the road in Europe may give Inter hope for the final on neutral territory, Guardiola’s side do boast the leading scorer in this year’s competition. Erling Haaland has netted 12 Champions League goals this term, more than four clubs that qualified for the knockout stages of the tournament.
Inter were not favourites to even progress beyond the group stage let alone make it all the way to the final. Despite losing home and away to Bayern Munich, Inter took four points off Barcelona to finish above the Catalans and Viktoria Plzen.
Simone Inzaghi has fostered a deserved reputation as a cup specialist and leaned upon his side’s defensive solidity in the knockout stages, steering the Nerazzurri to five clean sheets in six games.
After a narrow 1-0 aggregate victory over Porto in the round of 16, Inter pierced the hype surrounding Roger Schmidt’s Benfica with a decisive 2-0 win in the first leg in Lisbon.
Played to the backdrop of a cacophonous San Siro, Inter defeated arch-rivals Milan in both legs of a semi-final dubbed the Euroderby.
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Champions League
Real Madrid’s financial setback following Champions League exit

Real Madrid have missed out on a significant financial gain after failing to make the final of the UEFA Champions League.
Manchester City dealt a fatal blow to Real Madrid’s European title defence with a resounding 4-0 victory at the Etihad Stadium on Wednesday, securing their spot in the final next month.
The loss will have financial implications for Real Madrid, who would have earned a significant sum of €15.5m had they progressed to the final and faced Inter.
Additionally, winning the tournament would have secured them an additional €4.5m.
Nevertheless, despite missing out on the final, Real Madrid have enjoyed financial success throughout their campaign in the Champions League. Their run to the semi-finals has already earned them just over €60m, which could help them fund a move for Jude Bellingham – 90min understands the Borussia Dortmund midfielder has agreed personal terms with Los Blancos.
In the aftermath of Wednesday’s defeat, there has been considerable speculation surrounding the future of Real Madrid coach Carlo Ancelotti, who has continually been linked to the Brazil job.
Read the latest Real Madrid news here
Despite his team’s inability to retain both La Liga and the Champions League this season, the Italian remains optimistic about continuing in his role for next term.
“It’s been a good season. There are four games to go and we have to give it our best shot. Hopefully we can finish well. Reaching a Champions League semi-final is a success because only four teams can reach it. Losing a sem-final can happen,” he said after the match.
On whether he would stay on as Real Madrid manager, he added: “The club president was quite clear 15 days ago. So nobody has any doubt. What the president tells me privately, I’m not going to say here.”
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