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May 6, 2011

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United sees chance of revenge

IF Manchester United is to avenge its defeat to Barcelona in the 2009 Champions League final when they meet again at Wembley on May 28, the words Alex Ferguson spoke that night will have to ring true.

Barcelona outplayed United 2-0 in Rome with goals from Samuel Eto'o and Lionel Messi, as United was totally overwhelmed by the Catalan giant.

After the dust had settled on one of United's worst performances of the season, Ferguson said: "In adversity you always move forward quicker. We're still a young team and we can improve on that. In fairness, we were beaten by the better side. I know what went wrong and it will not happen again."

Ferguson has never explained exactly what he thought did go wrong, but whether United is a better team now than it was in 2009 is a subject that will be debated every day until the final is over.

One thing is certain, it will have to improve on the way it played that night at Rome's Olympic Stadium to lift the European Cup for a fourth time. To do that against the best club side in the world, it will have to demonstrate the kind of assured authority and confidence it displayed on Wednesday against one of the worst semifinalists the Champions League has produced.

United sealed its place in this year's final by destroying Schalke 04 4-1 at Old Trafford for a 6-1 aggregate semifinal victory and was never seriously troubled at any time over the two legs.

The team that secured its place at Wembley showed nine changes from the side that won the first leg, and for the final Ferguson could chose 10 of the 11 men who faced Barcelona in 2009 with only Cristiano Ronaldo of the starting line-up no longer at the club.

There is little that Ferguson or Barca coach Pep Guardiola do not know about each other's teams and while the game is still more than three weeks away with domestic issues still to be settled, the key area, as it was in 2009, will be in midfield.

Dominated

Then, Barca's Xavi and Andres Iniesta totally dominated Anderson, Michael Carrick and Ryan Giggs and laid the foundation for Barca's success. Ferguson will not want that to happen again.

Wembley is in many ways the perfect setting for this year's final. Both Manchester United, in 1968 and Barcelona, in 1992, won their first European Cups there and Ferguson believes United will go into the game far better prepared than in any of the previous finals he has lead them into.

Asked if there was a sense of destiny after United won the European Cup for the first time at Wembley in 1968, Ferguson added: "Let's hope so."

"I think it will be a fantastic final. It is some weeks ahead and I hope we have everyone ready," he said.

"The big advantage this time as opposed to two of our previous finals is that we have no players missing. In '99 we missed Roy Keane and Paul Scholes and in 2009 we missed Darren Fletcher. We've got everyone available this time and that does make a difference. This is the best competition in the world, all the best teams are there. To get to the final is an achievement itself, but to win it is the ultimate."

Barcelona is, if anything, an even better and more rounded team than the one that beat United in Rome to complete an unprecedented treble of Champions League, Spanish league and cup in Pep Guardiola's debut campaign as coach.

Striker Eto'o was offloaded and won Europe's elite club competition with Inter Milan the following season, while the brief experiment with Zlatan Ibrahimovic ended when Barca moved him on to AC Milan and bought David Villa at the end of last season.

But Messi has gone from strength to strength since the 2009 triumph and is top scorer in this season's edition with 11 goals.





 

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