This time, defense alone won’t be enough to keep Atlético Madrid alive in the Champions League.
Diego Simeone’s team needs its attack to wake up if it wants to overcome the 1-0 first-leg loss to Manchester City in the quarterfinals of the European competition.
The team was held scoreless and managed a total of one shot on target in its last two matches. To reach its first Champions League semifinals since 2017, Atlético needs its stars to step up when City visits on Wednesday.
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João Félix, Antoine Griezmann and Luis Suárez have combined to score only four goals since early March — two by Félix and two by Suárez in the same Spanish league game. Matheus Cunha and Ángel Correa, the other Atlético forwards, also haven’t helped much recently, being unable to score since February.
Other than the double against last-place Alavés on April 2, Félix is scoreless in six matches in all competitions. Suárez hasn’t found the net since Feb. 19. The 35-year-old Uruguay striker was key for Atlético in its Spanish league title-winning campaign last year but has played a reduced role this campaign.
Griezmann has been struggling the most, though, with no goals in nine consecutive matches in a scoreless streak that dates back to a Copa del Rey match in January. The 31-year-old France forward returned to Atlético this season after a lackluster stint with Barcelona but hasn’t fully met expectations.
Simeone rested Félix against Mallorca on Saturday and started with Suárez and Griezmann in attack, but they struggled in a 1-0 loss that left the team fourth in the league standings with seven rounds to go, in danger of not securing a Champions League spot next season.
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Atlético had only one shot on target against relegation-threatened Mallorca and none in the first leg against City.
Besides offensive struggles, Atlético's recent home record in European competitions also has been disappointing. It hasn't won in its last six home games in the Champions League, with four draws and two losses. It lost to Liverpool and AC Milan this season, with draws against Porto in the group stage and Manchester United in the first leg of the round of 16.
To make it worse, the Wanda Metropolitano Stadium won’t be at full capacity on Wednesday after UEFA charged the club with “discriminatory behavior” and ordered a 5,000-seat section of the stadium to be closed after an Atlético fan was filmed making a Nazi salute in the first leg in Manchester. Atlético will also have to display a UEFA banner there, saying “#NoToRacism.”
Atlético’s defense, which has carried the team under Simeone in recent years, was largely effective in Manchester and could be boosted by the return of José María Giménez, who missed the first leg because of a muscle injury. Midfielder Héctor Herrera was listed as doubtful because of a muscle injury.
Not having the away-goals rule in place this season could be key for Atlético after it failed to score in England.
Playing in the quarterfinals for the sixth time in nine seasons, the Spanish club is seeking its first Champions League title.
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