Monaco eyes history-making comeback against Juventus

AS Monaco, beaten 2-0 at home in the first leg of its Champions League semifinal against Juventus, will have to make history in Tuesdays return if it is to end Ligue 1’s long absence from the final.

Published : May 08, 2017 23:16 IST , Milan

Monaco has the attacking power to punish most sides in Europe but Juve, playing at home, will be a different proposition with its tight defense.
Monaco has the attacking power to punish most sides in Europe but Juve, playing at home, will be a different proposition with its tight defense.
lightbox-info

Monaco has the attacking power to punish most sides in Europe but Juve, playing at home, will be a different proposition with its tight defense.

AS Monaco, beaten 2-0 at home in the first leg of its Champions League semifinal against Juventus, will have to make history in Tuesdays return if it is to end Ligue 1’s long absence from the final.

Only two teams have ever won a knockout tie in the competition after losing at home in the first leg and in both cases -- Ajax Amsterdam against Panathinaikos in 1996 and Inter Milan against Bayern Munich in 2011 - they had only one goal to make up.

Monaco, which itself was the last French side to reach the final when it lost to Jose Mourinhos Porto in 2004, would also have to end Juve's four-year unbeaten home record in Europe and a run of six successive clean sheets in the competition.

Monaco has never won a game in Italy in seven attempts while Juve’s record against French teams will not give it much encouragement either - the Italians have won all previous 11 knockout ties against Ligue 1 opponents including Monaco itself on two occasions.

Both teams lead their own leagues and are on the brink of winning their respective titles while Juventus have also reached the Italian Cup final, putting them on course for a treble.

Monaco coach Leonardo Jardim, whose side won 3-0 at Nancy on Saturday to close in on the Ligue 1 title, said that an early goal could change the complexion of the tie.

"We have to stay confident, try to play our game and put on a good performance and if we score at the start of the game, maybe that could change things," said Jardim.

If there is one thing which gives Jardim hope, it is Monaco's prolific scoring record this season.

It has blasted 139 goals in 55 matches in all competitions, not including the French League Cup, and has managed three or more goals in a match on 25 occasions.

Kylian Mbappe, 18 and one of the hottest properties in European football, has scored 18 goals in his last 20 competitive games, while the team features other dangerous players including resurgent Colombian forward Radamel Falcao.

Juventus forward Paulo Dybala limped off during Saturday's 1-1 draw at home to Torino, which ended his side's run of 33 consecutive home league wins, but coach Massimiliano Allegri said it was just a case of cramp.

"It was normal in the circumstances and towards the end of the season," said Allegri, who warned his team not to think about any another result than a win.

"Monaco are a side with great talent and we have absolutely not yet sealed our qualification. We need to win the second leg.”

Sign in to unlock all user benefits
  • Get notified on top games and events
  • Save stories to read later
  • Access to comment on every story
  • Sign up / manage to our newsletters with a single click
  • Get notified by email for early bird access to discounts & offers to our products
Sign in

Comments

Comments have to be in English, and in full sentences. They cannot be abusive or personal. Please abide to our community guidelines for posting your comment