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Real Madrid turn sights to retaining title
By AP - Sep 15,2014 - Last updated at Sep 15,2014
MANCHESTER, England — Real Madrid ended a 12-year wait for La Decima — a 10th European Cup — by winning the Champions League last season.
Now the Spanish club has a new target: Achieving what no team has managed in 25 years — retaining the trophy.
The Champions League returns this week, with Madrid’s all-star line-up seemingly the team to beat again this season ahead of its first match at home against FC Basel on Tuesday in Group B.
No team has successfully defended Europe’s most prestigious club title since AC Milan in 1990, before the competition underwent a facelift and turned into the financial beast that is the Champions League.
As in recent years, Barcelona, Bayern Munich and Chelsea will be among the favourites to challenge for the title.
Here are some things to know about the start of the 2014-15 Champions League:
Spanish supremacy
With four strong teams involved, Spain is aiming to continue its run of outperforming the other major European leagues in the Champions League.
Spain put two teams into last year’s final, when Madrid beat crosstown rival Atletico Madrid 4-1 after extra time, and has had two sides in the semifinals for the past four seasons. Barcelona won the title in 2011.
Like Madrid, Atletico begin their campaign on Tuesday at Olympiakos in Group A. On Wednesday, Barcelona play APOEL in Group F and Athletic Bilbao host Shakhtar Donetsk in Group H.
Counting on costa
If the start of the Premier League season is anything to go by, Chelsea will be England’s most competitive side in the Champions League.
Especially if Diego Costa keeps up his stunning form.
The Spain international’s seven goals in four games have guided Chelsea to four straight wins and first place in the Premier League.
Chelsea have been given the most benign-looking group of England’s four representatives, too, placed with Schalke, Sporting Lisbon and NK Maribor. Chelsea start at home against Schalke on Wednesday in Group G.
Manchester City advanced from their group last season for the first time, losing in the last 16 to Barcelona. The English champions, who travel to Bayern on Wednesday in
Group E, will be expected to progress further this season.
On Tuesday, Arsenal is away to Borussia Dortmund in Group D
and Liverpool’s first match in the Champions League in five years is at home against newcomer Ludogorets in Group B
— the same group as Real Madrid. There is no Manchester United in the competition for the first time since the
1995-96 season.
Juve’s real test
New Juventus coach Massimiliano Allegri may have started winning over his doubters with two wins out of two in Serie A, but the real test will come in the Champions League.
Under Antonio Conte, Juventus won a third straight Italian league title last season but exited Europe’s elite club competition at the group stage.
At AC Milan, Allegri won just 11 of his 34 Champions League matches in charge, drawing another 13, and never went past the quarter-finals.
Juventus, which host Malmo in Group A on Tuesday, started their domestic campaign with a 1-0 win at Chievo Verona and a 2-0 victory at home to Udinese on Saturday.
Fond memories
France’s two Champions League teams — Paris Saint-Germain and Monaco — have experienced strikers facing their former clubs in the first round of fixtures.
Zlatan Ibrahimovic has scored so many wonderful goals for PSG and Sweden over the past two years, he may well have lost count. PSG play Ajax in Group F
on Wednesday and the Dutch hosts will be hoping Ibrahimovic isn’t in the mood for another goal on the same ground where he scored one of his best ever.
Ten years ago, when playing for Ajax, Ibrahimovic scored a mesmerising solo effort against NAC Breda — dribbling past several players before caressing the ball home.
Ibrahimovic has scored five goals in four games this season but PSG have looked very patchy and is overly dependent on their captain.
After losing their two biggest stars in the transfer window — Radamel Falcao and James Rodriguez — Monaco have struggled and is languishing in 18th place in the French league.
The 33-year-old Dimitar Berbatov has been left as Monaco’s main striker and will be up against his former team Bayer Leverkusen, where he made his name in European football.
First-timers
There are two newcomers in this season’s Champions League, Ludogorets from Bulgaria and Malmo from Sweden.
Ludogorets advanced from the play-offs in memorable fashion when a defender — Cosmin Moti — saved two penalties in a shoot-out win over Steaua Bucharest after the team’s goalkeeper was sent off late in extra time.
Ludogorets play Liverpool at Anfield in Group B on Tuesday.
Malmo reached the European Cup final in 1979 when they lost to Brian Clough’s Nottingham Forest. They also played in the 1990-91 European Cup and is Sweden’s first group-stage representative in 14 years.
Malmo travel to Juventus in Group A on Tuesday.
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Champions League holders Real Madrid will face former European champions Liverpool, FC Basel and debutants Ludogorets of Bulgaria following the group stage draw on Thursday.
The Champions League returns Tuesday and Wednesday with Cristiano Ronaldo and Lionel Messi competing for yet another prize as the rival stars take aim at the tournament’s all-time scoring record.
MONACO — Barcelona got a favourable start to its title defence, Zlatan Ibrahimovic’s wish to go home was granted and Benfica was given the l