Both Juventus and Barcelona are looking to cap fantastic seasons by
completing rare trebles when they meet in the Champions League final at
the Olympic Stadium in Berlin on Sunday.
Juventus are appearing in their first Champions League final in 12
years as they look to win the European Cup for the third time, but
Barcelona, inspired by Lionel Messi, are the favourites to win a fifth
European Cup and fourth in the last decade.
Juve coach
Massimiliano Allegri and his Barcelona counterpart Luis Enrique have
already enjoyed excellent debut seasons in charge of their respective
clubs, both winning domestic league and cup doubles, and both are now
within touching distance of making it a glorious treble.
For
Barcelona, it would be a second such treble following their fantastic
first season under Pep Guardiola in 2008-09, but such an achievement is
very rare indeed.
Only six other clubs have ever won a domestic league and cup double
and the European Cup in the same season, with Celtic's Lisbon Lions of
1967 the first.
Since then, Ajax (1972), PSV Eindhoven (1988),
Manchester United (1999), Inter Milan (2010) and Bayern Munich (2013)
have repeated the feat.
Barcelona can therefore become the first
club to do it twice, and their current team contains several members of
that 2009 vintage under Guardiola.
"We are still a young team.
There are still quite a few players from the Guardiola era," Enrique
said. "This could turn out to be an historic season for us."
Juventus, meanwhile, will either join that elite group of clubs or become the first club to have lost six European Cup finals.
The
Italian champions' main task is to blunt Barcelona's razor-sharp attack
of Messi, Neymar and Luis Suarez, which has sliced through defences on
the road to Berlin.
The South American trio have scored a stunning
120 goals between them this season, compared to the 103 managed by the
entire Juventus team.
With 58 goals in all competitions, four-time
world player of the year Messi is in the best form of his illustrious
career, but Juventus can ill afford to focus on containing his talents
alone.
Messi destroyed Guardiola's Bayern Munich with two goals in
the first leg of their semi-final before setting up Neymar for the
third at the Camp Nou.
But in the return it was Suarez and Neymar
who did the damage, combining for two first-half goals at the Allianz
Arena, which put the tie beyond Bayern.
To make Juve's task even
harder, centre-back Giorgio Chiellini was ruled out of the final after
tearing a calf muscle in training.
But Juventus have neither flown
to Berlin just to witness Messi's magic first hand nor do they wish to
see him become the first player to score in three Champions League
finals.
"This is the game of our lives," said Juve goalkeeper
Gianluigi Buffon, their sole survivor from their last Champions League
final, the loss to AC Milan in 2003.
"I would always want to be
starting off as a favourite, but we have our weapons to try and make
Barcelona's job more difficult," added Buffon, who along with Pirlo won
the World Cup at the same stadium with Italy in 2006.
Juve, who
reached the final by knocking out holders Real Madrid 3-2 on aggregate
in their semi-final, welcomed Italian international defender Andrea
Barzagli back to training on Wednesday after a spell out with a thigh
strain.
AFP

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