Group D:
Manchester
United | Olympique
Lyonnais
| Fenerbahce |
Sparta
Prague
Manchester
United
· Third
in English league
· Champions
League pedigree: Winners 1968, 1999
|
Man
Utd's Ruud van Nistelrooy. |
|
The Star Man - Ruud Van Nistelrooy
The most prolific marksman in the Champions League over the last
three seasons, Van Nistelrooy has a stunning record
against
Europe
's best defences.
Signed from PSV Eindhoven in the summer of 2001, he has also been
prolific in the Premiership, firing 68 goals in
just 98 appearances. It's no wonder United stumbled
without him as he recovered from injury at the start
of this season.
A star turn for
Holland
at Euro 2004, Van Nistelrooy
is a striker who links the play as well as anyone
in the game and he should form a formidable partnership
with either Alan Smith or Wayne Rooney.
The Weak Link - Defence
The lengthy suspension of Rio Ferdinand left United badly exposed
at the back as the likes of Mikael Silvestre, John
O'Shea and Gary Neville struggle to fill the gap
at the heart of the defence.
Roy Keane has moved back from his familiar midfield role to fill
in at the heart of the defence at the start of this
season, so Alex Ferguson will be keen to get Ferdinand
back up to speed as quickly as possible. His dilemma
may well be finding a suitable partner for his £29.1m
centre-back.
Whether Silvestre is that man remains to be seen after his shaky
Euro 2004 with
France
and Keane has stated
he has no intentions of moving back permanently.
Maybe previously errant Argentine Gabriel Heinze
will fill the role, though he seems likely to be
deployed at left full-back.
The New Face - Wayne Rooney
After a summer of speculation, Alex Ferguson finally secured the
services of
England
's golden boy on transfer
deadline day. If he continues his Euro 2004 form
in the red of United, he could be the missing piece
in their jigsaw.
The challenge of Champions League football played a factor in Rooney
opting to seal his switch from Everton to Old Trafford
and the 18-year-old now has to force his way into
the team on a consistent basis.
It may be that
Ferguson
looks to incorporate
him into the in his starting line-up alongside Van
Nistelrooy and Smith, with Rooney playing a deeper
role.
The Coach - Sir Alex Ferguson
A living legend in British football after a thirty year career
as a manager that has seen him claim every major
honour available,
Ferguson
still has the passion
to add to his trophy haul.
The highlight of his career came in 1999 as he led United to a
unique Premiership, FA Cup and Champions League
Treble, but he has struggled to recapture such glory
in
Europe
since that famous night
at the Nou Camp when two late goals saw off Bayern
Munich.
United always reach the latter stages of the Champions League,
but can a developing side prove their doubters wrong
by capturing the ultimate prize this season? Time
will tell, but you write off this manager at your
peril.
Verdict: The quarter-finals at best.
Olympique
Lyonnais
· French
champions
· Champions League Pedigree: Second
round 2001-01, quarter-finalists 2003-04.
|
Olympique
Lyon's Sidney Govou. |
|
The Star Man - Sidney Govou
Brilliant little French international who can line up as an out-and-out
striker or as a right-sided attacking midfielder.
Noted for sprinter-like speed, dribbling prowess,
and packs a powerful shot, though he does not try
his luck from distance as often as he should.
His one weak points is his frail physique.
When the muck and bullets start to fly, he can be
a little lightweight at times and in the past couple
of years he has been a regular in the treatment
room with various injuries.
Joined
Lyon
as a 17-year-old in
1997, making his first team debut two years later.
Burst onto the European scene in the 2001-02 season,
scoring two wonderful goals in
Lyon
's 3-0 thumping of Bayern
Munich in the Champions League.
The Weak Link - Defence
Lyon
sold their first-choice central defenders, the Brazilian
Edmilson (to
Barcelona
) and the Swiss Patrick
Muller (to
Mallorca
), in the close season and the jury must be
out whether the new pairing of the Brazilian Claudio
Cacapa and recently-signed ex-Lille man Eric Abidal
will fill the void adequately.
Bought from Atletico Mineiro in 2001, Cacapa loves one-on-one battles
with opposing strikers but his concentration tends
to lapse at times, with ball-watching a particular
problem. While Abidal has lots of promise, he is
relatively untested at the top level and his distribution
is not the best.
Lyon
's full-backs, the right-sided Antony Reveillere and left-back
Jeremie Berthod have their weaknesses, especially
their below-average positional play.
The New Face - Sylvain Wiltord
On hearing that Brazilian marksman Giovane Elber would be sidelined
until the New Year with ankle ligament damage, the
Lyon
management swooped
to sign the French international front-runner or
attacking midfielder, who had come to the end of
his contract with Arsenal.
Now fully recovered from the ankle injury which kept him out for
three months last season, he started his pro career
in the early 1990s with French side
Rennes
, then starred for
Bordeaux
before joining Arsenal
in the summer 2000 in a £14 million deal via Deportivo
La Coruna, for whom he never played.
Quick, incisive and a proven goalscorer, he has won 61 caps for
France
- he made his debut
for Les Bleus back in February 1999 in a 2-0 victory
over
England
at Wembley - and has
managed 20 goals for his country, a good strike-rate
by anyone's standards.
The Coach - Paul Le Guen
Former French national team skipper who on ending an outstanding
playing career as a defensive midfielder with Brest,
Nantes and Paris Saint-Germain, successfully turned
to coaching, first taking charge of Rennes and then
headhunted in 2002 by Lyon, whom he has led to the
last two French League titles.
Softly-spoken and not one to show his emotions, he is not the most
colourful of characters. But he is an excellent
organiser, has a sharp eye for tactical detail and
is a good man-manager, able to keep al the stars
in his squad relatively happy.
Enjoyed much success in Europe as a player, a member of the PSG
team which reached the Champions League semis in
1995 and won the Cup-winners' Cup the following
year.
Verdict: Could well repeat last season's quarter-final spot.
Fenerbahce
· Turkish
champions
· Champions League Pedigree: Two
previous appearances in 1996-97 and 2001-02 but
eliminated at the first round stage on both occasions.
|
Fenerbahce's
Pierre van Hooijdonk. |
|
The Star Man - Pierre Van Hooijdonk
Dutch international striker who moved from Feyenoord of Rotterdam
to Fenerbahce a year ago and quickly became a cult
hero with the Black Eagles, amassing 23 goals to
help Fener claim the 2003-04 league title.
Physically imposing, with a deft touch on the ball and a free-kick
specialist, he enjoyed his finest moment in
Europe
when playing an instrumental
role in Feyenoord's UEFA Cup triumph in 2002. He
won his first cap for
Holland
back in 1994 but has
never truly been able to establish himself as a
regular for the 'Oranje'.
Can be a difficult customer to handle. Went on strike in 1998 in
an attempt to earn himself a transfer from
Nottingham
Forest
and also had bust-ups
with management while at Benfica and Feyenoord.
Has also played for Rosendaal, NAC Breda, Celtic
and Vitesse Arnhem.
The Weak Link - The backline
Promising young centre-back Servet Cetin is likely to be out until
the New Year with a knee ligament injury and he
will be badly missed. All their other centre-backs,
the Brazilian Luciano, Deniz Baris and Umit Ozat
are robust, determined and strong in the air but
are not the quickest over the ground.
Fener can be exposed at full-back too. Recently bought from Standard
Liege, young right-back Onder Turaci lacks experience,
while at left-back, another
Brazilian Fabiano is far better going forward than
marking and covering.
Highly experienced Turkish national team keeper Rustu Recber has
returned to Fener after an unhappy time at
Barcelona
. But how has his confidence
been affected by being tagged a Nou Camp reject?
The New Face - Alex
Fenerbahce certainly pulled off a transfer market coup this summer
when they won the race to sign the extravangantly-gifted
Brazilian playmaker from Cruzeiro for just £3 million.
Critics say the 27-year-old is not particularly quick and can be
muscled out of a game but his glorious left-foot,
vision and flair more than make up for those supposed
faults. Sets the tempo of his team's play and picks
out passes which others simply do not see.
First played for
Brazil
in 1998 and took some
time to show his true worth in the famous yellow
jersey. But he is now firmly established in the
plans of national team coach Carlos Alberto Parreira,
performing brilliantly in Brazil's Copa America
triumph this summer.
The Coach - Christoph Daum
Controversial German boss who hit the headlines for all the wrong
reasons in the summer of 2000 when he tested positive
for cocaine, an affair which led to his country's
FA abandoning plans to make him coach of the Nationalmannschaft.
An outspoken, no-nonsense boss, he has masterminded League titles
in
Germany
(
Stuttgart
),
Austria
(Austria Wien) and
Turkey
(Besiktas and Fenerbahce).
He has also worked at German clubs
Koln
and Bayer Leverkusen.
Joined Fener at the start of last season.
Leeds United fans will forever be grateful to him for fielding
too many foreign players against them in a European
Cup first round, second-leg at
Elland Road
in 1992-93. Without
his blunder,
Stuttgart
would have gone through
on the away goals rule. However, UEFA ruled there
should be a play-off in
Barcelona
, which
Leeds
duly won.
Verdict: Apart from Van Hooijdonk, Alex and young Turkish striker
Tuncay Sanli, Fener do not have enough quality to survive the first round.
Sparta
Prague
· Czech
champions
· Champions
League pedigree: Second round 2002, 2004
|
Sparta
Prague
's Karel Poborsky. |
|
The Star Man - Karel Poborsky
Sparta
fans all breathed a
sigh of relief this summer with the announcement
that the brilliant 32-year-old attacking midfielder
had postponed plans to retire from the game and
had signed a one-season extension. A wise move.
The right-sided man was playing some of the best
football of his carrer last term and was particularly
effective for the Czech Repiuubluic at Euro 2004.
An marvellous package of trickey, speed and high workrate,
he has played all over
Europe
, starting out with
Ceske Budejovice
, Viktoria Zizkov and
Slvia Prague in his homeland, then emigrating to
play for Manchester United, Benfica and Lazio. Returned
home to join
Sparta
in 2002.
The
Czech
Republic
's most capped player
of all-time, he recently won his 100th cap. Nicknamed
'Express Train'.
The Weak Link - The Defence
Sparta
are in period of transition defensively following the
sale of Czech international Tomas Hubschman to
Ukraine
outfit Shakhtar Donetsk
this summer. Hubschman, a former young Czech Player
of the Year, had been a tower of strength for them
in recent years and would-be replacements, Jiri
Homola or Jiri Koubsky are not quite of the same
calibre.
The other centre-back Petr Johana is solid enough but full-backs
Pavel Pergl (right) and Martin Petras (left) can
be sucked out of position.
Keeper Jaromir Blazek, the understudy to Czech national team number
one Petr Cech, is a fine shot-stoper and very good
in one-on-one situations. However, he has been known
to make a mess of back passes.
The New Face - Jan Simak
Cultured Czech international playmaker brought in from German club
Bayer Leverkusen. A schemer with sublime ball-skills,
a great range of pass and knows where the goal is.
However, he is not the most consistent of performers,
flitting in and out of games.
Curently rebuilding his career at
Sparta
after missing most
of last season with mental problems. On loan at
Hannover
, he went missing for
a whole week in September 2003, with neither family,
friends or club officials knowing where he was.
Eventually tracked down in
Prague
, he said he wanted
to quit the game and was diagnosed with depression.
After many months of rest and recuperation, he is
now ready for another shot.
Began with Czech club sides, Sokol Mezno, Tabor,
Ceske Budejovice
and Chmel Blsany before
heading to
Germany
to play for
Hannover
in 2000.
The Coach - Frantiek Straka
This volatile, tough-talking ex-Czech national team libero replaced
Jiri Kotrba as
Sparta
boss in March 2004,
immediately leading his new team to the League and
Cup double.
Played for
Sparta
for nine years (1979-88),
folowed by an long spell
in German football with Borussia Monchengladbach,
Hansa Rostock and
Wuppertal
.
On hanging up his boots in 1998, he was a German-based player agent
for a couple of years before moving into coaching,
first with German regional league side Wuppertal,
then Czech top flight club Teplice.
Verdict: To fall at the first fence.
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