Juventus would today at the Principality Stadium in Cardiff,
Wales, trade tackles with Real Madrid in the UEFA Champions League final for
the continent’s top prize, even as the two managers thread with caution.
Juventus have not won the Cup since 1996, while Real are the
defending champions, and Juve coach, Massimiliano Allegri says they need to be
fully focused.
Indeed, this final in Cardiff will be the 19th meeting
between Juventus and Real Madrid – all in the European Cup. Out of the 19 games
played so far, both clubs have eight wins each and two draws, with Juve scoring
21 goals to Madrid’s 18.
It therefore follows that this game will be the decider of
who is the better of the two sides.
To romp into this year’s final, Juventus finished top of
their group, ahead of Sevilla, Lyon and Dinamo Zagreb, respectively,
progressing past Porto in the last 16, dumping Barcelona out in the
quarter-finals and recording a 4-1 aggregate win over Monaco in the semis.
Real on the other hand finished behind Borussia Dortmund in
their group, but eight points clear of Legia Warsaw and nine ahead of Ronaldo’s
former club Sporting Lisbon.
They produced home and away 3-1 wins over Napoli in the last
16, before defeating Bayern Munich 6-3 on aggregate and overcoming neighbours
Atletico Madrid en-route to the final.
This epic final, which experts have described as ‘a gritty
encounter’, will be a fight between two honour chasing managers.
Real Madrid’s Zinedine Zidane replaced Rafa Benitez as boss
in January 2016 and ended that season just one point behind Barcelona in La
Liga – but won the Champions League with a penalty shootout victory over
Atletico.
This season, Zidane has led his side to their first league
title in five years and stands to win his second successive Champions League
trophy.
Meanwhile, Juventus’ Massimiliano Allegri took the helm of
affairs in July 2014 after spending four years with AC Milan, replacing
now-Chelsea boss Antonio Conte – who had resigned to take the reins of Italy’s
national side.
Since then, Allegri has won the Serie A title in each of his
three seasons and guided the Old Ladies to two Champions League finals, losing
his last 3-1 to Barcelona in 2015.
Interesting, both sides have displayed a high sense of
attacking football on their way to this final. But how tactical one would be to
outwit the other will likely determine who runs away with the coveted trophy.
Real Madrid have scored more goals, creating more chances,
hitting more shots on target, providing a greater counter-attack threat and
possessing superior attacking aerial threat in the course of this championship.
In fact, Real’s top scorer Cristiano Ronaldo, who has fully
adopted his new centre forward role, has scored 10 goals in the competition –
twice as many goals as Juve’s most prolific striker Gonzalo Higuain. In terms
of creating chances, Toni Kroos and full-back Marcelo lead the way for Madrid –
with the former also able to launch pin-point precision from set plays.
However, it should be remembered that Juve have the
capability to score many goals against powerful, attacking Spanish sides,
having all-but secured a quarter-final victory over Barcelona with a 3-0
first-leg home win.
But in terms of style, the two clubs attempt similar passes,
with Juventus slightly higher in proportion in their own half than Real –
primarily by Medhi Benatia and Andrea Barzagli.
However, Real’s weakness is their vunerability. Real are
vulnerable across a defence line charged with attacking intent, in addition to
being more error prone and facing more shots. In addition, Madrid are more
prone to being caught offside, missing more shots and big chances.
Juventus on the other hand would seek to be economical in
attack and Higuain would need to convert any opportunity at goal, as the game
is likely to be a case of attack against defence.
If they fail to breach Juve’s defensive solidity, Zidane’s
men might be in for trouble.
Zidane acknowledged this fact when he was quoted to have
said “Real Madrid are absolutely not the favourites. It’s very difficult to
score against this Juve side.”
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