Sevilla on course for Europa League final

Sevilla stayed firmly on course for a second consecutive Europa League crown after thumping Fiorentina in their semi-final first leg.

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Madrid - Sevilla stayed firmly on course for a second consecutive Europa League crown when an Aleix Vidal double and a Kevin Gameiro strike secured a thumping 3-0 win at home to Fiorentina in their semi-final first leg on Thursday.

Chasing a record fourth triumph in Europe's second-tier club competition, Sevilla took the lead in the 17th minute at a festive Sanchez Pizjuan stadium when Vidal thrashed a low shot into the corner from a Carlos Bacca layoff.

The Spanish midfielder made it 2-0 to the Andalusians seven minutes into the second half when Vitolo released him into space on the right of the penalty area and he finished clinically past Fiorentina goalkeeper Neto.

Substitute Gameiro put the tie virtually beyond the Italians 15 minutes from time when he scored with his first touch just under 30 seconds after replacing Bacca following good work down the left from fullback Benoit Tremoulinos.

It was Sevilla's ninth win in a row at home in continental competition and their seventh in seven matches at the Sanchez Pizjuan in the latest edition of the Europa League.

“Fiorentina deserved to be here but we again demonstrated our strength at our stadium and got another positive result,” Vidal told Spanish television.

“We cannot relax in the return because if they get into the game early on we could suffer,” added the 25-year-old, who had never scored in nine previous European appearances.

“If we said that the tie was evenly balanced we would be lying. But I repeat that we cannot let our guard down because they could get a result like we got today.”

Fiorentina's Serie A rivals Napoli squandered the lead and drew 1-1 at home to Ukrainian side Dnipro Dnipropetrovsk in their semi-final, first leg, with the return legs to be played in a week's time.

Sevilla won back-to-back Uefa Cups in 2006 and 2007 and can eclipse Inter Milan, Juventus and Liverpool, who each won the competition three times. – Reuters



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Pele undergoes prostate surgery

Brazilian soccer legend Pele has undergone prostate surgery and is in stable condition, a Sao Paulo hospital said.

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Sao Paulo - Brazilian soccer legend Pele has undergone prostate surgery and is in stable condition, a Sao Paulo hospital said.

This is the second time Pele, 74, has been hospitalized in six months.

In a statement, the Albert Einstein Hospital said Pele had undergone a transurethral resection of the prostate. According to the U.S. National Institutes of Health's website, the procedure involves removing an internal part of the prostate gland in order to treat an enlarged prostate.

Earlier in the day, local news site Globo Esporte said Pele had a prostate condition known as hyperplasia, which it said increases the risk of a urinary infection. The report did not cite sources.

Pele, whose given name is Edson Arantes do Nascimento, was released from the same hospital in early December following a two-week stay with kidney problems.

With more than 1,280 career goals, and an unequaled three World Cup titles during his playing career, Pele is considered by many the greatest soccer player of all time. – Reuters



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Napoli left to rue missed chances

Dnipro Dnipropetrovsk substitute Yevhen Seleznyov snatched a late equaliser to earn a 1-1 draw at Napoli whose striker Gonzalo Higuain spurned several chances in their Europa League semi-final.

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Dnipro Dnipropetrovsk substitute Yevhen Seleznyov snatched a late equaliser to earn a 1-1 draw at Napoli whose striker Gonzalo Higuain spurned several chances in their Europa League semi-final, first leg.

David Lopez put Napoli ahead early in the second half on a frustrating night for their Argentina international Higuain, who saw four second half efforts saved before Seleznyov struck.

A frustrated Higuain was thwarted by goalkeeper Denys Boyko as the Serie A side pressed for a second goal.

Seleznyov then took advantage of slack Napoli defending to snatch an equaliser with nine minutes left to put the Ukrainians in pole position for a place in the final in Warsaw.

Holders Sevilla beat Fiorentina 3-0 in their first leg in Spain to take charge of the tie ahead of next week's return.

Napoli coach Rafael Benitez suggested Dnipro's goal was offside, telling reporters: “Everyone saw what happened with the goal that changed the game. But we have to bear in mind our excellent performance in the second half when we created a lot.”

Napoli, whose only European triumph was lifting the Uefa Cup in 1989, struggled to break down a stubborn Dnipro defence in the first half in Naples and, on the only occasion they got through, Lorenzo Insigne's shot struck the post.

The hosts appeared to have done the hard part when Spaniard Lopez headed them in front five minutes after halftime.

A second goal looked imminent as gaps began to appear in the Dnipro defence, but Dnipro keeper Boyko had other ideas.

Higuain twice got clear on the right but Boyko saved both efforts with his legs, and did the same when the Argentine got free on the left for another chance.

The Dnipro stopper then tipped a rising shot over the bar after Higuain worked an opening on the edge of the area.

Dnipro, playing their 17th match of a campaign which began in the third qualifying round on July 30, hit back against the run of play with nine minutes left.

Artem Fedetskiy sent in a low cross from the right, the Napoli defence failed to clear and Seleznyov turned it in at the back post to completely change the complexion of the tie. – Reuters



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Relegation fight goes down to the wire

The fight to avoid automatic relegation will be the main focus when the final round of Premiership fixtures kick off on Saturday.

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Johannesburg - The fight to avoid automatic relegation will be the main focus when the final round of Premiership fixtures kick off at 3pm on Saturday.

The team who finishes last (16th) at the end of the season is automatically relegated with the National First Division (NFD) champions (Golden Arrows) promoted.

The two teams who finish 14th and 15th in the Premiership will then have to battle it out with the NFD’s second and third placed teams in the relegation/promotion playoffs to decide which two teams will play in the top-tier South African league next season.

Current favourites for automatic relegation are Moroka Swallows who occupy last spot on the table with 27 points. AmaZulu are on the same number of points, but six ahead of The Birds on goal difference in 15th place.

Swallows come up against Bloem Celtic at Dobsonville Stadium with their future in the league on the line. AmaZulu are also at home to Maritzburg United at Moses Mabhida Stadium in their last attempt to avoid the chop.

Chippa United are better off in 14th place with 30 points, but only a win in their game against champions Kaizer Chiefs at Nelson Mandela Bay Stadium could take their side out of the relegations playoffs – also depending on other results. If Chippa lose or draw, they will be condemned to the relegation playoffs. But if Chippa wins, it would bring the University of Pretoria into the equation. Tuks are on 32 points and face Mamelodi Sundowns at Lucas Moripe Stadium. If Tuks lose and Chippa wins, the Eastern Cape side could sneak ahead into 13th place. A draw, however, would be enough for Tuks to stay in the Premiership as their goal difference is nine better than Chippa.

The race for second and third spots in the NFD is tight, with Jomo Cosmos, Black Leopards, Thanda Royal Zulu and Cape All Stars all in with a chance.

ANA



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Bale reduced to role of bystander

According to Uefa statistics, Gareth Bale had made fewer passes and taken fewer touches of the ball than keeper, Iker Casillas against Juventus.

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The day before the European Cup semi-final, Gareth Bale was approached by a group of Real Madrid fans with a camera phone. They wanted a picture; the trouble was they wanted one of themselves with James Rodriguez and they wondered if the world's most expensive footballer would take it. Naturally, the Welshman obliged.

In the passageways of the Juventus Stadium in the wake of Real's 2-1 defeat there were a couple of journalists waiting not to speak with any Madrid player but to have their photos taken with them. Had Woodward and Bernstein taken that approach to Watergate, they would have asked for Richard Nixon's autograph rather than exposing him as a crook.

They were not particularly interested in posing with Bale, which was just as well because he was in no mood to chat. According to the Uefa statistics, he had made fewer passes and taken fewer touches of the ball than Real Madrid's keeper, Iker Casillas.

Had Bale's family watched ITV's coverage of the semi-final, they would not have enjoyed the analysis from Turin. Roy Keane, who in this city in 1999 had turned a European Cup semi-final that had seemed hopelessly lost Manchester United's way, had been damning. He argued Madrid were playing “with 10 men because Bale gave them absolutely nothing”. Keane went on: “He kept making the easy decision. The reason he is at Real Madrid is to be brave and to get at people. But every time he got the ball, he turned back. “

In the eyes of the Italian press, who had seen him destroy Internazionale when he was still a Tottenham player, Bale had been an irrelevance. “Banal” was the headline in one newspaper.

It would, of course, have been too much to have expected anyone bar Real's manager, Carlo Ancelotti, to have pointed out that Bale was not fully fit and that he had only made his comeback from injury at the weekend, when his cross against Seville had allowed Cristiano Ronaldo to celebrate his hat-trick in a match won by the odd goal in five.

In what has proved a difficult second season at the Bernabeu, Bale has averaged a goal every other match - roughly the same ratio as Wayne Rooney. And yet Rooney's command of a foreign language, or the way he mixes outside the training ground, or the way Ronaldo looks at him, is not analysed to death in the pages of Madrid's sports paper, Marca.

In his later years at Old Trafford, Sir Alex Ferguson became something of a snob when it came to newspapers, ignoring the man from the Manchester Evening News and granting extensive interviews to Gazzetta dello Sport and L'Equipe. He never allowed Marca anywhere near his training ground.

Marca and the Real Madrid president, Florentino Perez, have been at war for several months now and Bale has become the newspaper's chief and easiest target. It matters not that Bale struck an astonishing winner against Barcelona in the final of last season's Copa del Rey or scored in the European Cup final against Atletico. That credit, which at Manchester United would sustain a man for a couple of seasons, long ago ran out.

Instead, Bale is portrayed as Perez's creature, a man the president considered worth more than Ronaldo, whose precious away goal in Turin brought him level with Alfredo di Stefano in the list of Real's all-time leading scorers.

There have been reports of Perez asking Ancelotti why Bale was subbed or not selected and on Tuesday night, as Juventus regained a lead they could and should have extended, it seemed bizarre Ancelotti should have chosen Isco rather than Bale as the first man to be brought off. It was strange but not as odd as his choice of Sergio Ramos as a central midfielder.

Like everyone who manages Real Madrid, Ancelotti finds himself seated on a throne of bayonets. Facing the club with whom he enjoyed less success than anywhere else in his managerial career, Ancelotti made too many mistakes, one of which was probably not starting with Javier Hernandez, who had scored the winner against Atletico in the quarter-finals, rather than Bale.

Had Fernando Llorente scored for Juventus late on, the tie might already be out of Real's reach. As it was, Rodriguez could promise that Madrid's footballers “would be out to kill”. The Bernabeu will be an intimidating place on Wednesday night - and it might not be just the Juventus players who feel the fear. – The Independent



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Toure '90 percent certain' to leave City

Manchester City midfielder Yaya Toure is “90 percent certain” to leave the Premier League club at the end of this season, his agent Dimitri Seluk said.

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London - Manchester City midfielder Yaya Toure is “90 percent certain” to leave the Premier League club at the end of this season, his agent Dimitri Seluk said.

Seluk told Sky Sports News that Ivorian Toure, who joined City in 2010 as part of owner Sheikh Mansour's vast outlay on world-class players, is attracting serious interest from three clubs.

The 31-year-old Toure, a dominant force in City's two Premier League title-winning sides in 2012 and 2014, has not made the same impact the club have come to expect from the powerhouse midfielder this season.

Last month Seluk branded boss Manuel Pellegrini a “weak manager” after a poor run of form dropped City out of the running for the Premier League title and ensured they will end the current campaign without a piece of silverware.

Toure caused controversy last May after he claimed he was shown disrespect by City after they failed to wish him a happy 31st birthday and present him with a cake. – Reuters



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Footballers to get financial aid

In a bid to stop local players from ending up broke, Safpu and Old Mutual have entered into a deal to educate them about money.

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Johannesburg - In an effort to stop footballers from spending all their money and ending up broke when they retire, the SA Football Players Union and Old Mutual have entered into a deal to educate the sportsmen about money.

There are many stories of South African footballers who were national heroes in their time left destitute because they did not save their money. Just one example is former Bafana Bafana star Sizwe Motaung who died in poverty.

The ‘On the Money’ financial wellbeing programme aims to increase the financial knowledge of footballers and help them manage their finances better.

“The union is very excited about this partnership with Old Mutual. The challenges facing our players are well documented. For far too long our players have been disenfranchised by their lack of knowledge on issues such as finance, which has had devastating impacts on their futures,” said Sapfu president Hareipha “Simba” Marumo said on Thursday.

Old Mutual’s Retail Mass Foundation managing director Bongani Madikiza said the programme would be rolled out to all South Africa’s professional football bodies, including the PSL, NFD, Bafana Bafana, and Banyana Banyana.

“By concluding this partnership with Safpu, we are able to promote financial fitness awareness… We are confident that our practical ‘On the Money’ programme and others will not only help players while their solid sporting careers are on the go, but will also ensure that they make wise investment choices for the longer term so that they can look ahead to do great things once they retire from soccer,” Madikiza said at the announcement of the programme in Johannesburg.

Labour Bureau



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United agree deal for Depay

Dutch international forward Memphis Depay has agreed to join Manchester United when the transfer window opens in June.

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London - Dutch international forward Memphis Depay has agreed to join Manchester United when the transfer window opens in June, his club PSV Eindhoven said.

British media said the deal, subject to the 21-year-old passing a medical, was around 30 million euros ($34 million).

“We are very proud of this upcoming transfer,” PSV technical manager Marcel Brands told the PSV website (www.psv.nl).

“Memphis has gone through all the teams of the PSV youth academy and has played an important part in the national title this year.

“He's a wonderful exponent of our training and will make a nice transition to a magnificent club in a beautiful competition.”

United also confirmed they had agreed the deal for a player who scored twice in last year's World Cup finals and helped PSV canter to the Dutch title this season. – Reuters



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Pep’s words come back to haunt him

24 hours before his Bayern Munch team would face Barcelona, Pep Guardiola said it was ‘impossible’ to stop Lionel Messi.

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“Messi devours Guardiola,” screamed the front page of Spanish sports daily Marca as the Argentine won the battle of Barcelona legends past and present in a 3-0 win for the Catalans in the first-leg of their Champions League semi-final against Bayern Munich.

Pep Guardiola could see it coming, yet was powerless to prevent it. Stop Lionel Messi? “Impossible,” he said 24 hours before the game.

“There is not a system or coach to stop talent of his magnitude,” he added, and so it proved as Messi struck twice and set up Neymar in the final 13 minutes to take Barca to the brink of next month's final in Berlin.

On his homecoming to the Camp Nou after 11 years as a player and captain and then four more as the club's most successful coach ever in winning 14 trophies between 2008 and 2012, Guardiola tried his best.

An almost suicidal back three going man-to-man with Barca's front three of Messi, Luis Suarez and Neymar, who now have 111 goals between them this season, was ditched early on, but Bayern still displayed a bravado beyond almost any other side when faced with the daunting task of a rampant Barca at the Camp Nou.

Despite being plagued by injuries, most notably to the two men who tore Barca to shreds in a 7-0 thrashing for the Catalans at this stage of the competition two years ago in Arjen Robben and Franck Ribery, Bayern still had more possession.

Yet, in this test of Barca old verus Barca new, Guardiola's old friend Luis Enrique was vindicated as his more powerful, direct approach won out.

“Percentages here and there don't matter. The important thing is how much you have the ball in the opposition half because that is where you can cause damage,” said Enrique afterwards.

The statistics that mattered backed him up too. Barca didn't just score the only three goals on the night, they had all of the eight shots on target too.

Given the exploits of Messi, Suarez and Neymar this season, the defensive solidity instigated by Enrique has often gone overlooked.

This was their sixth consecutive clean sheet, a 31st in 54 games this season.

“Defensively we were very good because that a team like Bayern doesn't have a shot on target is sensational,” said Barca defender Gerard Pique.

Yet, with 77 minutes on the clock, Bayern looked to have done their job.

The one man mountain threatening to prove his coach wrong and stop Messi, as he had in last year's World Cup final, was Manuel Neuer. His giant frame had pulled off brilliant saves to deny Luis Suarez and Dani Alves.

Yet, even he proved fallible to Messi's brilliance. When given space on the edge of the area for the first time in the match, the four-time World Player of the Year looked towards the far corner then hooked the ball back in at the near post leaving Neuer flummoxed.

Three minutes later he left Jerome Boateng eating grass before nonchalantly dinking the ball beyond Neuer on his weaker right foot.

The finish and Messi's celebration for the first as he whirled away punching the air was reminiscent of his goal in Barca's last Champions League final appearance when they proved to strong for Manchester United at Wembley.

Guardiola celebrated his second Champions League in just three years as a coach that evening. On Wednesday he learned what it feels like to be on the other side of Messi's magic.– AFP



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United out to stop the rot

A three-match losing streak has thrust Manchester United into a battle for a Champions League place and the side will aim to halt their decline.

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London – A three-match losing streak has thrust Manchester United into a battle for a Champions League place and the side will aim to halt their decline at Crystal Palace.

United sat third in the Premier League after beating rivals Manchester City last month, nine points clear in the race for a top-four finish.

However, three straight defeats have dropped them to fourth just four points ahead of Liverpool with three games left.

Now United visit Palace with Juan Mata saying the game must be won.

“We are forced to win as soon as possible: our rivals ahead keep adding points, and also the teams behind are getting closer,” the

midfielder wrote on the club’s website.

“We must focus on being effective because we haven’t scored in the last few games and we can’t afford it any longer.

“There are three finals remaining and I hope we can change this streak as soon as possible.”

United’s losing run is their longest in the league since 2012. They’ve also failed to score in three straight games for the first

time in eight years.

United had 80 per cent possession and 26 shots, including a Robin van Persie penalty that was saved by Boaz Myhill, against West Brom last week but still lost 1-0.

“As players and staff, there’s no doubt we can qualify for the Champions League and that was always what we wanted to do,” Ashley Young said after the game. “

”It’s still in our hands and we have three massive games coming up.

“We have another tough game away to Palace next weekend and we want to get back to winning ways.”

Liverpool also face a stern test when they visit newly crowned champions Chelsea.

The Reds have won just two of six, but still find themselves in the hunt thanks to United’s slips.

“It’s not over yet,” Liverpool’s Adam Lallana said. “We can still finish in the top four but we need to take maximum points now.

“We have to put pressure on United by going to Stamford Bridge and getting three points. Pressure is a tough thing to deal with.”

The race to avoid relegation has also turned into a fight.

While Burnley and Queens Park Rangers will likely drop, four teams are within two points of Sunderland in the final relegation place.

Hull and Leicester are both a point ahead of Sunderland and one below Newcastle and Aston Villa.

Hull host Burnley, while Leicester to look to make it six wins in seven against Southampton.

“The Burnley game is not going to keep us up or send us down because there are still two games after that,” Hull manager Steve Bruce said after their 3-1 loss to Arsenal.

“We still have it all to do and it is a big game, we are aware of that. A result will be good.”

Newcastle, in the survival battle after eight straight losses, host West Brom and Aston Villa play West Ham.

Back at the top of the table, Manchester City and Arsenal are level on points as they look to be runner-up to Chelsea.

City host QPR, a day before Arsenal are home to Swansea.

Tottenham visit Stoke in the weekend’s final fixture. – DPA-ANA



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Last-chance saloon for Burnley

Burnley's seemingly doomed attempt to avoid relegation from the Premier League reaches last-chance saloon when they face Hull City.

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London - Burnley's seemingly doomed attempt to avoid relegation from the Premier League reaches last-chance saloon on Saturday when failure to beat Hull City will send them down.

Sean Dyche's side have earned plenty of plaudits for their style of play this season, but not enough goals or points.

When they stunned champions Manchester City 1-0 in March they were one point behind 17th place and survival appeared to be well within their grasp.

Five defeats and a 0-0 home draw with Tottenham Hotspur in their next six matches, however, leaves the humble Lancashire club needing a sporting miracle.

With three games left to play they have 26 points, compared to 17th placed Hull's 34. They must beat Hull, Stoke City and Aston Villa and hope for favours elsewhere.

Despite their predicament, Dyche said his team remains motivated and midfielder Matt Taylor insists the fight goes on.

“There's three games left and we'll continue to fight,” Taylor told the Lancashire Telegraph.

“We won't feel sorry for ourselves. We'll dust ourselves down and go again.”

While Burnley's Premier League status looks almost certain to last only one season, as it did in 2009-10, fellow promoted side Queens Park Rangers are also in dire straights, although Leicester City look like surviving.

QPR, on 27 points, will be doomed by the time they travel to Man City on Sunday, should Hull beat Burnley, Aston Villa beat West Ham United and Newcastle United beat West Bromwich Albion the day before.

Third from bottom Sunderland, who are a point behind Hull with a game in hand, could put the jitters up the teams just above them with victory in Saturday's early kickoff at Everton.

A Sunderland win against Roberto Martinez's side would take them, for a few hours at least, above free-falling North East rivals Newcastle United who have lost eight league games in a row and are spiralling out of control.

Newcastle, in 15th spot with 35 points, had two sent off in the 3-0 capitulation at Leicester last week, after which manager John Carver suggested defender Mike Williamson had got a red card on purpose.

Such is the disarray at St James' Park that skipper Fabricio Coloccini wrote an open letter apologising to the club's fans.

“Players and staff have come together in order to leave all past problems aside and to focus 100 percent on the three 'cup finals' that we have left,” he said.

With Chelsea already champions and Arsenal and Manchester City scrapping for second place, the only real intrigue at the top is whether fourth-placed Manchester United can clinch a place in the top four, having lost three consecutive games.

Victory at Crystal Palace on Saturday would ease their nerves. – Reuters



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Bayern need a miracle

Bayern will need a Munich miracle to retain their dream of reaching the Champions League final on home soil after slumping to a 3-0 defeat at Barcelona.

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Bayern will need a Munich miracle to retain their dream of reaching the Champions League final on home soil after the five-time champions slumped to a 3-0 defeat at Barcelona in their semi-final first leg on Wednesday.

The Bavarians were hoping to set the foundations for their fourth final appearance in six seasons next month in Berlin, and a first under coach Pep Guardiola, with a solid display in Spain.

Instead they were outclassed by the Catalans, who scored three times in the last 13 minutes to go into next week's return leg as overwhelming favourites after Bayern ran out of steam towards the end of the game.

“I am not really a friend of big words because when you lose 3-0 then the chances are obviously not great,” club CEO Karl-Heinz Rummenigge said in a post-midnight dinner in Barcelona.

“But maybe there will be a football wonder in Munich.”

The Bavarians have already overturned a big first-leg deficit once this campaign when they lost 3-1 at Porto in the quarter-finals only to crush them 6-1 back in Munich.

But after Lionel Messi scored twice in a scintillating performance and Neymar added a late third as part of an impressive team display, few believe Bayern can turn it around once more against a side as strong as Barcelona.

Missing key players, especially injured wingers Franck Ribery and Arjen Robben, the Bavarians lack the kind of pace down either flank that would cause major problems for any team.

“Without Arjen and Franck we did not have our two counter-attack players and that made things difficult,” said Guardiola, who won 14 triphies in four years at Barca.

“The return leg now becomes very complicated but we will give it a shot.”

Robben is out for the rest of the season, while Ribery, already injured for about two months, remains doubtful for the return leg, with David Alaba and Holger Badstuber also out.

Only a few weeks ago, Bayern looked on course for a repeat of their 2013 treble but after last week's German Cup exit and their loss to Barcelona, they now need to stage a monumental upset just to reach the final.

“We are Bayern and we keep our heads held high,” midfielder Thomas Mueller said. “We cannot expect to have a return leg like we had against Porto.”

“But the 11 players who will be on the pitch will fight until the last second but it is clear that we now need a small football wonder.” – Reuters



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Wits outsmart Chiefs

Kaizer Chiefs fell to just their third loss of their league campaign with a 2-1 defeat to Wits in their Premiership match at FNB Stadium.

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Johannesburg – Kaizer Chiefs fell to just their third loss of their league campaign with a 2-1 defeat to Wits in their Premiership match at FNB Stadium.

Wits grabbed the lead in the opening five minutes with a well-taken goal from Henrico Botes, before Siphiwe Tshabalala levelled matters in familiar fashion with a free-kick ten minutes before half-time. But it would be just before the hour mark, when The Clever Boys would outsmart the AmaKhosi to score the winner through Paseka Sekese and wrestle all three points from the encounter.

With the win, Wits remain in fourth position on the log, but crucially join Orlando Pirates on 49 points who have a superior goal difference of nine to maintain third spot. It means Wits can claim third position for the season in their final game of the season depending on what the Soweto Giants can achieve in their last fixture.

For champions Chiefs, the loss means little as they remain on 66 points and will claim their trophy on the weekend.

Wits took the lead in the fifth minute when Botes headed in a goal from a free-kick. Ben Motshwari delivered the ball into the box, and Botes met the cross perfectly to give Reyaad Pieterse no chance in the Cheifs goal and take a 1-0 lead for the visitors.

Tshabalala levelled the scores for Chiefs in the 35th minute. It was a trademark strike for the veteran player as he whipped the ball over the wall from a free kick into the back of the net as Wits keeper Moeneeb Josephs was left rooted to the spot.

The much-admired Chiefs defence were made to look ordinary as Wits took the lead again in the 58th minute. Tebogo Moerane was allowed to make a bustling run down the left without a defender in sight, before crossing the ball into the box where Sekese rose in between three defenders and his unchallenged header found the back of the net for a 2-1 lead. – ANA



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Amazulu boost survival hopes

AmaZulu scored a 2-1 victory over the University of Pretoria in the Absa Premiership match at the Absa Tuks Stadium, in Hatfield.

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Pretoria – AmaZulu scored a 2-1 victory over the University of Pretoria in the Absa Premiership match at the Absa Tuks Stadium, in Hatfield.

The result marked AmaZulu’s first win over AmaTuks in Premiership competition and it offered a glimmer of hope at a time when they are in the throes of the dreaded relegation zone.

AmaZulu’s win also marked a personal triumph for their coach Steve Barker, a former AmaTuks mentor, and the victory made for a season’s double against the Pretoria side.

AmaTuks made their early pressure count with a 30th minute left-footed goal by Tebogo Monyai, thanks to a fine assist by Atusaye Nyondo.

Moments earlier, ‘Usuthu’ goalkeeper, the Zimbabwean-born Energy Murambadoro, foiled a scoring attempt from Ronald Ketjijere by turning the parting shot for a corner.

AmaTuks’ 1-0 lead survived the first half in which Murambadoro was the only yellow card booking.

Steve Barker’s Usuthu surprised AmaTuks early after the break when they equalised through Bongi Ntuli after fine work by Willem Mwedihanga in the build-up movement to the opposition goalmouth (1-1).

Amost 20 minutes later, Usuthu shocked AmaTuks to take a 2-1 lead when Ntuli netted hi second with a fine low right-footed drive and from that point onwards, the relegation-threatened KZN visitors were forced on to a largely defensive role as the hosts tried to claw their way back into the match, but to no avail. – ANA



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Ancelotti vows to hold onto Bale

Carlo Ancelotti will fight to keep Gareth Bale at Real Madrid and out of the clutches of Manchester United this summer.

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Carlo Ancelotti will fight to keep Gareth Bale at Real Madrid and out of the clutches of Manchester United this summer, it has emerged.

Real boss Ancelotti faces his own battle to survive at the Bernabeu at the end of this season but has already told club president Florentino Perez that Bale should not be sold under any circumstances.The Wales international — on United’s list of targets for the summer — has endured a difficult second season at Real.

He was heavily criticised across Spain for another poor display as the holders lost their Champions League semi-final first leg 2-1 at Juventus.Bale’s modest efforts drew stinging criticism from ITV analyst Roy Keane, who said the former Tottenham star had been so poor that Real had been left playing with 10 men. That, in turn, brought a stinging rebuke from Bale’s agent Jonathan Barnett.

Away from all this, though, it is understood Ancelotti’s faith in Bale remains absolute. The veteran Italian coach has already attributed the poor performance in the semi-final first leg to injuries and believes Bale will return to form over the next two or three weeks.

With Perez looking to sell one big name each summer to make way for another, Bale is a prime candidate to leave as clubs like Chelsea and United begin to circle.

Nevertheless, Ancelotti believes Bale will grow into a genuine Real galactico.

With Keane having been so critical on the night of the Juventus game, Barnett made the unusual decision to defend his client vigorously yesterday, telling the BBC: ‘Why should we take any notice of comments from people who don’t know what they are talking about — and from people who have failed in management?‘This is only an issue in England. Gareth is at the biggest club in the world. He is one of the best players in the world. He is fine.

‘He only listens to relevant comments. He is 100 per cent focused on Real Madrid.’

United still hope to persuade goalkeeper David de Gea to sign a new deal, despite interest from Real. Another shaky performance from Real goalkeeper Iker Casillas suggested change is needed in that position and former United coach Phil Neville admitted he is worried De Gea may leave Old Trafford.

‘My biggest fear in the summer is David de Gea,’ said Neville. ‘I want him tied up on a long-term contract.

‘He is the best developer I have seen for a number of years. From when he first signed to where he is now, the improvement he has shown has been nothing short of incredible.‘He is the best around. He has won Manchester United games, he is up there with Edwin van der Sar and Peter Schmeichel in terms of winning games.’

Real face a tricky second leg at home next week but James Rodriguez is already talking up their chances.The 23-year-old said: ‘It’s not a bad loss. They were lucky. We have to think about next Wednesday. They will sit back and we have to have faith.’ – Daily Mail



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