The Joy of Six: Barcelona vs. Manchester United

Denis Irwin, Gary Walsh and Gary Pallister trudge off after United’s hiding in the Camp Nou in 1994. (Getty Images)
Denis Irwin, Gary Walsh and Gary Pallister trudge off after United’s hiding in the Camp Nou in 1994. (Getty Images)
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The Joy of Six: Barcelona vs. Manchester United

Denis Irwin, Gary Walsh and Gary Pallister trudge off after United’s hiding in the Camp Nou in 1994. (Getty Images)
Denis Irwin, Gary Walsh and Gary Pallister trudge off after United’s hiding in the Camp Nou in 1994. (Getty Images)

From the majesty of Atkinson’s cup specialists to the might of Cruyff’s dream team, six epic battles between these Euro giants:

1) Manchester United 3-0 Barcelona (agg: 3-2), Cup Winners’ Cup quarter-final second leg, Old Trafford, March 21, 1984
Sir Matt Busby and Sir Alex Ferguson brought glory and trophies to Manchester United on an industrial scale, yet they never had an Old Trafford European night such as this. Ron Atkinson’s cup specialists overcame a 2-0 first-leg deficit to overwhelm a Barcelona side that included Diego Maradona and Bernd Schuster. United’s three goals, two from Bryan Robson and one from Frank Stapleton, were scored from a combined distance of around six yards, an apt reflection of a night on which they stormed the Barcelona goal like it was a medieval fortress. Barcelona, used to a slower pace domestically, simply could not cope with United’s top-gear football.

The last of the goals came in the 53rd minute, which led to nerves around Old Trafford being Freddy Kreugered for the remainder of the match. “I thought we took the third goal too early,” Atkinson said after the game. “The last quarter of an hour felt like about three days.”

There were plenty of immense performances – not least the 19-year-old Graeme Hogg, who had scored an own goal in the first leg, and Remi Moses, who between them harassed Maradona into anonymity. But the night belonged to Robson, who cemented his status as the most irreplaceable player in English football. When Granada TV’s Elton Welsby collared him in the tunnel for an interview, after he had been chaired off by adoring United fans, Robson was so exhausted he could barely get his words out.

Nobody else had trouble making noise. All those involved say the atmosphere has never been repeated at Old Trafford, and the story goes that there were complaints about the noise as far away as Rochdale. There were certainly no prawn sandwiches on sale that night.

2) Manchester United 2-1 Barcelona, Cup Winners’ Cup final, Rotterdam, May 15, 1991
Robson agrees that his best performance for United was against Barcelona – but he’s not talking about 1984. He takes the greatest pride in a subtler display in the 1991 Cup Winners’ Cup final, when he controlled the midfield as United won their first European trophy in 23 years.

The recurring theme of Ferguson’s matches against Barcelona was his obsession with the center of midfield, where all Barcelona teams since Johan Cruyff’s have tended to outnumber and outclass their opponents. At the age of 34, Robson – who was really hurt by being dropped from Graham Taylor’s England squad – did not allow that to happen, producing an unflashy but near flawless display of positioning, tackling and passing.

He also created both of Mark Hughes’s goals. The first was stolen on the line from Steve Bruce’s header; the second, battered in from a prohibitive angle with both feet off the ground, was straight out of a comic book. It was also Exhibit A in the case for Hughes to be included when we write The Joy of Six: Big Game Players. And it provided the purest catharsis after his miserable spell at Barcelona.

At a time when tactics was a swearword in English football, the match was an early example of Ferguson’s love of a good chalkboard. He asked Brian McClair to drop on to Ronald Koeman when United lost the ball, to stop Barcelona’s passing carousel at source. A technically inferior United – this was pretty much the same Barcelona team who won the European Cup a year later – were deserved winners of a scruffy game despite a very jittery spell after Les Sealey’s late own goal.

Cruyff reacted as you might expect to the sight of his 3-1-2-3-1 formation being trumped by a 4-4-2. “They had one more chance than us – I don’t think they were superior,” he said, elevating his nose by precisely 45 degrees. “United played the British game.” Ferguson, and especially Robson, would have taken that last sentence as a compliment.

3) Barcelona 4-0 Manchester United, Champions League Group A, Camp Nou, November 2, 1994
“Manchester United are about to find out how good they really are, in front of 110,000 witnesses.” The opening line of David Lacey’s match preview in this paper is so perfect that it feels like it was filed from the future. Ferguson found out that his first great United team were a million miles short of succeeding in the European Cup, and not only because of the pesky foreigner rule that led to the omission of Peter Schmeichel for this game.

To channel Martin Johnson, that United team had only two problems in Europe: getting the ball and keeping it. They were top of their group when they traveled to Barcelona, but what followed was one long intravenous injection of reality. In what turned out to be the last hurrah of Johan Cruyff’s Dream Team, Romario and Hristo Stoichkov left United’s center-halves Steve Bruce and Gary Pallister with twisted everything. “It was one of the biggest games for me,” said Bruce, “and I had an absolute beast. We lost 4-0 but it could have been 14.”

Bruce’s best contribution was in the dressing room at half-time, when he and Brian Kidd separated Ferguson and Paul Ince just as they were moving to within haymaking range of one another. “You’re a bottler, Incey!” Ferguson had screamed. “You can’t handle the stage, can you?!” It was the beginning of the end of Ince’s United career.

United, used to 100mph football domestically, could not cope with the slow-slow-devastating tempo of Barcelona’s attacks. You could write a book on the genius of Romario – the Joy of Six wishes someone would – but it’s notable that Pallister picked out one quality above all others. It wasn’t his finishing, his movement or his speed from a standing start. It wasn’t even his persecution of Manchester United defenders called Gary. The thing that struck Pallister the most was Romario’s awareness. Romario was always looking over his shoulder to see where Pallister was, reversing the usual relationship between forward and defender, before slithering into a position where he could expose Pallister’s high center of gravity.

“Pallister and Bruce were both auditioning for the role of Juliet: Romario, Romario, wherefore art thou Romario?” wrote Lacey in his match report. “And nobody had a clue about Stoichkov’s whereabouts.” Pallister was a majestic center-half in English football; this was the one time in his career when he walked off the pitch knowing he’d been out of his depth. In a dark corner of his subconscious, Romario owns a long-term lease.

4) Barcelona 3-3 Manchester United, Champions League Group D, Camp Nou, November 25, 1998
United’s Treble season had such a perfect killer-to-filler ratio that their two astonishing 3-3 draws against Barcelona in the Champions League group stage are great songs tossed off as B-sides. The second of those matches, which Louis van Gaal’s Barcelona had to win to stay in their tournament (the final, as you may have heard, was to be played at the Camp Nou), had almost as much in common with basketball as football. For both sides, valor was the better part of discretion. “It was a night of complete abandon,” Ferguson said, “played exactly in the spirit of ‘let the best team win’.”

Two memories in particular stand out: Dwight Yorke and Andy Cole taking their relationship to another level with a Zorroish swish through Barcelona’s defense, and the demented magnificence of Rivaldo’s attempts to keep Barcelona in the competition. He scored two superb equalizers, lasered a shot on to the crossbar from 30 yards and brilliantly created a late chance for Giovanni that was saved by Schmeichel. Few footballers – few human beings – have ever failed quite so gloriously.

5) Manchester United 1-0 Barcelona (agg: 1-0), Champions League semi-final, Old Trafford, April 29, 2008
The greatest trick Carlos Queiroz ever pulled at Old Trafford was to get out some gym mats. When United prepared for the 2008 semi-finals, Queiroz and Ferguson were so determined to restrict Barcelona’s “passing carousel” – a phrase he coined before the second leg – that they went through an unprecedented level of tactical preparation.

During training, Queiroz placed gym mats between the two midfielders, Michael Carrick and Paul Scholes, and the two defenders, Rio Ferdinand and Wes Brown (with Nemanja Vidic injured, Brown had the tie of his life). The ball was not allowed to touch the mats under any circumstances, and Queiroz walked the four players through exactly where they should be in relation to the ball.

It worked: United restricted Barcelona to few chances and no goals across the two ties, and reached their first Champions League final since 1999 thanks to Scholes’s howitzer on a night of desperate emotion at Old Trafford. It was probably, across both legs, their most negative performance in Ferguson’s 26 years at the club, but the end justified the means. And the mats.

6) Barcelona 2-0 Manchester United, Champions League final, Rome, May 27, 2009
The Champions League finals of 2009 and 2011 finals are generally presented as a duology. That’s understandable given the recurring majesty of Andrés Iniesta, Xavi and Lionel Messi, and the sight of United being reduced to numbing impotence. Yet while the 2011 final was as close to unwinnable as dammit, 2009 was different – a game in which, though they were ultimately outplayed, United went away asking life’s cruelest question: what if?

What if they had scored during their blistering start? What if they hadn’t given away such a soft goal to Samuel Eto’o when they were completely on top? What if the irreplaceable Darren Fletcher had not been suspended after a dubious red card in the semi-final at Arsenal? What if they had picked a better hotel? Many have ridiculed Ferguson for that last one, particularly those who have never used a bad hotel as an excuse for a defeat on Football Manager, but it was always important to him: 18 years earlier he cited the quality of their hotel and preparation in Rotterdam as a major reason for the Cup Winners’ Cup final defeat of Barcelona.

Pity poor Michael Carrick, who was left to deal with the greatest midfield in football history on his own because of errant performances by Anderson (2009) and Ryan Giggs (2009 and 2011). He had to cope with Xavi and Iniesta, which was like confronting a superior version of himself – only there were two of them, and they also had support from Messi. “It was as if they owned the ball,” Carrick said, “and were playing their own private game.” Everything needs an acronym these days: Messi, Iniesta and Xavi were the little mix who proved size doesn’t always matter.

Carrick played the 2009 final with a broken toe and says he has “never got over” his imprecise header near the halfway line that ultimately led to Eto’o’s goal. That game had such an impact that he struggled mentally for the next two years. He found it much easier to deal with 2011, because by then Barcelona were in a different stratosphere. But he, and United, will always remember the first time.

The Guardian Sport



My Grandfather Encouraged Me to Play for Algeria, Luca Zidane Says

 Algeria's goalkeeper #23 Luca Zidane reacts during the Africa Cup of Nations (CAN) Group E football match between Algeria and Sudan at Moulay Hassan Stadium in Rabat on December 24, 2025. (AFP)
Algeria's goalkeeper #23 Luca Zidane reacts during the Africa Cup of Nations (CAN) Group E football match between Algeria and Sudan at Moulay Hassan Stadium in Rabat on December 24, 2025. (AFP)
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My Grandfather Encouraged Me to Play for Algeria, Luca Zidane Says

 Algeria's goalkeeper #23 Luca Zidane reacts during the Africa Cup of Nations (CAN) Group E football match between Algeria and Sudan at Moulay Hassan Stadium in Rabat on December 24, 2025. (AFP)
Algeria's goalkeeper #23 Luca Zidane reacts during the Africa Cup of Nations (CAN) Group E football match between Algeria and Sudan at Moulay Hassan Stadium in Rabat on December 24, 2025. (AFP)

Luca Zidane, son of French World Cup-winner Zinedine, said his grandfather had supported him in switching international allegiance to Algeria, after playing for France at junior level.

Zinedine Zidane is widely regarded as one of the greatest French footballers, inspiring his country to their first World Cup victory in 1998 and scoring two goals in the 3-0 win over Brazil in the final in Paris. The midfielder also guided them to the Euro 2000 trophy, achieving an unprecedented double for Les Bleus.

The decision to switch nationalities by Luca, who chose to avoid comparisons with ‌his father from ‌an early age by opting to play as ‌a ⁠goalkeeper, came as ‌a surprise, especially since he made it at the age of 27.

He quickly became Algeria's first-choice keeper, and his father watched him play against Sudan in Vladimir Petković's side's opening Africa Cup of Nations Group E match on Wednesday, which they won 3-0.

Zidane was not tested much during the match, but he did make an important save from a dangerous chance that fell to Yaser Awad with the score at ⁠1-0.

"When I think of Algeria, I remember my grandfather. Since childhood, we’ve had this Algerian culture in the ‌family," Zidane told BeIN Sports France.

"I spoke to ‍him before playing for the national ‍team, and he was extremely happy about this step. Every time I receive ‍an international call-up, he calls me and says that I made a great decision and that he is proud of me."

He said his father had also backed his decision. "He supported me," Luca said. "He said to me ‘Be careful, this is your choice. I can give you advice, but in the end, the final decision will be yours'.

"From the moment the coach and the federation ⁠president reached out to me, it was clear that I wanted to go and represent my country. After that, I naturally spoke with my family, and they were all happy for me."

Zinedine Zidane, who was sent off in the 2006 World Cup final in Germany which they lost to Italy on penalties, won the Champions League in 2002 with Real Madrid and claimed the Ballon d'Or award in 1998.

His son, who plays in Spain for Granada after starting his career at Real Madrid, has always worn a shirt bearing the name Luca, but he decided his national team jersey would carry the name Zidane.

"So for me, being able to honor ‌my grandfather by joining the national team is very important," he said. "The next jersey with the name on it will be for him."


Villa Face Chelsea Test as Premier League Title Race Heats Up

Football - Premier League - Aston Villa v Manchester United - Villa Park, Birmingham, Britain - December 21, 2025 Aston Villa's Morgan Rogers celebrates scoring their second goal =. (Action Images via Reuters/Paul Childs)
Football - Premier League - Aston Villa v Manchester United - Villa Park, Birmingham, Britain - December 21, 2025 Aston Villa's Morgan Rogers celebrates scoring their second goal =. (Action Images via Reuters/Paul Childs)
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Villa Face Chelsea Test as Premier League Title Race Heats Up

Football - Premier League - Aston Villa v Manchester United - Villa Park, Birmingham, Britain - December 21, 2025 Aston Villa's Morgan Rogers celebrates scoring their second goal =. (Action Images via Reuters/Paul Childs)
Football - Premier League - Aston Villa v Manchester United - Villa Park, Birmingham, Britain - December 21, 2025 Aston Villa's Morgan Rogers celebrates scoring their second goal =. (Action Images via Reuters/Paul Childs)

Aston Villa face a tough challenge at Chelsea on Saturday after muscling their way into the Premier League title race alongside Arsenal and Manchester City.

The Gunners, top of the tree at Christmas, host Brighton, while Pep Guardiola's in-form City travel to Nottingham Forest.

Liverpool manager Arne Slot is grappling with a striker crisis after Alexander Isak fractured his leg, while Manchester United captain Bruno Fernandes also faces a spell on the sidelines.

AFP Sport looks at three talking points ahead of the festive action:

Rogers spearheads Villa charge

Unai Emery's third-placed Villa are still considered rank outsiders for the Premier League title even though they are just three points behind leaders Arsenal.

Villa's 2-1 home win against Manchester United was their 10th consecutive victory in all competitions -- the first time they have achieved the feat as a top-flight team since 1914.

One of the major reasons for their recent success is the form of England midfielder Morgan Rogers, who failed to register a single goal involvement in his first seven matches in all competitions.

Now it is a different story: he has recorded 11 goal involvements in his past 15 appearances and the quality of his goals has been striking.

Rogers' seven Premier League goals this season have come from just 2.86 expected goals -- a metric used to determine how likely a player is to convert a chance.

But football analysts Opta give Villa just a five percent chance of becoming English champions for the first time since 1981.

Emery's men have an opportunity to silence the doubters when they take on fourth-placed Chelsea, with a match at Arsenal to follow just days later.

Slot's goals headache

In the early weeks of the season, Arne Slot would probably have envisaged Mohamed Salah and Alexander Isak as two of his first-choice attackers.

Now the Liverpool boss has neither -- Salah is with Egypt at the Africa Cup of Nations, while Isak faces at least two months on the sidelines after fracturing his leg against Tottenham.

Slot has steadied the ship at Anfield after a shocking run of six defeats in seven Premier League matches that left Liverpool's title defense in tatters.

A run of three wins and two draws in five league games has lifted the reigning champions into fifth spot, but there will be concerns over where the goals are going to come from ahead of the visit of bottom club Wolves.

Isak's absence will heap more pressure on the shoulders of top-scorer Hugo Ekitike.

The summer signing has netted eight times in the Premier League -- twice the tallies of Salah and Cody Gakpo.

Fernandes blow for Man Utd

Bruno Fernandes has been a shining light and virtually ever-present during Manchester United's recent lean years.

But manager Ruben Amorim is going to have to plan for a period without his talisman after the Portugal midfielder pulled up with an apparent hamstring injury in United's 2-1 defeat at Villa Park.

While the prognosis is unclear, Amorim has already ruled Fernandes out of United's clash against Newcastle at Old Trafford on Friday, among a list of absentees, with the Portuguese boss urging the rest of his squad to "step up" in the absence of his "impossible to replace" captain.

"It's massive," defender Diogo Dalot told Sky Sports. "We don't know how bad it is but for him to come off (in) the game, we know how tough he is."

Playmaker Fernandes has five goals and seven assists in the Premier League this season for inconsistent United, who are also without top-scorer Bryan Mbeumo, on Africa Cup of Nations duty with Cameroon.


Romero Faces FA Charge for Behavior After Liverpool Dismissal

Tottenham Hotspur's Argentinian defender #17 Cristian Romero (C) and Spanish defender #23 Pedro Porro (R) remonstrate with referee John Brooks (L) during the English Premier League football match between Tottenham Hotspur and Liverpool at the Tottenham Hotspur Stadium in London, on December 20, 2025. (AFP)
Tottenham Hotspur's Argentinian defender #17 Cristian Romero (C) and Spanish defender #23 Pedro Porro (R) remonstrate with referee John Brooks (L) during the English Premier League football match between Tottenham Hotspur and Liverpool at the Tottenham Hotspur Stadium in London, on December 20, 2025. (AFP)
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Romero Faces FA Charge for Behavior After Liverpool Dismissal

Tottenham Hotspur's Argentinian defender #17 Cristian Romero (C) and Spanish defender #23 Pedro Porro (R) remonstrate with referee John Brooks (L) during the English Premier League football match between Tottenham Hotspur and Liverpool at the Tottenham Hotspur Stadium in London, on December 20, 2025. (AFP)
Tottenham Hotspur's Argentinian defender #17 Cristian Romero (C) and Spanish defender #23 Pedro Porro (R) remonstrate with referee John Brooks (L) during the English Premier League football match between Tottenham Hotspur and Liverpool at the Tottenham Hotspur Stadium in London, on December 20, 2025. (AFP)

Tottenham captain Cristian Romero was charged by England's Football Association with allegedly acting in an "improper" manner in response to being sent off during Saturday's 2-1 Premier League defeat against Liverpool.

With Xavi Simons already being given a red ‌card earlier, ‌Tottenham ended up ‌with ⁠nine men ‌after captain Romero was given a second yellow for a tackle on Ibrahima Konate in the 93rd minute.

"It's alleged that he (Romero) acted in ⁠an improper manner by failing to ‌promptly leave the ‍field of ‍play and/or behaving in a ‍confrontational and/or aggressive manner towards the match referee after being sent off in the 93rd minute," the FA said in a statement.

Romero has until ⁠January 2 to respond to the charge.

The dismissal meant he already has to serve a one-match ban and will miss Sunday's away trip to Crystal Palace.

Tottenham are 14th in the league table with 22 points, 17 ‌behind leaders and derby rivals Arsenal.