Manchester United are keeping tabs on Chelsea’s Thomas Tuchel and Sevilla’s Julen Lopetegui as they draw up a list of candidates to become the club’s full-time manager this summer, The Guardian’s Jamie Jackson reports.
Paris Saint-Germain’s Mauricio Pochettino and Ajax’s Erik ten Hag continue to be linked to the role, along with Luis Enrique. However, the latter could be difficult to bring aboard at the end of the season because he intends to oversee Spain at the World Cup later this year.
Carlo Ancelotti, who is currently in charge of Real Madrid, could also be pursued by United if they’re unsuccessful in landing their other targets, according to a report earlier in March.
Ralf Rangnick, the Red Devils’ interim boss, is set to move into an advisory position when the 2021-22 term is over.
Tuchel emerged as a surprise candidate in recent weeks due to the problems at Chelsea. The west London club’s disgraced owner, Roman Abramovich, has been hit with government-imposed sanctions due to his association with Russian President Vladimir Putin. That’s left Chelsea to deal with numerous restrictions, including a block on ticket sales, frozen television and prize money, and a £20,000 limit on the team’s travel costs for away matches.
Tuchel has vowed to remain with Chelsea until the end of the campaign, but wouldn’t commit to the club beyond that point when quizzed on his future over the weekend. “Everything can change,” he said.
Since he succeeded Frank Lampard at Chelsea in January 2021, Tuchel has led the Blues to silverware in the Champions League, UEFA Super Cup, and Club World Cup. Tuchel’s Chelsea also lost in finals for the FA Cup and League Cup.
Lopetegui, meanwhile, has seen his pursuit of La Liga glory fall away in recent weeks as Sevilla are now 10 points behind table-topping Real Madrid. However, his side takes on West Ham United in the second leg of its Europa League last-16 tie on Thursday and is aiming to win the competition for a second time under its Spanish tactician.
The 55-year-old drew widespread attention when he took Spain to the 2018 World Cup following a dominant qualification campaign, but he was released from that role just days before the tournament began due to him negotiating a three-year contract to manage Real Madrid.
He still took the job at Real Madrid but was dismissed by October 2018. Lopetegui was appointed Sevilla boss in June 2019.
The Champions League last 16 came to a thrilling conclusion this week. Below, we dissect the biggest talking points from the games in Europe’s premier club competition.
Pulisic saves best for Champions League
Christian Pulisic’s time at Chelsea has been anything but straightforward. He’s spent equal parts on the bench and pitch, and a fair amount of his time recovering from various injuries. But the U.S. international has also come good in the biggest moments.
His goal just before halftime Wednesday against Lille sent Chelsea on their way to the Champions League quarterfinals, giving new life to their title defense just as it seemed under threat. Burak Yilmaz’s well-taken penalty had put the reigning Ligue 1 champions within a goal of leveling the tie, only for Pulisic to convert with Chelsea’s single shot on target in the first half. The goal gave his teammates the peace of mind they needed at a turning point of their season. Chelsea went on to win the game 2-1 and the tie 4-1 on aggregate.
Pulisic’s numbers in the Champions League may seem insignificant, but in the context of his turbulent career, they matter. He’s now scored five goals from open play for Chelsea in the competition. Comparatively, Eden Hazard only struck four times from open play in the Champions League across seven seasons with the club. Four of Pulisic’s goals have also come in the knockout stage – one better than all other U.S. internationals have combined in this point of the tournament.
Pulisic has openly and candidly discussed his struggles in west London, not just with injuries but also with mental health. A hero for the U.S. men’s national team, Pulisic faces a weekly battle to get into Chelsea’s lineup. The 23-year-old lost his place even after scoring against Real Madrid in the Champions League semifinals last season. Still, he managed to play a role off the bench in the second leg, coming on to deliver a crucial assist.
His timing was impeccable yet again Wednesday.
Chelsea finding solace on the field
Chelsea have won five out of the six games they’ve played since Roman Abramovich announced he was ceding “stewardship” of the club. A lot has happened since then: Chelsea are now up for sale and prohibited from selling merchandise or extra tickets as a result of the U.K.’s sanctions against Abramovich. Manager Thomas Tuchel has fielded numerous questions about the future of his club and whether it can even last the season under such tight financial oversight.
There’s noise everywhere but on the pitch.
The schedule has undoubtedly been kind to Chelsea – games against Burnley and Norwich City were exactly what they needed to restore their equilibrium – and the players seem to have found some relief away from the politics of their conundrum.
Tuchel has struck a compassionate tone as well, reminding everyone that Chelsea’s struggles are nothing compared to the daily reality for refugees fleeing Ukraine. Maybe that sense of perspective has given his players the freedom to do their jobs on the field because they have, under extraordinary circumstances, been professional in their performances. They don’t seem to care about the impact Abramovich’s sanctions may have on their own financial situation.
“There are a lot of harder things in the world right now than (taking) the bus (rather than a plane) to an away game,” Kai Havertz said earlier this week.
It’s just about the football right now.
Show Emery some respect
Villarreal were on the back foot in the first half of Wednesday’s second-leg encounter in Turin. Argentine netminder Geronimo Rulli was called into action on multiple occasions, and the crossbar came to the Spanish side’s rescue, too. Unai Emery’s team tried to go toe-to-toe with Juventus in the first 45 minutes, but that desire to dictate the tempo and get forward was actually proving detrimental, so the canny tactician went with a different approach in the second half.
It worked wonders.
The visitors sat deep, packed the front of their own penalty area, and dared Juve to fashion chances against a low block. The hosts, who looked so dangerous early in the match, were toothless after the interval, totally stymied by a resolute yellow wall. Rulli was vital in the opening half, but he was largely a passenger in the second stanza.
That change in approach ultimately won Villarreal the match and sent them to the Champions League quarterfinals for the first time since 2009. His substitutions proved masterful, too; Francis Coquelin won the first of Villarreal’s two penalties, and Gerard Moreno, though just barely, slotted it home to kick-start what eventually turned into an unlikely 3-0 triumph.
“The prep we put into tonight was why we won,” Rulli said after the contest, a clear nod to Emery’s work on the training ground and in the video room.
The Spanish bench boss is often ridiculed for his spell at Arsenal, but his track record of success literally everywhere else – especially in knockout competitions – speaks for itself. With Emery concocting the schemes, Villarreal will make life difficult on whomever they draw in the quarterfinals.
Another crushing defeat for Juventus
Juventus and the Champions League simply don’t get along very well.
Wednesday’s soul-crushing loss signaled the third consecutive campaign in which the Bianconeri have failed to progress beyond the last 16; they were sent packing by underdogs Lyon and FC Porto on the away goals rule the last two seasons.
They outdid themselves this time, though, wasting what was a legitimately good first-half performance by crumbling in the final 12 minutes of the contest in Turin.
A 3-0 scoreline was undeniably harsh on the Italian side – Villarreal had three shots on target, and two of those were penalties – but it’s almost tradition now for Juventus to conjure up new and interesting ways to falter in Europe.
Another inquest is on the horizon for a club that desperately wants to end its Champions League title drought yet can’t seem to get out of its own way. Maybe that’s why chairman Andrea Agnelli is so desperate to start up his own Super League.
Here are the main talking points from Tuesday’s matches …
Atletico of old gate-crash Old Trafford
Diego Simeone knew his team had pulled off another great escape against Manchester United. As referee Slavko Vincic sounded the final whistle, Simeone bolted for the exit, sensing the shower of beer and insults that would come his way. Atletico Madrid did what they’ve done so well under the Argentinian manager: pester their way to a famous 1-0 victory away from home.
Simeone’s side followed a familiar recipe for success. Soaking up pressure with six at the back proved effective. Hitting on the counter worked like a charm. Atletico moved the ball quickly enough to evade United’s press, and when an opening presented itself, they took full advantage. Renan Lodi’s header gave Atletico a lead to defend, allowing them to retreat into an ultra-conservative 6-3-1 formation.
The selfless Antoine Griezmann relished the defensive battle, making a game-high four tackles while winning possession eight times. But it was his cross to Lodi that won Atletico the tie. Griezmann attacked until his team needed him to defend, leaving Joao Felix on his own after supplying the assist.
Then, Atletico summoned the dark arts. Goalkeeper Jan Oblak bought time here and there, going down under minimal contact. Marcos Llorente convinced the referee to halt play for a head injury when he went down clutching his leg. Substitutes interfered with United’s throw-ins. Though Atletico played a riskier game, United ended up committing more fouls. The choppiness suited Simeone’s side, disrupting the rhythm of a contest United couldn’t quite grasp.
“There was always somebody lying on the floor,” manager Ralf Rangnick said afterward.
United lacked collective spirit
United didn’t exactly play badly. They created chances and forced Oblak into some spectacular saves. They pressed well enough. But they didn’t exactly play well. The game just passed them by. It just kind of happened.
Individually, United lacked quality. Coming off the 59th hat-trick of his career, Cristiano Ronaldo failed to land a single shot on target. Jadon Sancho struggled to emerge from the shadows of Atletico’s right-sided defenders. The hosts made just six touches in the penalty area. It looked like there was a force field on the pitch.
That’s what happens when Atletico score first.
United’s defense didn’t pay enough attention to detail against an opponent that loves to exploit the finer margins of the game. They were too casual in the lead-up to Lodi’s goal, leaving space for Atletico to infiltrate. Harry Maguire charged out of position, and Raphael Varane scrambled as Felix made a run into the area. Alex Telles tucked inside to cover for his center-back, only to vacate the left flank. All alone, Griezmann whipped in the decisive cross, and Diogo Dalot lost Lodi at the far post.
United simply lacked the collective effort that propelled their counterparts to victory.
End of an era?
What does a world without both Lionel Messi and Ronaldo in the latter stages of the Champions League look like? That reality is starting to become the norm.
We caught a glimpse of it last season, when the pair were at Barcelona and Juventus, respectively. Moves to Paris Saint-Germain and Manchester United couldn’t prevent a pattern from emerging; both were eliminated in the round of 16 this campaign, too. Worse yet, the two superstars – who sit first and second in all-time Champions League scoring with a mammoth 265 goals between them – were totally ineffectual in their ousters.
Ronaldo was particularly invisible on Tuesday. Against Atletico Madrid, a team he has absolutely feasted on throughout his career, he didn’t muster a shot on target over 180 minutes across both legs.
Both players are still capable of sublime moments that hearken back to their peaks – see Ronaldo’s hat-trick from just this past weekend as a prime example – but the days of all-conquering performances in the Champions League certainly appear to be over. Time remains undefeated.
Discount Benfica at your own peril
The numbers all suggest that Ajax should have progressed easily. On the surface, the Dutch giants dominated their second-leg clash against unfancied Benfica on Tuesday. Ajax had 66% of the ball, fired off 16 shots to Benfica’s four, and conjured up 90 total attacks to the Portuguese visitors’ 20.
On that basis, Benfica’s 1-0 victory in Amsterdam, and subsequent 3-2 triumph on aggregate, seems harsh on Erik Ten Hag’s team. But in truth, the Eagles were full value for their surprising win, defending valiantly and limiting Ajax to just two shots on target. Both of those efforts came from outside the penalty area. Nicolas Otamendi and Jan Vertonghen were resolute all match, and Odisseas Vlachodimos was largely untested in goal.
Benfica, meanwhile, took their one chance, Darwin Nunez upstaging the prolific Sebastien Haller and scoring with his team’s lone shot on target to stun the Johan Cruyff Arena and much of the football world, which had expected the swashbuckling Eredivisie club to roll into the next round.
This will be viewed as a big missed opportunity for an Ajax team that had, until this point, been more impressive than the squad that was seconds away from reaching the final in 2019. But make no mistake, Benfica didn’t steal anything here. Dogged defending and clinical finishing made the difference.
Going into Friday’s quarterfinal and semifinal draw, the Portuguese side will be touted by almost everyone as the team that all the proverbial heavyweights want to be paired with. Fair enough. Avoiding the likes of Manchester City, Liverpool, and Bayern Munich would obviously be preferable.
The draw for the quarterfinals of this season’s Champions League is complete, and some mouthwatering matchups are on tap. Here’s an early breakdown of each contest, along with predicted outcomes.
Chelsea vs. Real Madrid
First leg: April 6 at Stamford Bridge
Second leg: April 12 at the Santiago Bernabeu
Other teams would’ve crumbled. A misfiring strikeforce, the dwindling contracts of three first-team defenders, and a League Cup final defeat to Liverpool had already shoved Chelsea under the microscope. Then, the Blues were tangled up in politics after owner Roman Abramovich’s links to Russian President Vladimir Putin forced the club on the market and led to restrictions including a block on ticket sales, frozen television and prize money, and a £20,000 limit on the team’s travel costs for away matches.
But Chelsea have won five straight matches amid the chaos – a run defined by Kai Havertz’s excellence in attack and the unwavering focus of players like Thiago Silva and Antonio Rudiger. If anything, the club’s predicament has created a siege mentality at Stamford Bridge.
“I want us to be the team nobody wants to play,” Tuchel said after Chelsea reached the quarterfinals.
Chelsea are only one half of the round’s standout tie, though. Real Madrid are empowered by their remarkable comeback victory against Paris Saint-Germain in the last 16 and will be desperate to exact revenge following last season’s semifinal elimination. Their fairly comfortable position atop La Liga could also work to their advantage, allowing Carlo Ancelotti to rest key players for their quarterfinal bouts with the Blues.
Prediction: Real Madrid advance on penalties
Manchester City vs. Atletico Madrid
First leg: April 5 at the Etihad Stadium
Second leg: April 13 at the Wanda Metropolitano
Diego Simeone’s famously air-tight backline was punctured this season. Atletico Madrid have surrendered more goals than any other team in La Liga’s top eight, and their hopes of capturing back-to-back La Liga titles were shattered by a torrid winter which included defeats to Real Mallorca, Granada, and Levante.
But something seems to have clicked in recent weeks. There’s been a stark defensive improvement for Los Colchoneros with only three goals conceded over their last five league outings. And Tuesday’s Champions League vanquishing of Manchester United featured influential performances from Antoine Griezmann and Jan Oblak, and numerous shady tactics designed to disrupt the English side’s rhythm.
Simply put, it was classic Atleti.
This doubleheader presents a huge test for Manchester City. Pep Guardiola’s men were frustrated by resolute defending as recently as Monday’s 0-0 draw at Crystal Palace; Kyle Walker, often the last line of City’s resistance to counterattacks, will miss the first leg through suspension. In addition, imperious center-back Ruben Dias is sidelined with a thigh injury and isn’t expected to re-emerge until mid-April.
Prediction: Manchester City advance 3-2 on aggregate
Villarreal vs. Bayern Munich
First leg: April 6 at the Estadio de la Ceramica
Second leg: April 12 at the Allianz Arena
It isn’t exactly a crisis, but Bayern Munich are unsettled at the moment. For a club that always appears in full control, things are unusually turbulent in Bavaria. Rampant speculation surrounding star striker Robert Lewandowski’s future is becoming a distraction, results have dipped and allowed rivals Borussia Dortmund to get back into the Bundesliga title fight, and Julian Nagelsmann is dealing with a host of injuries and absences – particularly in defense – forcing disruptive lineup changes seemingly every week.
Against that backdrop, Bayern have to navigate an extremely tricky test against a Villarreal side flying high on the back of an emphatic triumph over Juventus in the previous round. Unai Emery masterminded the victory with excellent tactical tweaks and substitutions in the second half of the second leg, and now he’ll have almost three weeks to concoct a scheme to keep the Yellow Submarine’s run alive.
The task will be infinitely more difficult than stopping a deficient Juve, though. Sitting deep in a low block with nine players behind the ball worked wonders in Turin, but inviting that much pressure against Bayern is likely not a path to success.
For their aforementioned issues, this is still Bayern Munich, and sheer talent is hard to overlook; Bayern were ragged in the first leg against Red Bull Salzburg before smashing in seven goals at home in the return fixture. A stout Villarreal side, with Emery at the helm and plenty of seasoned veterans in the squad, certainly won’t crumble like the young Salzburg team did in the last 16, but another surprise here might be too much to ask.
Prediction: Bayern Munich advance 4-2 on aggregate
Benfica vs. Liverpool
First leg: April 5 at the Estadio da Luz
Second leg: April 13 at Anfield
Nelson Verissimo has instilled renewed hunger at Benfica since taking over for Jorge Jesus in December; that steely determination was on full display in the last-16 upset of Ajax. He’ll need every ounce of it to pull off what would easily be the most significant shock of the quarterfinals.
Liverpool are on an absolute tear right now.
The Reds have won 14 of their last 15 matches in all competitions, outscoring their opponents 32-5 over that stretch. The one loss – to Inter Milan in the previous round – ultimately wasn’t decisive, either. With nearly three weeks until the first leg in Lisbon, plenty can change, of course. But with Luis Diaz adding a fresh spark to the Liverpool attack and all the usual suspects still in tow, Benfica’s aging defensive duo of Jan Vertonghen and Nicolas Otamendi will find life significantly more difficult against the rapid, fluid Liverpool attack.
Even if superlative right-back Trent Alexander-Arnold hasn’t recovered from his hamstring injury in time for the quarterfinals, Liverpool have too much invention, creativity, and cutting edge for a dogged Benfica side to overcome.
The eight teams still standing in this season’s Champions League learned their respective routes to the showpiece match of the competition in Friday’s draw for the quarterfinal and semifinal stages.
The quarterfinal round is headlined by a clash between Chelsea, the reigning champions, and Real Madrid, record 13-time winners of the tournament. The matchup will see the Blues face off against former manager Carlo Ancelotti in a rematch of last season’s semifinal tilt.
Quarterfinal matchups
Match 1: Chelsea vs. Real Madrid
Match 2: Manchester City vs. Atletico Madrid
Match 3: Villarreal vs. Bayern Munich
Match 4: Benfica vs. Liverpool
The clubs listed first will contest the first leg at home. Quarterfinal first legs take place on April 5 and 6 with the return fixtures slated for April 12 and 13.
Chelsea could yet be forced to play their home leg behind closed doors due to EU sanctions that have been imposed on owner Roman Abramovich.
“It would be a disadvantage,” Chelsea bench boss Thomas Tuchel said. “In general this kind of game is for the spectators and the game changes so much without them so hopefully we find a solution.”
Semifinal matchups
UEFA also filled out the Champions League bracket by teeing up the final four. Should they both win – no small feat considering their quarterfinal opposition – last season’s finalists Chelsea and Manchester City will tangle in the semis this time around.
Winner of quarterfinal 2 vs. winner of quarterfinal 1
Winner of quarterfinal 4 vs. winner of quarterfinal 3
The first legs of the semifinals will be played on April 26 and 27 while the decisive second legs take place on May 3 and 4.
The Champions League final is scheduled for May 28 at the Stade de France in Paris.