Champions League final video highlights
2011
Manchester United manager Alex Ferguson reckons the Champions League final against Barcelona could be the best final of the last 10 years.
With Barcelona now regularly lauded as one of the greatest ever club sides and Ferguson insisting that his players are better prepared than when the teams met two years ago, the United manager said Friday that the ingredients are in place for a classic.
Barcelona has already clinched a third straight Spanish title and such is the fashion in which Lionel Messi and his teammates routinely frustrate and dismantle opponents that bookmakers rate United as a big underdog despite having reached a third final in four seasons.
"The success both teams have had in the past decade has been enormous," Ferguson said. "It really could be the best final of the decade. The attraction of two teams with such history is obvious. Anything could happen in this game."
The coaches are agreed on one thing: each team will improve on its performance in the 2009 final, when United was rattled by Barcelona's early goal and went down 2-0.
"I'm very happy with winning in Rome but let's be honest," said Barcelona coach Pep Guardiola, who as a player helped Barcelona win its first title in 1992. "We have to play better than we played in Rome and I have told my players that repeatedly."
Barcelona has done that for much of this season, with the likes of world champions Andres Iniesta, Xavi Hernandez and Sergio Busquets helping their team secure close to two-thirds possession in this seasons Champions League - against supposedly Europe's best sides.
"Obviously fans want us to be faithful to the way we play, to our philosophy, and we will be," goalkeeper Victor Valdes said. "If we are to win, that's the only way we can get there."
Faced with such a pure footballing force, Ferguson acknowledged that he had consulted Real Madrid coach Jose Mourinho for ideas on how to approach the match.
With his side sitting deep and barely challenging for possession, Ferguson's friend is one of the select few to have engineered a victory - albeit one that was followed by a humbling defeat in the Champions League semifinals - over Barcelona this season.
"I've had a small conversation with him and he's wished us all the best," Ferguson said. "He knows we're prepared."
A win for Barcelona is so widely anticipated that British bookmakers rate a Manchester United side that has just won a record 19th English title the biggest Champions League final outsider for more than a decade.
But odds of 3-1 against United winning are more a reflection of the amount of money wagered on 21-20 shot Barcelona than any shortcomings in a side that advanced to the final without conceding an away goal and is drawing close to two decades of dominance in England.
"We are proud that in the future - in the next four, five, 10, 15 years - some guys will remember this team playing right now," Guardiola said. "If they say, 'One time I saw this team and they played good for us,"' we are glad.
"But to say we are the best team ever is impossible. It is not true."
With a penalty shootout to follow if neither team wins through regular or extra time, one side will depart Wembley level with Bayern Munich and Ajax on four titles. Only Real Madrid, AC Milan and Liverpool have won more.
Barcelona won its first title at Wembley in 1992 before picking up two more titles in the past five years. United also won its first at the north London stadium in 1968, long before the ground was demolished and rebuilt to its current 90,000-seat configuration.
"It's at Wembley and that gives you an awareness that this is a big game," said Ferguson, the most decorated manager in English football. "And I like big games."
Ferguson's players are looking forward to the chance of getting some payback after the disappointment of 2009.
"It doesn't bother us who is favorite and who is not," United midfielder Michael Carrick said. "It is about performing in a one-off game. We respect them for what they are, the way they play the game and the strengths they have."
Carrick is likely to start Saturday, with the veteran Ryan Giggs or more defensive Darren Fletcher alongside him. England striker Wayne Rooney is likely to sit deep behind Mexico international Javier Hernandez, with Antonio Valencia and Park Ji-sung occupying the wide positions.
Barcelona captain Carles Puyol said he is fit following the knee injury that restricted him to a handful of games since January, while Guardiola said fullback Eric Abidal is also available and free of the after effects of a liver tumor earlier this season.
If Hernandez can turn Puyol toward his own goal, or Valencia can test him and Gerard Pique with teasing crosses, United may get the early goal it wants.
"According to the bookmakers, we are underdogs, but I don't think that matters to us," Ferguson said. "Anyone coming to a game of this nature doesn't care what the experts say or the bookmakers say.
"We will be going out there with a genuine chance."
AP