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Big Match Feature: Schalke v Man City

football20 February 2019 09:00
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Schalke's last three Uefa Champions League campaigns have all ended in the round of 16 and they will be keen to make the most of home advantage as they welcome Manchester City for the first leg of their latest knockout tie.

The German club reached the semifinals in 2010/11, but have not been past the round of 16 in three attempts since.

Schalke qualified for this season's knockout stages by finishing second to Porto in Group D.

The winners of Group F in the autumn, Manchester City are in the knockout stages for the sixth year in a row, and have won two of their last three round of 16 ties. In 2017/18 they went on to the quarterfinals, where they lost to fellow English side Liverpool.

Previous Meetings

City have won two of the teams' three previous fixtures, most recently a 2-0 success in Gelsenkirchen in the 2008/09 Uefa Cup group stage thanks to goals from Benjani and Stephen Ireland. Vincent Kompany played 90 minutes for City, the only player from either side who is still with their club.

The English club also came out on top against Schalke in the semifinal of their victorious European Cup Winners' Cup campaign in 1969/70, overturning a 1-0 first-leg loss in Germany with a 5-1 victory in Manchester.

Form Guide

Schalke

Schalke are in the last 16 for the first time since 2014/15, when they lost 5-4 on aggregate to Real Madrid, going down 2-0 in the home first leg and bowing out despite a 4-3 success in Spain.

That made it three successive last-16 eliminations for Schalke, who were also beaten 9-2 on aggregate by Madrid in 2013/14 and 4-3 by Galatasaray the previous season, in each instance losing the home leg – the 6-1 home loss to Madrid in February 2014 equalling their biggest European defeat.

Overall, Schalke have won only two of their five round of 16 ties in the Uefa Champions League. In each of those aggregate victories, against Porto in 2007/08 and Valencia in 2010/11, they won the home leg.

Schalke picked up 11 points in this season's group stage, seven coming at home where they beat Galatasaray (2-0) and Lokomotiv Moskva (1-0) after opening with a 1-1 draw against Porto.

Schalke have still won only three of their last eight Uefa Champions League games in Gelsenkirchen (D2 L3), conceding 18 goals.

Schalke are, however, unbeaten in nine home European fixtures (W6 D3).

The German club are without a win in their last five games against English sides (D2 L3), since a 2-0 victory at Arsenal in October 2012. Their most recent game with a Premier League side in Gelsenkirchen was a 5-0 loss to Chelsea in the 2014/15 Uefa Champions League group stage, equalling their heaviest European defeat.

That defeat by Chelsea made it six home matches against English clubs without a win – during which they conceded 14 goals and scored two – for Schalke (D2 L4), who won the first three such fixtures; they have not beaten an English club in Germany since a 3-1 defeat of Arsenal in October 2001.

Schalke's record in two-legged knockout ties against English clubs is W1 L1. Their most successful Uefa Champions League campaign, in 2010/11, was emphatically ended by City's neighbours Manchester United in the semifinals (0-2 home, 1-4 away).

Manchester City

City have been in the Uefa Champions League round of 16 every year since 2013/14, although they have won only two of those five previous ties. Twelve months ago a 4-0 away first-leg success at Basle effectively booked their place in the quarterfinals, Josep Guardiola's side going through despite a subsequent 1-2 home reverse.

The win at Basle was only City's second away success in the round of 16; the other came at Dynamo Kyiv in 2015/16 (3-1), the only other tie they have won at this stage. They have lost all of their other three round of 16 away matches.

This is City's second game in a row against Bundesliga opponents; they beat Hoffenheim 2-1 in Manchester on matchday six, having won by the same scoreline in Germany. That made it six wins from their last seven matches against German clubs (D1), stretching back to a 1-0 loss at Bayern München in September 2014.

The Citizens have won three of their last five games in Germany, losing only one; in contrast, they suffered five defeats in their first six visits, the exception that 2008 victory at Schalke.

City have lost both two-legged contests against German clubs, Uefa Cup quarterfinals against Borussia Mönchengladbach in 1978/79 and Hamburg 30 years later. 6

City's best Uefa Champions League performance was reaching the 2015/16 semifinals.

The English champions opened this season with an unexpected 2-1 loss at home to Lyon – their third successive European defeat in Manchester – but won four of their next five fixtures, including a 6-0 home victory against Shakhtar Donetsk on matchday four that was their biggest win in Uefa club competition.

City have won only five of their last 11 European matches, home and away – losing five. Away from home it is three wins in six matches (D1 L2).

Links and Trivia

Leroy Sané was a Schalke player from 2005 to 2008 and from 2011 until joining City in 2016; he made 47 Bundesliga appearances between April 2014 and May 2016, scoring 11 goals.

Matija Nastasic made 34 Premier League appearances for City between September 2012 and August 2014, when he joined Schalke, initially on loan.

Sané scored Schalke's goal in a 1-1 draw against Wolfsburg in April 2015; Kevin De Bruyne was on target for Wolfsburg.

• Have also played in Germany:

Kevin De Bruyne (Werder Bremen 2012/13, Wolfsburg 2014–15)

Ilkay Gündogan (Bochum 2008, Nürnberg 2009–11, Borussia Dortmund 2011–16)

Vincent Kompany (Hamburg 2006–08)

• Have also played in England:

Nabil Bentaleb (Tottenham 2013–16)

Benjamin Stambouli (Tottenham 2014/15)

Sascha Riether (Fulham 2012–14)

Omar Mascarell (Derby 2014/15)

Gudio Burgstaller (Cardiff 2014)

Sergio Agüero scored one goal and set up two more in Atlético Madrid's 4-0 defeat of Schalke in the 2008/09 Uefa Champions League third qualifying round second leg.

Latest News

Schalke

• Uefa Champions League squad changes

In: Rabbi Matondo, Jeffrey Bruma, Bastian Oczipka

Out: Abdul Rahman Baba, Naldo, Franco Di Santo, Jannis Kübler

Schalke's record since matchday six is W3 D3 L3. They drew 0-0 at home to Freiburg on Saturday.

Suat Serdar was sent off in the 42nd minute against Freiburg, the fourth Schalke player to be dismissed in this season's Bundesliga, level with Stuttgart as the most in the league.

On 6 February Schalke reached the quarterfinals of the German Cup with a 4-1 win against Fortuna Düsseldorf, Salif Sané scoring a brace. They will play Werder Bremen at home in the last eight in early April.

Schalke's sole league victory so far in 2019 is a 2-1 defeat of Wolfsburg in their first game on 20 January, Daniel Caligiuri scoring twice.

Ahmed Kutucu, who made his professional debut on matchday six, has scored three goals in eight competitive games.

Haji Wright scored his first Bundesliga goal in a 2-1 home defeat against Bayer Leverkusen on 19 December.

Benjamin Stambouli (cheekbone fracture), Alessandro Schöpf (knee) and Steven Skrzybski (hamstring) have all been out since a 2-2 draw at Hertha Berlin on 25 January.

Guido Burgstaller (Achilles tendon and groin) had been sidelined since 8 December before coming on for the final seven minutes on Saturday.

Breel Embolo suffered a broken metatarsal on 11 November and has not played since.

Manchester City

• Uefa Champions League squad changes

In: Claudio Bravo, Gabriel Jesus, Philippe Sandler

Out: Brahim Díaz, Luke Bolton, Eliaquim Mangala

Vincent Kompany's next appearance in the Uefa Champions League, group stage to final, will be his 50th.

Raheem Sterling made his 50th appearance in Uefa club competition on matchday six. Ilkay Gundogan will reach the same mark in his next game.

City's record since matchday six is W13 D1 L3 – all three defeats coming in the Premier League.

The English champions have won 12 of their last 13 games in all competitions, losing one – they have scored 49 goals in that run, conceding only six.

City reached the FA Cup quarterfinals with a 4-1 win at fourth-tier Newport on Saturday evening, Phil Foden scoring twice. The 18-year-old has four goals in his last five appearances.

Josep Guardiola's side have scored five or more goals in nine of their 42 games this season.

Sergio Agüero scored Premier League hat-tricks against both Arsenal (3-1) on 3 February and Chelsea (6-0) a week later, and has nine goals in his last six City appearances.

The treble against Chelsea was Agüero's 11th in the Premier League, equalling Alan Shearer's competition record.

City's away record in all competitions this season is W13 D4 L3 – they have won five of their last nine (D1 L3).

City will play Chelsea at Wembley in the English League Cup final on 24 February.

The Manchester club beat third-tier Burton Albion 9-0 at home in the first leg of the League Cup semifinal on 9 January – City's biggest win since a 10-1 defeat of Huddersfield in 1987. They won the return leg 1-0.

The Citizens signed 18-year-old midfielder Ante Palaversa from Hajduk Split in January, loaning the teenager back to the Croatian club for the rest of the season.

Kompany picked up a muscle injury in a 2-1 win against Liverpool on 3 January and has not featured since.

Benjamin Mendy had surgery on the cartilage in his left knee on 14 November.

Claudio Bravo has been out since sustaining an Achilles problem on 20 August.

Head Coach

Domenico Tedesco

Date of birth: 12 September 1985

Nationality: Italian

Coaching career: Stuttgart (youth), Hoffenheim (youth), Erzgebirge Aue, Schalke

Tedesco, who moved to Germany with his family at the age of two after being born in the Italian town of Rossano, represented ASV Aichwald in the German lower leagues during an unheralded playing career.

He joined Stuttgart in 2008, initially working in the club's youth section as assistant to Thomas Schneider while also studying for a bachelor's degree in business engineering; he also holds a master's in innovation management.

Left Stuttgart at the end of 2014/15 to take up a post of coach of Hoffenheim's youth team, being promoted to the Under-19s two years later.

On March 8 2017 Tedesco was hired by 2. Bundesliga side FC Erzgebirge Aue, then bottom of the league with only 11 matches remaining; unbeaten in his first five fixtures, winning four of them, he picked up 20 points of the 33 available to steer the club to safety.

That earned Tedesco a two-year deal with Schalke in June 2017 to succeed Markus Weinzierl as coach, and he guided the club to second place in the Bundesliga in his first season to earn a place in the group stage of the Uefa Champions League.

Josep Guardiola

Date of birth: 18 January 1971

Nationality: Spanish

Playing career: Barcelona, Brescia (twice), Roma, Al-Ahly Club, Dorados de Sinola

Coaching career: Barcelona B, Barcelona, Bayern München, Manchester City

Known as 'Pep', he came up through Barcelona's youth ranks to win six Spanish Liga titles, one EuropeanChampion Clubs' Cup, a Uefa Cup Winners' Cup and two Copa del Rey trophies from 1990 to 2001. Also had spells with Brescia, Roma, al-Ahly in Doha and Mexico's Dorados de Sinola before ending his playing career in 2006. Won 47 caps and Olympic footballing gold with Spain in 1992, but missed the 1998 and 2002 Fifa World Cups through injury.

Having coached Barcelona's B team, he took charge of the senior side in 2008 and won the Uefa Champions League, Spanish Liga and Copa del Rey in his first season. That was just the beginning of a glorious four-season spell which yielded 14 trophies. In his second campaign, Guardiola steered Barcelona to a second Liga title as well as the Spanish and Uefa Super Cups and the Fifa Club World Cup. Even more sucess followed in 2010/11 as Barcelona completed a hat-trick of Spanish titles and, for the second time under Guardiola, got the better of Manchester United in the Uefa Champions League final.

In his final season, 2011/12, Guardiola's team won the Uefa Super Cup and Fifa Club World Cup once more before he signed off his reign with a second Copa del Rey triumph. After a year's break, Guardiola took charge of Bayern in June 2013, replacing Jupp Heynckes.

Collected the Uefa Super Cup, Fifa Club World Cup, German Cup and, with a record seven games to spare, the Bundesliga title in his first season in Germany. Secured his second successive Bundesliga title the following season, and Bayern again dominated domestically in 2015/16, but all three of Guardiola's Uefa Champions League campaigns in Bavaria ended in the semifinals.

Opted for a new challenge at Manchester City in summer 2016 and, though the first year in charge produced Guardiola's first trophy-less campaign as a coach, he and City delivered in style in 2017/18, racking up 100 points in winning the Premier League and adding the English League Cup.

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