Bayern seek to overturn 1-0 first leg deficit against Atletico

Bayern Munich's midfielder Franck Ribery (centre) controls the ball next to his teammates Jerome Boateng (right) and Arturo Vidal during the final team training session one day prior to the Champions League semi-final, second-leg football match against Atletico Madrid at the club trainings area in Munich, Germany, on May 2, 2016. PHOTO | AFP

What you need to know:

  • Guardiola and Bayern are bidding to avoid losing a semi-final to a Spanish side for the third year running having lost the first-leg last Wednesday at Atletico after Saul Niguez’s early solo strike.
  • Bayern have exited the Champions League semi-finals for the last two years running with defeats to Real Madrid in 2014, then to Barcelona last year.
  • Bayern have been unstoppable at home in Europe this season, winning all five games at the Allianz Arena, but needed extra time to come back from 2-0 down to beat Juventus 4-2 at home in the second leg of the last 16.

Madrid

Bayern Munich’s coach Pep Guardiola knows he needs to prove his critics wrong by overturning a 1-0 first-leg deficit against Atletico Madrid in Tuesday’s crunch home Champions League semi-final.

Guardiola and Bayern are bidding to avoid losing a semi-final to a Spanish side for the third year running having lost the first-leg last Wednesday at Atletico after Saul Niguez’s early solo strike.

Having won 14 titles in four years at Barcelona and six titles so far in three years with Bayern, Guardiola hopes to sign off in charge of Munich by lifting the Champions League trophy at the final on May 28 in Milan.

Bayern have exited the Champions League semi-finals for the last two years running with defeats to Real Madrid in 2014, then to Barcelona last year.

DREW CRITICISM

Another exit at the hands of Spanish opposition will not go down well in Bavaria, especially in the wake of Guardiola’s decision to start the first leg in Madrid with Germany star Thomas Mueller, Bayern’s top scorer in Europe this season, on the bench.

The decision drew plenty of criticism from the German media and, by his own admission, the Munich leg is Guardiola’s “final bullet” in the battle to prove any critics wrong before he leaves to coach Manchester City next season.

“I have read in a German newspaper that my work in Munich will only be valued, and the job considered done, if I win the Champions League. That’s how it’ll be seen,” Guardiola said after Bayern saw off Benfica in the quarterfinals.

Bayern have been unstoppable at home in Europe this season, winning all five games at the Allianz Arena, but needed extra time to come back from 2-0 down to beat Juventus 4-2 at home in the second leg of the last 16.

They have won all 11 home games in Europe since being hammered 4-0 in the Munich leg by Real Madrid in the 2014 semi-finals, having lost 1-0 in Spain.