Bayern Munich manager Pep Guardiola (left) and his Real Madrid counterpart Carlo Ancelotti will have their hands full trying to outhink each other in Tuesday's showdown in Munich. Christof Stache / AFP and Sergio Perez / Reuters |
Bayern Munich plans on making home advantage count in Tuesday's Champions League semifinal second leg against Real Madrid, having never lost at home to the Spanish giant.
Madrid arrives in the Bavarian capital holding a 1-0 lead thanks to Karim Benzema's 19th-minute goal in last Wednesday's first leg in Madrid and is looking to avenge its defeat at the same stage to Bayern two years ago.
But history is on the Germans' side.
Bayern has never lost to Real in Munich, with eight victories and one draw, to lead the overall series with 11 victories to Madrid's eight from 21 encounters.
The second leg is finely poised.
Real maintained its positive momentum since beating Barcelona in the Copa del Rey final before its first-leg victory over Bayern by romping to a 4-0 win over Osasuna in the Spanish league on Saturday.
Ballon d'Or winner Cristiano Ronaldo proved he is fit for the Munich clash after a hamstring injury by scoring twice to give him 47 goals on the season.
Real coach Carlo Ancelotti rested stars Benzema, who picked up a knee knock in the first leg, and Gareth Bale, who was recovering from the flu, at Osasuna.
The Italian said both men should be fit to start at Allianz Arena.
"I am sure that whatever eleven I play will be full of desire and excited to play such a big game," said Ancelotti.
"Everyone should be calm because we are going to prepare properly.
"The objective is to score, not to defend, and that is the manner in which we will continue to work."
Ancelotti has never lost to a German team in six encounters from his time as AC Milan manager, but the key to Tuesday's game will be who scores first.
Real will be chasing the first goal in Munich, which would leave Bayern needing to score at least three times to progress to its fourth Champions League final in five years.
Worryingly for coach Pep Guardiola, Bayern has conceded the first goal in seven of its last nine matches since winning the Bundesliga title with a record seven matches to spare last month.
A woeful first half in Saturday's dress rehearsal saw the host 2-1 down to Werder Bremen in Munich before Bayern roared back with four second-half goals to claim a comfortable Bundesliga win.
But the flattering scoreline failed to mask Bayern's dreadful defending in the first 45 minutes, which Guardiola admitted gave him cause for concern.
"That is the first time I have been a bit disappointed and sad about the first half ... the fans didn't deserve that," said Guardiola.
"We were better in the second half, and that's good for the mood ahead of the Madrid match - but it will be a completely different game.
"I trust my team and I hope that we can all manage it together."
Bayern is bidding to become the first team to retain the Champions League trophy and will be the first since Juventus (1996-98) to reach three consecutive finals if it gets past Madrid to reach the final in Lisbon on May 24.
In marked contrast, Real is anxious to reach its first Champions League final since winning the title in 2002, having bowed out at the semifinal stage for the past three seasons running.
With Ronaldo and Bale both fit, Ancelotti is set to include both in his forward line alongside Benzema, with Isco on the bench.
Guardiola has some key selection decisions to make after Brazil's Rafinha struggled with the fleet-footed Real attack in Madrid.
One option would be to move captain Philipp Lahm to right-back from the defensive midfield.
Guardiola must also decide which stars to use in the attacking midfield after Germany pair Thomas Mueller and Mario Goetze both started on the bench in Madrid, with Mueller in particular voicing his discontent.