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Real Madrid's coach Jose Mourinho. Daniel Ochoa De Olza/AP/Press Association Images
Champions League

Friends reunited: Ferguson, Mourinho renew Champions League rivalry

Manchester united face Real Madrid at the Bernabeu tonight. We’re excited.

MANCHESTER UNITED WILL resume their historic rivalry with Real Madrid tonight with Jose Mourinho talking up the eagerly-awaited Champions League clash as the game “the whole world is waiting for”.

United, the three-time champions, go to Madrid, the record nine-time winners, in the latest instalment of a European rivalry which dates back to 1957. Their last meeting, in the 2003 quarter-finals, was a goal-laden classic with Real squeezing through 6-5 on aggregate after two breathless encounters.

“It is the match the world is waiting for,” said Mourinho ahead of the last-16, first leg clash in the Spanish capital. “The world is not waiting for other matches in the Champions League, so I hope we can give the world what they are waiting for.”

Mourinho spoke in glowing terms about United’s veteran manager and their long-standing friendship and rivalry, one that dates back to Mourinho’s early years in management with Porto in his homeland and his successful spell at Chelsea.

“I feel privileged about that because he is such an important person in the world of football and, more importantly than that, he is a good person,” said Mourinho.

Ferguson said he was ready to lock horns against the colourful Mourinho who was at Old Trafford on Sunday to see United beat Everton 2-0 and stretch their lead at the top of the Premier League to 12 points.

“I think he’ll relish going up against me,” said Ferguson. “It’s a great challenge, the two biggest clubs in the world. It’s a great game for us. I think Jose has set his sights on the European Cup this year, no doubt about that. It makes it harder for us in one way, but for them, too.”

Eastern promise

Elsewhere tonight, Borussia Dortmund, who won their pool ahead of Real Madrid, are looking to repeat their solitary European Cup triumph of 1997. Coach Juergen Klopp will get a chance to put his team’s mediocre domestic form to one side when they face a chilly trip to Shakhtar Donetsk and a team who outqualified defending champions Chelsea in the group stage.

These four matches complete the first week of action where teams that finished second in their group play the first-leg at home with the return fixtures set for the week of March 5 and 6.

Barcelona’s legion of fans will have to wait until February 20 before facing AC Milan at the San Siro.

Massimiliano Allegri’s Milan have only lost once in five meetings with Barcelona, dating back to 2001.

Barca, however, knocked out Milan 3-1 on aggregate in last season’s quarter-finals after the first leg finished 0-0 in Italy.

The Catalan giants are well on their way to a 22nd La Liga title, but few will forget last year’s competition where they suffered a shock semi-final exit against Chelsea.

Bayern Munich are also rumbling ruthlessly to a first Bundesliga crown in three seasons, but face a dangerous trip to the Emirates Stadium and a meeting with Arsenal.

Elsewhere, Porto will relish the chance of taking on debutants Malaga, in a matchup that will give both teams genuine hope of reaching the quarter-finals.

Galatasaray fly the flag for Turkey in a bid to bring the European Cup home for the first time and the arrivals of Didier Drogba and Wesley Sneijder have injected huge hope into the Istanbul club’s chances.

German side Schalke 04, whose only European success was winning the 1997 UEFA Cup, stand in their way of a place in the last eight for the first time since 2001.

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