14 September 2015

Lionel Messi: UEFA Champions League Greatest Player Set To Play 100th Match Against Roma

You don't have to argue too much, Messi is the greatest UEFA champions league player. With four trophies, 77 goals and several assists even Cristiano can't match this record for now but i must admit that the goal beast with out score Messi this season - you can't just stop a Ronaldo from scoring. Messi will play his 100th match against Roma on wednesday. We wish him more success.

Another milestone for Lionel Messi. The Barcelona forward will make his 100th appearance in the Champions League on Wednesday as the Catalans travel to Roma. Whatever happens in the rest of his career, he is already the greatest player to have graced the continental competition.

Messi made his Champions League debut against Shakhtar Donetsk in December 2004 and has featured in 11 editions of the prestigious tournament, winning it four times so far. He also leads the scoring charts with 77 goals in his 99 games to date. And at just 28, there are likely to be many more to come.


His first goal came in a 5-0 win over Panathinaikos in the group stages in November 2005 and Barca went on to win the competition that season for the first time since their maiden triumph in the old European Cup back in 1992.

But Messi suffered an injury in the quarter-final second leg against Chelsea and would play no part in the latter stages, recovering in time for the final but failing to make the bench in Paris where Frank Rijkaard's men came from behind to beat Arsenal 2-1. At the age of 19, he had won European club football's greatest prize, yet he had not felt the triumph was his.

No matter. There was to be plenty more to come and Messi played a pivotal part in his side's subsequent successes in the continental competition in the next nine years.

Under Pep Guardiola in 2008-09, the Argentine attacker stole the show with nine goals in 12 games, including a memorable one in the final as Barca beat Manchester United in Rome's Stadio Olimpico, the same stadium where he will make his 100th Champions League appearance on Wednesday.

The 2009 showpiece was billed as a match-up between Messi and Cristiano Ronaldo. Many believed at the time that the Portuguese was the more complete player, partly due to his aerial ability. But Messi marked the occasion with a header which gave Edwin van der Sar no chance and showed the world a new facet to his game as the Catalans claimed a treble of Liga, Copa del Rey and Champions League crowns.

The following season saw him score four against Arsenal and led to Arsene Wenger joking that he was a "Playstation" player, but Barca were left frustrated as they lost out narrowly to Jose Mourinho's Inter at the semi-final stage.

In 2010-11, Messi's 12 goals in 13 games helped Barca to a third final in five years and against Manchester United again (this time at Wembley), the Argentine lashed home a stunning strike from outside the box in a 3-1 win which saw the Blaugrana play some of their finest football in the Guardiola era. Leo, as usual, was at the heart of it all.

In 2011-12, he then set a new record for goals in a single Champions League season (since beaten by Ronaldo) as he netted 14 times in 11 appearances (including five in one game against Bayer Leverkusen, rivals again in the group stages this term).

It would ultimately end in disappointment, however, as he missed a penalty at Camp Nou in the semi-final second leg against Chelsea and Barca were surprisingly knocked out by the Blues.

Injuries interrupted the next season, but a limping Leo still emerged from the bench to rescue his team as he set up Pedro for a crucial goal against Paris Saint-Germain in the quarter-finals. That came after inspiring a memorable comeback against AC Milan in the last 16 with a 4-0 victory at Camp Nou following their 2-0 first leg defeat at San Siro.

However, he was powerless to prevent a 7-0 aggregate defeat against Bayern Munich in the semi-finals, looking some way short of full fitness in the first leg and then not even appearing in the return. The 2013-14 campaign would also end in frustration as Gerardo Martino's men were knocked out in the last eight by Atletico Madrid.

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