Real Madrid
are motivated by the chance to be the first club to win back-to-back titles.
Juventus are aiming for their first European treble. No matter who ends up
lifting the trophy in Cardiff, history will be made.
AC Milan. Ajax. Juventus. Manchester United.
Those are all the teams who have been a game away from winning back-to-back
Champions League titles since the tournament was renamed in 1992.
Each of
those illustrious clubs fell at the final hurdle. Now the challenge is Real
Madrid's as they take on Juventus in this year's Champions League final in
Cardiff on Saturday.
The Spanish
club already has six European Cups and five Champions League titles to their
name. They have won two of the previous three finals going into this weekend's
showcase. If any European club is going to be the first to win consecutive
Champions League titles, it seems likely to be them.
"We
have to defend our title and we have that motivational extra of being the first
team in history to win it twice in a row," said Real captain Sergio Ramos
(pictured above, right). "As captain it would be a dream come true and I
could almost die in peace, hopefully we can bring that cup home with us."
Manchester
United was the last team to come close to defending their title, but lost to
Barcelona in the 2009 final. Cristiano Ronaldo was part of that United team,
but moved to Real Madrid the following season.
This season
he has scored 10 goals in the Champions League, taking his career tally in that
competition to 103. His 25 goals in La Liga this term helped Real to their 33rd
Spanish title and on Saturday he hopes to help his club to their second double
in four seasons.
Germany's
Sami Khedira will be looking to help Juventus to their second Champions League
title.
"We
have the historic opportunity to do the double and on Saturday night we hope to
win the Champions League," Ronaldo said.
A treble for the Old Lady?
Juventus has
dominated Italian football over the past six seasons. They have won six
straight Serie A titles and the last three Italian cups, including both
trophies this season. As they did in 2015, when they lost in the final to
Barcelona in Berlin, they have an opportunity to win their first treble. To do
so, they must get past the other member of Spain's big two in Cardiff. The only
Italian team to have previously won the treble was Inter in 2009-10, under Jose
Mourinho.
A rematch 19 years in the making
Real Madrid
have bested Juventus in the Champions League final before. The two faced off in
the 1998 Champions showpiece in Amsterdam, and Pedrag Mijatovic scored the only
goal of the game in the second half as Real beat the Italians 1-0.
On the
losing side? Zinedine Zidane, the current coach of the Galacticos. He later
joined Real Madrid from Juventus in 2001 and lifted the Champions League title
with the Spanish club in 2003.
The two
teams have met 18 times between 1961 and 2015. Each side has won eight games
and two others have ended in a draw.
A refereeing opportunity on the
lifetime
Felix Brych,
a German referee from Munich, will be the one blowing the whistle in the Welsh
capital. Though he has refereed a European final before - the 2014 Europa
League final between Benfica and Sevilla - this will the first time the
41-year-old referee has officiated a Champions League final.
"It's
an honor to be chosen for the biggest game in European club football, and I'm
very much looking forward to it," Brych said in an interview published on
UEFA.com on Friday.

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