Barcelona: story so far, key players, why they can win

Barcelona: story so far, key players, why they can win

Story so far: BarcelonaSupporting Barça hasn't been for the faint-hearted this term. Witness that incredible last-16 comeback, when they became the first team in UEFA Champions League history to overturn a four-goal first-leg defeat. Indeed, they have been sublime at home, scoring 21 goals and conceding one in four mesmerising victories. Away they have won two, lost two. Next up: Juventus.Record this season: P8 W6 D0 L2 F26 A9 Barcelona's historic comeback

Madrid leapfrog Barcelona, Bayern and Monaco prevail

Madrid leapfrog Barcelona, Bayern and Monaco prevail

Round of 16 second legs: Tuesday 14 March• JUVENTUS (2-0) PORTOJuventus 2-1 AC Milan (Benatia 30, Dybala 90+7pen; Bacca 43)Juventus made it 31 consecutive home league victories in dramatic fashion as Paulo Dybala converted from the spot with the last kick of the game. Medhi Benatia had earlier thumped in Dani Alves's chipped pass for his first Bianconeri goal. Milan had José Sosa dismissed in added time before Dybala tucked away the winner.Arouca 0-4 Porto (Danilo 15, Soares 25 86, Diogo Jota 71)Francisco Soares continued his incredible scoring streak as Porto eased to a ninth successive Liga v... UEFA.com - News

Madrid go first: Spain’s longest unbeaten runs

Madrid go first: Spain’s longest unbeaten runs

Real Madrid's 3-3 draw with Sevilla on Thursday moved them ahead of Barcelona and set a Spanish record of 40 games unbeaten in all competitions. As UEFA.com discovers, the two giants dominate the landscape in undefeated runs involving Spanish sides.1. Real Madrid, 40 (2016 – present) A 2-0 loss to Wolfsburg in last season's UEFA Champions League quarter-final first leg was the last time Real Madrid tasted defeat. Since then they have been unstoppable, notching up 30 victories and ten draws as they relentlessly swept all before them while collecting the UEFA

Victories for Denmark, Netherlands and England

Group CDenmark 1-0 SwedenSebastian Buch Jensen settled the Nordic derby with a goal three minutes into added time. It was just reward for a Denmark side that dominated possession from the off and hit the upright through Carlo Holse in the second half. Sweden, who shocked England on Friday, were set for a point until they were caught out at the last. Sørensen, introduced after 63 minutes along with Buch Jensen, crossed from halfway to the far side of the penalty area, where his fellow substitute did the rest.