Champions League Final 2010

hill16

TK's Big Daddy
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Bayern Munich are without suspended winger Franck Ribery so Thomas Mueller should partner Ivica Olic in attack.
Argentine centre-back Martin Demichelis is fit again allowing Holger Badstuber to revert to left-back.
Inter Milan captain Javier Zanetti is set to move up from defence to replace suspended midfielder Thiago Motta, with Cristian Chivu playing at left-back.
Centre-back Lucio has recovered from a calf injury and should anchor the defence with Walter Samuel.
Inter are set to use the same four-man attack deployed against Barcelona.


Inter manager Jose Mourinho has been testing a 4-2-3-1 formation that includes Goran Pandev, Wesley Sneijder and Samuel Eto'o positioned behind and around centre forward Diego Milito.
All four forwards were also utilised in the two wins over Chelsea in the first knockout round and the 3-1 victory over Barcelona in the opening leg of the semi-finals.
Meanwhile for Zanetti the game marks his 700th appearance in all competitions for Inter while Eto'o is attempting to become only the second player in the history of the competition to score in three different European Cup finals.
Eto'o found the net in Barcelona's 2-0 victory over Manchester United last season and the Catalan side's 2-1 win against Arsenal in 2006.
The 29-year-old would join Real Madrid legend Alfredo di Stefano as the only players to achieve the feat.
"Those two finals were against English teams," said the Cameroon star.
"This will be a new kind of experience - me at a different club, coming up against a great Bayern team. Let's wait and see."
Despite the absence of Ribery, widely regarded as one of the finest players in the world, captain Mark van Bommel believes that another one of their star players - Arjen Robben - can take centre stage.
Robben has scored crucial goals against Fiorentina and Manchester United in previous rounds and Van Bommel knows how important the Dutch winger is to Bayern.
"I'm glad he's playing for us, I don't know why Real didn't want him, he's very important for us, he scores very important goals and he also plays very well," said Van Bommel.
"The team knows how to play for him and he knows how to play for us. We compliment each other very well, everyone knows what to do in his position and Arjen is working very well. I love having him here."



Come on Bayern stuff it to the Portuguese grease ball and wipe that smirk off his face :whistling:
 
Bayern Munich 0 - 2 Inter Milan

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Jose Mourinho wrote his name into the history books as Diego Milito inspired Inter Milan to Champions League glory against Bayern Munich at the Bernabeu.
Milito set Inter on their way against the run of play with a clipped finish.
And he wrapped up a win built on the foundations of a solid defence with a solo effort that saw Inter become the first Italian side to win the treble.
It means Mourinho, who won the cup with Porto in 2004, becomes the third man in history to win it with two clubs.
He joins Ernst Happel and Ottmar Hitzfeld in earning that remarkable accolade - at the age of just 47 - and in doing so ends a wait of more than 45 years for Italian giants Inter to regain Europe's top prize.
That he did so by overcoming his former mentor Louis van Gaal, with whom he worked at Barcelona, in the process only served to complete the ultimate season of personal vindication for the Portuguese.
If reports are to be believed, it is a triumph that will earn Mourinho the manager's position at arguably the world's biggest club in Real Madrid.
How fitting, then, that this triumph was earned at Real's magnificent Bernabeu stadium - though Mourinho offered no clues as to whether it will prove the denouement of his Inter career in celebrating his side's triumph in excitable fashion.
It might not have been one for footballing purists, but as an occasion it was spectacular.


The decision to switch the match to a Saturday evening was fully justified as both sets of supporters rocked the Bernabeu from the first minute to the last.
And on the field, the fare was no less enthralling.
The build-up had been dominated by Van Gaal's and Robbens' accusations that Mourinho is a defensive tactician in the build-up - but if their hope was that such taunts would prompt a more ambitious approach from the Italian champions, they were to be disappointed.
The first couple of minutes aside, when Inter hinted at an expansive approach, the Italian side's tactics were clearly to stay strong defensively and pounce on the counter attack.
For a long time, though, it played right into Bayern's hands. With Robben giving left-back Christian Chivu a torrid time and Mark van Bommel pulling the strings in midfield, the Germans almost completely dominated.
Playing with an air of expression and invention, Bayern probed the Inter backline time and again. Robben beat Chivu down the right to set up Ivica Olic, the Croatian slamming wide, Hamit Altintop saw a right-foot shot deflected wide and Robben then skewed wide when well placed 18 yards out.
At the other end, Schneider saw a deflected 40-yard free-kick beaten away by Bayern keeper Hans Jorg Butt and Esteban Cambiasso had a firm volley blocked, but Inter's attacking personnel were largely anonymous in the face of the Germans' control.
Then, on 34 minutes, came Inter's ambush, Milito nodding Inter keeper Julio Cesar's long clearance down to Schneider and then dashing onto the Dutchman's smart return pass to clip home a delightful finish.
Mourinho's muted celebrations might have betrayed his awareness it was a lead his side barely deserved, though it could - and should - have been 2-0 moments before the break when Schneider shot tamely from Milito's lay-off and Butt palmed away his effort from 16 yards out.
Still, having watch Inter repel pass-masters Barcelona with 10 men in the semi-final, Bayern boss Van Gaal will have been all too mindful of the Italians' ability to defend a lead and he sent his team out flying in the second half.
Just moments after kick-off, the German champions should have been level, Thomas Mueller failing to connect smartly enough with a sliding finish with just the keeper to beat, allowing Cesar to beat his shot away.
It was a miss he was almost made to rue within minutes as Milito burst down Bayern's left, cut the ball back to Pandev, only for Butt to brilliantly tip the Macedonian's clipped effort past the post.
Predictably, though, the pattern for the second half had been set - Bayern controlling possession and Inter sitting deep and breaking.
Robben remained far and away Bayern's most potent weapon, his pace and skill down the right prompting almost continuous volleys from an increasingly frustrated Mourinho on the sidelines.
A free-kick from the Dutchman almost led to an equaliser when it fell to Mueller, only for the German's snap-shot to be blocked, before a fine curler again brought the best out of Cesar in the Inter goal minutes later.
But, just as in the first half, for all their considered build-up Bayern were always vulnerable on the counter attack, and another moment of Milito magic settled it.
The Argentine - a constant thorn in the Germans' side - had it all to do when he collected Samuel Eto's pass on 70 minutes, but did it he did, running at Mark van Buyten, turning the defender brilliantly - though far too easily - before side-footing a sensational 30th goal of his season.
The goal was effectively game, set and match, Bayern's sting very much drawn and Inter allowed to coast to victory thereafter.
The final whistle, fittingly, prompted a warm embrace between Mourinho and Van Gaal, before the former entered wild celebrations with his team on the pitch.
And having beaten the English, Spanish and German champions en route to club football's most sought-after trophy, few could Mourinho his moment of glory as his Inter were crowned worthy champions of Europe.
 
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