Barcelona will drop into the Europa League after Inter Milan’s win over Viktoria Plzen ended the Catalans’ hopes of qualifying for the Champions League last 16.
Barcelona were condemned to the Europa League without kick a ball on Wednesday, as Inter Milan’s victory over Viktoria Plzen ended the Catalans giants’ hopes of qualifying for the Champions League last 16.
Inter through to last 16 at Barcelona’s expense
A Henrikh Mkhitaryan header, a double by Edin Dzeko and a late strike by Romelu Lukaku earned Inter a 4-0 home win in one of the day’s early Champions League kickoffs - a result that gave the second-placed Italians an unassailable lead over Barça in Group C.
Defeat for Plzen means the group’s bottom team cannot now catch Barça, so Xavi Hernández’ men host already-through Bayern Munich at 3pm ET - a match you can follow live with AS USA - knowing they are certain to finish third and drop into Europe’s second-tier competition.
Having dug very deep to fund a bumper summer outlay on transfers, the loss of Champions League income is one that Barça, whose debt was estimated at €1.3bn when Joan Laporta took over as president last year, can scarcely afford.
The Blaugrana must now prepare for a second appearance in the Europa League since the competition’s 2009 rebranding from the UEFA Cup, and their 13th campaign overall in the tournament’s 51-year history.
Having also had to settle for a third-place finish in their Champions League group last season, it is the second straight year that Barça have slipped from the continent’s elite competition into the Europa League.
How many times have Barcelona won the Europa League/UEFA?
In a word, never. It’s the only European trophy they’ve failed to win. The club have five Champions Leagues/European Cups, four Cup Winners’ Cups and three Inter-Cities Fairs Cups to their name, but the best they have managed in the Europa League/UEFA Cup is the last four.
After dropping into the Europa League last season, Barça were immediately installed among the favourites to win the tournament, but their campaign came to an end in the quarter-finals, in ignominious circumstances.
After knocking out Napoli and Galatasaray, Xavi’s men faced Eintracht Frankfurt in the last eight. A 1-1 first-leg draw in Germany appeared to set the Catalans up nicely to finish the job at the Camp Nou, but it was Eintracht who triumphed in Barcelona, securing a 3-2 victory on the night.
And, to make matters worse for Barça, they suffered the embarrassment of seeing an estimated 30,000 travelling fans inside the Camp Nou turn the second leg into a quasi-home game for the visitors.
That Eintracht supporters were able to get their hands on so many tickets - far more than the official allocation of 5,000 - came down in no small part to Barça season-ticket holders’ willingness to sell their seats, as home fans skipped the game to enjoy their Easter holidays. “We can’t allow this,” Laporta said. “We’re getting information from the security and ticketing departments. We will take measures.”
Last season was Barça’s first appearance in the competition since 2003/04, when a sixth-placed LaLiga finish the previous year meant they had to settle for a place in the UEFA Cup. In their first campaign under Frank Rijkaard, Barça saw off Matador Púchov, Panionios and Brondby in the opening three rounds, before a 1-0 aggregate defeat to Celtic in the last 16.
Three years earlier, in 2000/01, Barça made their fourth and most recent appearance in the UEFA Cup semi-finals. After eliminating Club Brugge, AEK Athens and Celta Vigo, a side coached by Lorenç Serra Ferrer were edged out by Liverpool in the last four, Gary McCallister’s penalty proving the difference in the second leg at Anfield.
Barcelona also made semi-final exits in the 1995/96, 1977/78 and 1975/76 UEFA Cups.
Olatunde29ice
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2018: 0-3 Roma comeback 2019: 0-4 Liverpool comeback 2020: 2-8 loss to Bayern 2022: Drop to Europa League 2023: Drop to Europa League again Barca’s UCL disappointments continue 😬