The Match Day 1 of the Group Stages of the UEFA Champions League has come and gone with the thrill and excitement of years past.
Here we bring you some of the interesting points from the games.
Ahmed Musa Has a Fight on His Hands
After scoring two super goals against Barcelona everyone thought Ahmed Musa was set to take the City of Leicester by storm.
Many bridges have been crossed from pre-season to real-season and the Nigerian now finds himself a regular bench warmer.
He
can't start Premier League games and despite being Leicester's most
experienced Champions League striker, he was left on the bench yet again
in favour of recent Algerian recruit Islam Slimani - starting alongside
Jamie Vardy.
Everyone knows Vardy is virtually untouchable. This
leaves Musa, Slimani, Shinji Okazaki and Leonardo Ulloa to fight for the
other center-forward role in Leicester's duopoly.
Musa's other favoured role is the right-wing, but with a certain Riyadh Mahrez owning that spot... don't count on it.
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Renaissance or Relapse for English Teams
Between the years 2005 and 2012 English teams were amongst the most dominant in the Champions League.
That
has changed drastically recently, despite huge financial gains, with
sides from La Liga and the Bundesliga, in particular, stealing a march
on their EPL rivals.
This year, with Man United and Chelsea
conspicuously out of the competition the onus is on the quartet of Man
City, Arsenal, Leicester and Tottenham to redeem the English name.
Arsenal and City, both pre-scheduled to play on Tuesday night, did their best to save the queen.
City's 4-0 thumping of Monchengladbach was impressive as Arsenal's 1-1 away draw at PSG was commendable.
While
not much can be made of Leicester's 3-0 trouncing of lowly Club Brugge,
another French side, Monaco returned the English favour by beating
Arsenal's North London rivals, Tottenham at White Hart Lane.
In the circumstances there is a lot yet to do to convince the viewers that the English are truly back.
The Old Lady Fail to Get on their Feet
After
five years of Calcio dominance, Juventus' summer transfer activities
have been geared in one direction and one direction only; conquer
Europe.
Despite the undesirable yet financially rewarding loss of
Paul Pogba they have managed to make their squad look stronger in
readiness for the task of matching the likes of Madrid.
A goalless
draw at home to another Spanish side, Sevilla was sure not on the table
when the budget of Lagos State was spent to acquire Gonzalo Higuain
from Napoli.
The Bianconeri must now return to the barracks and strategize for a more successful foray.
Sevilla,
on their part, now appear willing to put up some Champions League fight
after three consecutive years of unprecedented Europa League success.
Atletico as Sturdy as Ever
If
you were asked to predict a team that will seal a one-nil victory in
the Champions League your answer won't fall far from La Liga side
Atletico Madrid.
For years now under Diego Someone their greatest strength has been their ability to shut teams out and grind out narrow wins.
Despite
the pretence of a 4-0 win in their last Liga game at the weekend
against Celta De Vigo they went back to their typical habits, squeezing
out a 1-0 win in the Netherlands against Dutch Champions PSV Eindhoven;
the same opposition Atletico knocked out on penalties in the round of 16
last season.
No surprises there.