Manchester City's Kevin De
Bruyne is targeting another deep Champions League run, although Pep
Guardiola's side must first negotiate a tricky last 16 second leg
against Monaco this week.
City recovered from
twice falling behind to outgun the French league leaders 5-3 in the
opening leg in Manchester, but Monaco's formidable attacking threat
could still shatter the Premier League club's aspirations.
Under
Manuel Pellegrini last season City reached the semi-finals for the
first time, losing to
eventual champions Real Madrid 1-0 on aggregate,
and De Bruyne is confident they can go further with Guardiola.
"I
think we can reach the final, but of course the other teams will think
the same and that doesn't make it easier," the Belgium international
told UEFA.com
"It will be very tough against
Monaco, they're doing extremely well at the moment, but we are very
positive and if we beat them we are through to the quarter-finals.
"After that, the final isn't that far away," he added.
Guardiola
has won all seven previous last-16 ties with Barcelona and Bayern
Munich, but City's recent away form is mediocre at best with just one
victory in their last six games in Europe.
"We'd
like to go through, but we cannot forget the team we are going to play.
Their attack is the best, by far," Guardiola said after City defeated
Middlesbrough 2-0 on Saturday to reach the FA Cup semi-finals.
"It will be tough but we’ll try to play our game and try to be one of the best eight teams in Europe."
Radamel
Falcao, who scored twice at the Etihad Stadium, is set to return to the
starting line-up on Wednesday after coming off the bench in Saturday's
2-1 win over Bordeaux that kept Monaco three points clear at the top.
Eighteen-year-old
starlet Kylian Mbappe has scored nine goals in his last eight
appearances, including the opener against Bordeaux, and will have a key
role to play if Monaco are to continue their strong record in two-legged
ties against English teams, having won four out of five times.
Shakespeare appointed
Jamie Vardy's goal in
Spain ensured Leicester City remain firmly in the hunt for a
quarter-final berth despite a 2-1 first-leg defeat at Sevilla.
The
Foxes used a 10-day gap in the fixture list to hold a training camp in
Dubai ahead of Tuesday's return leg at the King Power Stadium.
Craig
Shakespeare has been named as the club's manager until the end of the
season, and Austrian left-back Christian Fuchs said the trip to the
Middle East was a welcome breather.
"It was an
intense time over the last couple of weeks. It’s good to come down and
work a little on team spirit. When you win two games, that’s the best
medicine for team spirit," Fuchs told Leicester's in-house TV channel,
with the Premier League champions coming off back-to-back 3-1 wins over
Liverpool and Hull.
Fernando Torres is expected to
return for Atletico Madrid for their second leg at home to Bayer
Leverkusen after a sickening clash of heads in a 1-1 draw with Deportivo
La Coruna 10 days ago.
Diego Simeone's side, runners-up twice in the past three seasons, hold a 4-2 advantage going into Wednesday's clash in Spain.
Captain
Gabi and defender Filipe Luis are suspended for Atletico, while Tayfun
Korkut is the new man in charge for Leverkusen after replacing Roger
Schmidt last week.
Porto face a monumental challenge to overturn a 2-0 deficit away to 2015 finalists Juventus.
The
Italian giants are unbeaten at home since August 2015 and extended
their incredible 17-month winning league run in Serie A as Paulo Dybala
scored a controversial last-gasp penalty in a 2-1 victory over AC Milan
last Friday.
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