AC Milan and Barcelona both reached the last 16 of the Champions League on Tuesday, but Premier League giants Arsenal and Chelsea were made to wait to secure qualification.
Arsenal, 5-3 victors at Chelsea on Sunday, needed victory at home to Olympique de Marseille to book their place in the knockout phase, but they were held to a goalless draw.
The hosts enjoyed the best of the first half, with Marseille goalkeeper Steve Mandanda saving well from Theo Walcott and Gervinho, while Aaron Ramsey volleyed over from close range.
Photo: Reuters
Arsenal could not sustain their momentum after the interval, however, and even the introduction of in-form captain Robin van Persie as a substitute was unable to illuminate the path to goal.
“It’s difficult to be at your maximum three days after a big match,” Arsenal manager Arsene Wenger said. “Marseille played a good, very solid match and I think their point was not undeserved.”
The result preserved Arsenal’s one-point lead over second-placed Marseille in Group F, while Borussia Dortmund resurrected their qualifying hopes with a 1-0 win at home to Olympiakos that took them to within three points of Marseille.
Photo: AFP
Chelsea were held to a 1-1 draw at Belgian champions Genk, although Valencia’s 3-1 defeat of Bayer 04 Leverkusen meant that the Blues would not have been able to qualify in any case.
Ramires put Chelsea ahead in the 26th minute, arrowing home from a narrow angle from Fernando Torres’ pass, before David Luiz saw a penalty saved by Laszlo Koteles after Thomas Buffel handled Florent Malouda’s cross.
Chelsea thrashed Genk 5-0 in their previous encounter at Stamford Bridge, but they were made to rue Luiz’s miss just after the hour when Jelle Vossen swept home the equalizer from Fabien Camus’ cut-back.
“At the moment, it’s not happening for us,” Chelsea coach Andre Villas-Boas said. “It’s a fixture I wanted to win. With a draw, not everything is negative, but we could have done better.”
Valencia scored the second-fastest goal in competition history against Leverkusen, with Jonas netting after 10.6 seconds at the Mestalla — 0.3 seconds slower than Roy Makaay’s effort for Bayern Munich against Real Madrid in 2007.
Stefan Kiessling drew the German side level on the half hour, but Roberto Soldado flicked home Jeremy Mathieu’s cross to restore Valencia’s lead in the second half before Adil Rami made it 3-1 with 15 minutes to play.
Chelsea now lead Leverkusen by two points at the top of Group E, while Valencia’s qualification hopes have been rekindled as they are now just a point beneath the top two ahead of a home game with Genk on Nov. 23.
Lionel Messi sent fresh landmarks tumbling as he netted another superb hat-trick in a 4-0 success for Barcelona at 10-man Czech champions Viktoria Plzen.
The Argentine broke the deadlock from the penalty spot in the 24th minute, after Marian Cisovsky had been sent off for bringing him down.
The spot-kick took Messi’s tally for the club to 200 goals, and his second goal, in first-half injury-time, was his 50th goal for club and country this year.
Cesc Fabregas headed home in the 72nd minute, with Messi completing his second hat-trick in the space of four days — after Saturday’s triple against Real Mallorca — in injury-time.
The win sent Pep Guardiola’s side two points above Milan in Group H, after the Italian champions’ earlier 1-1 draw at BATE Borisov, but means that both the heavyweights in the group can now look forward to the round of 16.
“We’re very happy with the result today,” Guardiola said. “We’ll try to win at Milan [on Nov. 23] to stay at the top.”
Surprise package APOEL Nicosia preserved their lead in Group G by beating Europa League champions Porto 2-1 in dramatic last-gasp fashion.
Hulk appeared to have rescued a point for the Portuguese side with an 89th-minute penalty, only for Gustavo Manduca to restore the hosts’ advantage with a header just a minute later.
Zenit Saint-Petersburg are a point behind APOEL in second place after a 1-0 win at home to Shakhtar Donetsk.
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