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8 players we can’t believe never made it to a Champions League semi-final

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The best players that have never played in the Champions League featuring (L-R) Paolo Di Canio, Ian Wright, James Maddison

Arsenal, Roma, Chelsea and PSG legends feature among eight legendary players we can’t believe never played in a Champions Leaguesemi-final.

There have been countless unforgettable battles at that stage of the Champions League, with Lionel Messi, Cristiano Ronaldo, Andres Iniesta and Fernando Torres just a few of the names that blessed us with iconic moments. But some exceptional players never even made it that far.

Here are eight superb footballers who never played in a Champions League semi-final.

Gabriel Batistuta

If you’re old enough to remember James Richardson sipping a cappuccino on Channel Four’s brilliant Football Italia, you’ll no doubt fondly recall Batigol as a force of nature in his pomp.

One of the greatest goalscorers in history.

But while the Argentinian forward regularly made mincemeat of classic Serie A defences, opportunities on the biggest European stage were actually fairly limited – in large part thanks to spending his prime years at Fiorentina.

Batistuta memorably led the line for La Viola in Champions League matches against the likes of Arsenal, Barcelona and Manchester United, but he never made it beyond the convoluted multi-group-stage format the tournament favoured around the turn of the century.

It was a similar story during his time with Roma, where he came up against Real Madrid and Liverpool.

In his twilight years, he replaced Hernan Crespo at Inter in the 2002-03 campaign – but he wasn’t part of the Nerazzurri’s Champions League squad when they made it to the final four that year.

Edinson Cavani

In fairness, a cruel twist of fate denied Cavani a place in the semis when PSG made it to the semi-finals for the first time in the post-takeover era in 2019-20.

Unlike club captain Thiago Silva, he refused to sign a short-term two-month contract extension past June that year.

The Uruguayan had started to be frozen out of the picture and was no longer a PSG player when the season resumed for the strange, post-lockdown, behind-closed-doors final stages of the Champions League campaign.

He’d featured intermittently in the group stage and completed 90 minutes in the Round of 16 comeback victory over Borussia Dortmund en route to the final, but he was out of the squad for the one-legged knockout victories over Atalanta and RB Leipzig, as well as the defeat to Bayern Munich in Lisbon.

Francesco Totti

Roma weren’t exactly Champions League mainstays over the course of Totti’s legendary 24 years of service.

The World Cup winner flitted between the Champions League and the UEFA Cup/Europa League during his time as a Giallorossi deity. He only ever made it as far as the quarters, with Manchester United eliminating Roma in both 2007 and 2008.

Roma knocking out Barcelona en route to the semis in the 2017-18, their first season after his departure, must’ve been bittersweet.

You imagine he’d have gone on to do more in Europe had he succumbed to Florentino Perez’s ongoing flirtations, but he was too loyal to his club and his city.

“I wouldn’t go to Real Madrid, because it wasn’t my story,” Totti reasoned in The Guardian.

“My story was Rome, Roma, and a series of reference points that allowed me to express the best of me as a man and therefore as a footballer. Forever my family.”

Patrick Vieira

Between 1995 and 2011, Vieira represented AC Milan, Arsenal, Juventus, Inter and a nascent Manchester City, but he never made it to the final four of the Champions League.

That can’t be right, but somehow it is.

Arsene Wenger’s Gunners made it to the final in their first season since his departure.

And, whisper it, but a young Cesc Fabregas actually ran rings around him when he came up against them with Juventus in the quarters that year.

Jose Mourinho’s Inter won the treble in 2009-10 but he left in January of that campaign after struggling for gametime.

Tony Adams

Like Ian Wright, Adams is another Highbury hero who was a victim of the particularly intense competition for Champions League places in the 1990s.

The centre-half famously captained the Gunners to three league titles in three different decades, but he only ever played in four European Cup or Champions League campaigns and never made it past the quarters.

Alan Shearer

Not only did Shearer never make it as far as the semi-finals, but the Premier League’s all-time top goalscorer never once played in a Champions League knockout game.

That’s a bit mad when you think about it.

Batistuta has competition as the greatest 1990s icon to never play in a major knockout clash. Shearer was never really given the platform to go deep into Europe’s premier cup competition while representing Blackburn Rovers and Newcastle United.

The striker boasts a respectable record of seven goals and four assists from just 16 Champions League appearances in total – all of which were in the group stages in 1995-96 and 2002-03.

A knee injury kept him sidelined for all six of the Champions League matches under Kenny Dalglish in 1997-98, including that famous 3-2 victory over Barcelona.

Gianfranco Zola

The diminutive Italian notched three goals and three assists in 14 appearances for Chelsea as they made it to the Champions League quarters in 1999-00, but otherwise his European experience was limited to the UEFA Cup and Cup Winners’ Cup.

And he left Stamford Bridge the season before they knocked out Arsenal’s Invincibles en route to the 2003-04 semis under his similarly affable compatriot Claudio Ranieri.

Rafael van der Vaart

While admittedly not quite at the level of some of the other names on this list, Van der Vaart was a brilliant footballer on his day and played an important role in Tottenham’s rise to become a Champions League club (for a while).

His CV – Ajax, Hamburg, Spurs, Betis and Midtjylland – doesn’t exactly scream ‘Champions League semi-finalist’ but there was also that two-year stint at Real Madrid.

You’d kind of assume making the Champions League’s last four was a given with Los Blancos, but that was a different era for the club.

They were thrashed by Liverpool in the 2008-09 Round of 16 and exited the competition at the same stage the following year (after the signing of Cristiano Ronaldo no less) by old foes Lyon, so often a thorn in their side during the noughties.

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EPL: Full list of players leaving for 2025 AFCON

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At least 25 players in the Premier League are set to travel for the 2025 Africa Cup of Nations in Morocco.

The tournament is scheduled to take place from December 21, 2025, to January 18, 2026.

Nigeria, Ivory Coast, DR Congo lead the way in terms of players based in the English topflight, with four selected from each club for the AFCON.

FIFA has directed clubs to release the eligible players from Monday, December 15.

Full list of players confirmed

Sunderland (5):
Chemsdine Talbi (Morocco), Reinildo (Mozambique), Bertrand Traoré (Burkina Faso), Arthur Masuaku (DR Congo), Noah Sadiki (DR Congo).

Manchester United (3):
Bryan Mbeumo (Cameroon), Amad Diallo (Ivory Coast), Noussair Mazraoui (Morocco).

Fulham (3):
Alex Iwobi (Nigeria), Calvin Bassey (Nigeria), Samuel Chukwueze (Nigeria).

Burnley (3):
Axel Tuanzebe (DR Congo), Lyle Foster (South Africa), Hannibal Mejbri (Tunisia).

Nottingham Forest (2):
Ibrahim Sangaré (Ivory Coast), Willy Boly (Ivory Coast).

Brentford (2):
Dango Ouattara (Burkina Faso), Frank Onyeka (Nigeria).

Manchester City (1):
Omar Marmoush (Egypt),

West Ham United (1):
Aaron Wan-Bissaka (DR Congo)

Wolves (2):
Tawanda Chirewa (Zimbabwe), Emmanuel Agbadou (Ivory Coast).

Brighton & Hove Albion (1):
Carlos Baleba (Cameroon).

Crystal Palace (2):
Ismaïla Sarr (Senegal), Cheick Doucouré (Mali)

Liverpool (1):
Mohammed Salah (Egypt)

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NNL bars fans from Ranchers Bees vs Adamawa United

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The Nigeria National League, NNL, has announced that matchday six fixture between Ranchers Bees and Adamawa United will be played behind closed doors.

The announcement was made in a statement by the league body.

Only the State Football Association representatives, staff of both teams, kit managers and medical personnel will be allowed into the stadium.

Others are the match officials, security personnel and camera men.

The reason for the decision to play the game without club supporters wasn’t stated by the league body.

The encounter will take place at the Bako Kontagora Stadium in Minna on Saturday (today).

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Nigeria vs Egypt Friendly Gets New Date

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Nigeria’s preparations for the 2025 Africa Cup of Nations have taken a fresh hit, with Egypt confirming that the highly anticipated friendly between both nations has been shifted from 14 to 16 December.

The Egyptian Football Association (EFA) announced the adjustment late Friday, noting that FIFA’s updated international release directive, which allows clubs keep African players until 15 December, made the original date unworkable.

EFA Vice President Khaled El-Darandaly explained that the new rule left both Egypt and Nigeria without full squads for the initial date.

Key Pharaohs players, including Mohamed Salah and Omar Marmoush, are now expected to arrive only after the new release window.

Egypt had already named its 28-man provisional squad and opened camp in Cairo, with head coach Hossam Hassan accelerating final preparations for a Group B campaign that includes South Africa, Angola and Zimbabwe.

Nigeria’s disruption is more extensive. The Super Eagles were originally scheduled to open camp on 10 December and progress through a streamlined friendly schedule before departing for Morocco. That entire framework has now been dismantled.

Under the revised timeline, camp will open on 14 December, leaving Eric Chelle with barely a week to prepare before AFCON kicks off.

The venue for the friendly is also now uncertain, with Cairo no longer feasible and both federations considering shifting the match to Morocco.

Nigeria’s build-up has been further destabilised by injuries to Ola Aina, Taiwo Awoniyi, Benjamin Fredrick and Felix Agu.

The shock retirement of captain William Troost-Ekong, winner of the 2023 AFCON Player of the Tournament award, creates an additional leadership vacuum in defence.

Chelle, who released a 55-man provisional list, must now trim his squad to 28 within a compressed window. Nigeria will compete in Group C alongside Tunisia, Uganda and Tanzania as they chase a fourth continental title.

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