Top‑eight scramble dominates Champions League group climax

After 126 matches, 426 goals, five hat-tricks and 28 red cards the Champions League group phase reaches its head-spinning climax on Wednesday with 30 of the 36 clubs still with all to play for on the final night of action across Europe. (AFP/File)
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Updated 27 January 2026
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Top‑eight scramble dominates Champions League group climax

  • Arsenal and Bayern Munich cannot finish outside the top eight and are therefore automatically through to the last 16
  • The bottom four — Kairat Almaty, Villarreal, Slavia Prague and Eintracht Frankfurt — are all eliminated, while 13 clubs are assured of at least a playoff spot

LONDON: After 126 matches, 426 goals, five hat-tricks and 28 red cards the Champions League group phase reaches its head-spinning climax on Wednesday with 30 of the 36 clubs still with all to play for on the final night of action across Europe.
Arsenal, the only team with a 100 percent record, and Bayern Munich cannot finish outside the top eight and are therefore automatically through to the last 16.
The bottom four — Kairat Almaty, Villarreal, Slavia Prague and Eintracht Frankfurt — are all eliminated, while 13 clubs are assured of at least a playoff spot.
But the scenarios are complex as some teams try to avoid the jeopardy of the playoffs by clinching a top-eight spot and others desperately try to earn themselves a lifeline by avoiding finishing below the elimination trap door of 24th.
Here are the main talking points ahead of Wednesday:

THE BATTLE FOR THE TOP EIGHT
Six more automatic spots are available on the final night with Real Madrid, Liverpool, Tottenham Hotspur, holders Paris St. ⁠Germain, Newcastle United and Chelsea all with their top-eight destiny firmly in their own hands.
Wins for Real at Benfica, Liverpool at home to Qarabag and Spurs away to Eintracht Frankfurt would ensure they move into the knockout phase.
The standout clash of the night sees sixth-placed Paris St. Germain host Newcastle, who are seventh, with both teams on 13 points and with identical goal differences.
Whoever wins goes through while the loser would probably fall into the playoffs. A draw would leave both sides sweating.
Eighth-placed Chelsea (13 points) would probably go through with victory at ⁠a Napoli side fighting for survival, although they could still drop down on goal difference with several clubs also on 13 points just below the line.
With one or both of PSG and Newcastle definitely dropping points, Barcelona, Sporting, Manchester City, Atletico Madrid and Atalanta, who all have 13 points, go into the final night with a top-eight finish in sight.
A handsome victory for Barca at home to Copenhagen would probably be enough but a narrow win could leave them vulnerable on goal difference, though Sporting finish with a tough test at Athletic Bilbao who are scrapping for a playoff spot.
City must beat visitors Galatasaray and hope for the best to avoid a playoff, where their hopes ended last season, while a win for the Turkish side guarantees a playoff place.
A City victory could mean a remarkable six English teams finishing ⁠in the top eight.
Atletico could also get into the top eight with a big margin of victory at home to Norway’s Bodo/Glimt, while Atalanta would need to pile up the goals at Belgian team Union Saint Gilloise and hope for slip-ups elsewhere to sneak in.

THE SCRAP FOR A SEEDED PLAYOFF SPOT
While Inter Milan, who are 14th, and 15th-placed Juventus (both on 12 points) are assured of playoff spots, they will want to guarantee a seeding by finishing between ninth and 16th.
Last season’s finalists Inter finish at 16th-placed Borussia Dortmund (11 points) while Juve travel to Monaco.
Several teams, including Marseille, Bayer Leverkusen and PSV Eindhoven, could still finish in the top 16 or be eliminated with Marseille’s clash at Club Brugge, who must win to avoid elimination, likely to be one of several tense clashes.

AVOIDING ELIMINATION
Former European champions Benfica and Ajax Amsterdam find themselves in the last-chance saloon with elimination looming.
Jose Mourinho’s Benfica (29th) must defeat Real Madrid and hope for favorable results elsewhere, while four-time winners Ajax (32nd) must beat 24th-placed Olympiacos and then pray for a miracle.


Inter eight clear after win at Cremonese marred by fans’ flare flinging

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Inter eight clear after win at Cremonese marred by fans’ flare flinging

  • Inter again comfortably dealt with one of the division’s lesser lights, their consistency against the lower-ranked teams

MILAN, Italy: Inter Milan extended their lead at the top of Serie A to eight points with Sunday’s 2-0 win at Cremonese, a match which was marred by away fans nearly hitting the hosts’ goalkeeper Emil Audero with a firecracker.
Lautaro Martinez and Piotr Zielinski’s first-half strikes were enough for Inter to extend their unbeaten league run to 11 matches and pile pressure on nearest challengers AC Milan who face Bologna on Tuesday.
Inter again comfortably dealt with one of the division’s lesser lights, their consistency against the lower-ranked teams. Cristian Chivu’s team have collected 31 points from those 11 fixtures.
“It’s not a message to the rest of the league, it’s a message to ourselves,” said Martinez.
“There’s still along way to go and it’s a very evenly-balanced division.”
Martinez’s header, which came in the 16th minute from Federico Dimarco’s corner, made him Inter’s joint fourth-highest goalscorer in Serie A — level on 128 with Alessandro Altobelli who won the World Cup with Italy in 1982.
Martinez celebrated both his goal and his daughter’s fifth birthday, but a positive evening for him and Inter almost took a darker turn when Audero fell to the turf following the arrival of the firecracker from the Inter fans massed behind his goal.
The match was stopped for a few minutes and for a moment it appeared Audero, who played four times for Inter during the 2023/24 season, had been directly struck by the explosive, which went off near him in the penalty area.
Fortunately a stunned Audero had only suffered minor injuries to his leg and was able to continue, and the match finished without further incident.
“It’s something you have to condemn... it’s a very dangerous thing that you cannot do,” said Inter defender Alessandro Bastoni, who was born in Cremona and whose father played at full-back for Cremonese.
“I can only express solidarity with Emil who was a teammate of ours. Let’s hope they don’t happen any more.”
Cremonese started the season well but nine matches without a win has left them in 16th, five points above the relegation zone with fixtures against Atalanta, Roma and Milan coming up in the next few weeks.

Juve up to fourth

Gleison Bremer helped Juventus up to fourth, the Brazilian international defender scoring twice in a comfortable 4-1 win at Parma as the Turin giants continued their revival under Luciano Spalletti.
Bremer put Juve ahead in the 15th minute and poked home the away team’s third from close range eight minutes after the break, shortly after Andrea Cambiaso put Parma back in the game by flicking an innocuous cross into his own goal.
The 28-year-old has had to battle back from two serious knee injuries but looks back to his best for Juve’s push to for Champions League qualification.
Weston McKennie and Jonathan David scored the other goals as Juve, who look like a totally different team to the one coached by Spalletti’s predecessor Igor Tudor, went two points above Roma who take on Udinese on Monday night.
Como are sixth on 41 points, four behind Juve after Nico Paz wasted a last-gasp penalty in a goalless draw with Atalanta, who sit seventh and are set to sell one-time star winger Ademola Lookman to Atletico Madrid.
Como would have moved above Roma on goal difference had rising star Nico Paz netted from the spot in the eighth minute of added time after Giorgio Scalvini’s handball.
But Marco Carnesecchi pulled off a brilliant save to deny Paz and earn 10-man Atalanta, who had Honest Ahanor sent off in the eighth minute, a hard-earned point.
The 21-year-old Paz has scored eight times and set up six more this Serie A season as Como, owned by tobacco giant Djarum and coached by Cesc Fabregas, have exceeded expectations in just their second top-flight season in a quarter of a century.