Carlos Tevez and Javier Mascherano have a lot history together.
Barcelona and Juventus haven’t played each another for 12 years, which is partly what makes this season’s Champions League final so intriguing. In a competition packed full of “repeat” ties, this is a genuinely new tactical battle to get excited about.
Nevertheless, various players on opposing sides have faced one another before, when playing for other clubs, or at international level. It means various individual duels are also fascinating — here are three of the key battles.
Javier Mascherano vs. Carlos Tevez
These two Argentines go way back: they first encountered one another in one of world football’s greatest rivalries: River Plate against Boca Juniors. Already considered potentially world-class talents by that stage, their rivalry turned to friendship through mutual respect. When Kia Joorabchian brokered the deal which took Tevez to Corinthians in Brazil 10 years ago, the forward encouraged his agent to recruit Mascherano, too. And so he did.
Then came their unexpected, bizarre joint move to West Ham United in 2006, where Tevez shone and Mascherano was often kept out of the team by Hayden Mullins and Nigel Quashie. Unsurprisingly, they ended up at more illustrious sides, and were soon battling it out in Liverpool vs. Manchester United.
Tevez is now 31, while Mascherano will turn 31 two days after this final — and both are arguably at their peak. Tevez has been in sensational form for Juventus, forming a brilliant partnership with Alvaro Morata and providing both creativity and goal-scoring ability. He drops deep into clever positions between the lines, becoming an outright No. 10 for a side whose attacking midfielders, Arturo Vidal and Paul Pogba, are about energy as much as guile. His goal-scoring record is also impressive: 19 league goals last season; 20 this time around. He’s also hit seven in the Champions League this term, a competition he’d previously struggled in.
Mascherano is still considered a defensive midfielder playing out of position by many, but having played at centre-back for half a decade with Barcelona he should be viewed as amongst the world’s best in that position, too. His improvement has been hugely impressive: he now reads the game as intelligently as anyone in the world, making clever interceptions and well-timed, hard tackles if necessary too. He’s not the greatest in the air because of his height, but Tevez won’t trouble him in that respect.
This should be a tremendous head-to-head battle, because both players are highly intelligent with their positioning, but typically Argentine and up for a battle too. Tevez will attempt to draw Mascherano up the pitch, and the Barcelona defender must make good decisions about how far to track, and when to tackle.
Sergio Busquets vs. Arturo Vidal

Two of the world’s most complete midfielders are likely to be in direct combat — as they were at last summer’s World Cup. There, Chile’s 2-0 victory over Spain was largely due to Chile’s intense pressure, which was led admirably by a not-fully-fit Vidal shutting down Busquets repeatedly.
A repeat might be unlikely, because Juventus won’t press high up the pitch. Instead, they’ll defend deeper with the midfield protecting the defence solidly, and Max Allegri has often ordered Juve to flatten their diamond without the ball, with Vidal dropping in alongside Andrea Pirlo to create a more traditional midfield quartet.
Busquets might find his direct opponents when he receives possession are actually Tevez and Morata, dropping back to keep Juventus compact in the manner Atletico Madrid usually play against Barcelona.
The interesting element of this battle, however, will be what happens when Juventus win possession. Their usual approach in this Champions League run has been to bypass the midfield quickly, knocking longer passes into Tevez and Morata. However, they’re also excellent at getting the midfielders forward in support, and Vidal is capable of brilliant, lung-busting runs to sprint into the final third and provide an extra goal threat.
Because Juventus will play two upfront against Barcelona’s two centre-backs, Busquets’ job will be to track Vidal if he pushes forward to become an extra attacker. Few players in world football are as intelligent in a positional sense as Busquets, but the one thing he lacks is Vidal’s sheer speed. Busquets will be in control for 95 percent of the game, but a couple of untracked bursts from the Chilean could prove crucial.
Luis Suarez vs. Giorgio Chiellini

It’s typically Luis Suarez that the biggest game of his club career will see him battling against two players he’s previously wronged. He was banned for eight games for racially abusing Patrice Evra in 2011, then received a four-month worldwide ban (and nine-game international ban) for biting Giorgio Chiellini at last summer’s World Cup in Uruguay’s 1-0 win over Italy.
With Suarez’s tendency to drift wide from his centre-forward role, switching positions with Lionel Messi, he’ll encounter both Juventus’ left-back and their left-sided centre-back regularly. But it’s Chiellini he’ll battle against most regularly, and it’s worth remembering the nature of their encounter in Natal last summer.
Suarez’s bite was clearly unacceptable, but Chiellini’s antics throughout that match were risible. There was shirt-pulling, playacting, a couple of sly elbows when the referee wasn’t watching. There was unquestionably a plan to rile Suarez, based upon his previous antics, something which obvious by the way Suarez ran at Chiellini, rather than into the space either side of him, in the moments leading up to the horrific bite.
Chiellini wanted to turn it into something that transcends the usual battle you find between physical centre-backs and combative centre-forwards. He wanted football to take second place behind a pantomime, a running contest to see who could provoke the other into something stupid. Chiellini won that aspect — although individually he played extremely poorly, and Italy lost the game.
Chiellini will surely attempt something similar this weekend. This Juventus backline is extremely well-drilled collectively, and all four are good individuals both physically and technically. But they’re also masters of the dark arts, and they know Suarez is a ticking time bomb. Messi is impossible to rile; Neymar usually keeps his discipline. But Suarez can be provoked.
In a pure footballing sense, Chiellini will want to defend deep, to counteract the pace of all three Barcelona forwards. Suarez’s game at Barcelona is all about his lateral running across the opposition backline to create space for others, which is more difficult inside a congested penalty area. Suarez’s main chances to pounce will probably come from direct attacks, when he can spin dangerously into the channels.









