“We have a lot of faith in him. We know that what we need to do is free him up as much as possible. And it’s not easy for him, he gets so little space, it’s hard for him.” Tuesday’s Champions League encounter was the ninth time that Messi had faced Chelsea, a run of games stretching back to 2006 when the sides met in the competition’s group stages. That kicked off a series of often epic encounters between the teams in the following six years. Yet even during the 2011/12 season, when Messi scored 73 goals for Barcelona, he failed to find the net in the two games he played against the Londoners.Leo #Messi - the man for the big occasion ?? ?? #ChelseaBarça pic.twitter.com/GdWLqaFER0
— FC Barcelona (@FCBarcelona) February 20, 2018
Despite his record against Chelsea, and the approach of his 31st birthday in June, he looked like Barcelona’s most likely route to goal on Tuesday, finding space in Chelsea’s otherwise disciplined defence and linking up dangerously with Iniesta on several occasions before the pair worked the equaliser. “We see that so often from him, either with his scoring or his passing for goals,” Barca defender Samuel Umtiti told reporters. “In the big matches he makes his mark.”FACT: Lionel Messi has now scored 18 goals vs English teams in @ChampionsLeague - the most in football history. ? Arsenal: 9 ⚽️ ? Man City: 6 ⚽️ ? Man United: 2 ⚽️ ? Chelsea: 1 ⚽️ ? "He couldn't do it in the @PremierLeague" ? pic.twitter.com/VDQJFdeyrf
— SPORF (@Sporf) February 21, 2018


