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2022 Champions League final: Liverpool v Real Madrid
Mohamed Salah said earlier this month Liverpool had "a score to settle" with Real after losing 3-1 to the Spanish giants in the 2018 final in Kyiv.
Four years ago, the Egypt star left the pitch in tears after falling heavily following a challenge by Sergio Ramos. "I want to play against them and hopefully win it from them as well," added Salah, who has yet to extend his contract that expires in June 2023.
This is the third time Liverpool and Real have met in the final.
As well as 2018, the two clubs met in 1981 when Liverpool emerged 1-0 winners in Paris. Forty-one years later, will history repeat itself?
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Four defeats but a place in the final
Real Madrid have lost four times in 12 Champions League matches this season - Liverpool have lost three out of 62 matches in all competitions in 2021-22 - yet the champions of Spain have made it through to their 17th final in the competition.
They have defeated Liverpool's Premier League rivals Chelsea and Manchester City along the way but suffered a surprise home defeat to Moldova's Sheriff Tiraspol in the group stage last September.
Real came back from the abyss in their semi-final against City.
Trailing Pep Guardiola's side 5-3 on aggregate with just one minute of normal time remaining in the second leg, Brazilian substitute Rodrygo scored twice to force extra time.
Benzema, who has scored seven Champions League goals against English teams this season, then sent Ancelotti's side to Paris with a penalty.
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Paris steps in after Russia stripped of final
European club football's showpiece final, which is expected to be watched by a global television audience of up to 400 million, is being held in Paris after Russia was stripped of the event following the nation's invasion of Ukraine.
It was scheduled to be played in St Petersburg but Uefa announced in February it would instead move the match to the Stade de France.
Paris has been given just three months to prepare, well short of the usual 18.
It is the third year running the venue of the Champions League final has been moved - the previous two because of the coronavirus pandemic.
The last time the Stade de France staged the Champions League final was in 2006 when Barcelona defeated Arsenal.
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Liverpool fans paint Paris red
French authorities are braced for an influx of up to 60,000 Liverpool supporters as Paris prepares for the Champions League final.
Most have travelled without a ticket for the match by coach, train, plane and boat to soak up the atmosphere.
Around 7,000 police will be on duty while authorities have prepared a vast fan zone for up to 45,000 Liverpool fans along the Cours de Vincennes, a major avenue in the east of Paris, six miles from the stadium.
There will be 75,000 inside the Stade de France but only 20,000 tickets have been made available to each side, with a further 12,000 offered for sale to fans worldwide.
The remaining 23,000 tickets have been distributed to national associations, commercial partners, broadcasters, and Uefa's official hospitality programme.
More than one-fifth of Liverpool's ticket allocation was for tickets that cost between £410 and £578.
Liverpool John Lennon Airport has put on 34 extra flights to take around 9,000 supporters to Paris on Friday and Saturday, with 13 flights for fans departing on Friday and 21 flights departing on Saturday morning.
However, fans travelling to France faced long queues at the Port of Dover.
Some complained of "chaos" after being stuck in hours-long queues alongside families heading for half-term holidays