Photographs: Stringer/Reuters
Lionel Messi has often said personal accolades are secondary to the fortunes of the team and Barcelona's Argentina forward would probably swap all four of his World Player of the Year awards for a comeback success against AC Milan on Tuesday.
Barca's hopes of a third Champions League crown in five years are hanging by a thread after Milan surprised them 2-0 at the San Siro in last month's last-16, first leg.
If the pre-tournament favourites are to get past the Serie A side into the quarter-finals, Messi will surely have to be on song.
He and his teammates will also need to reverse a slump in key games after they were beaten twice in five days by arch rivals Real Madrid following the reverse in Italy.
Messi, well shackled by Milan in the first leg, claimed another record on Saturday when he came off the bench and scored for a 17th consecutive La Liga game in a 2-0 victory for the leaders at home to bottom side Deportivo La Coruna.
Producing the goods on the biggest occasions is what counts
Image: Barcelona's Lionel Messi (left) and Javier MascheranoPhotographs: Stringer/Reuters
Barca said he had set a new world best by surpassing Polish forward Teodor Pewterek, scorer of 22 goals in 16 straight outings for Ruch Chorzow at the end of the 1930s.
Messi has netted 27 on his prolific run.
Some have questioned his form of late but it was his 40th goal of the La Liga campaign and his 51st in 41 appearances in all competitions, including five in the Champions League.
He is the top scorer in Europe's elite club competition the past four seasons.
Producing the goods on the biggest occasions is what counts, though, and the 25-year-old has been overshadowed in recent weeks by Real Madrid forward Cristiano Ronaldo.
The Portuguese scored the goal against his former club Manchester United on Tuesday that sent Real through to the Champions League last eight and netted twice to help eliminate Barca from the King's Cup at the end of last month.
Barca rested key players to keep them fresh for the Milan showdown
Image: FC Barcelona players attend a practice sessionPhotographs: Petr Josek/Reuters
A significant positive from Barca's La Liga win on Saturday was that they kept a clean sheet for the first time in 14 outings and a repeat performance will likely be crucial on Tuesday at the Nou Camp.
Barca also rested a slew of key players to keep them fresh for the Milan showdown.
Assistant coach Jordi Roura, standing in for Tito Vilanova while he undergoes cancer treatment in New York, deployed Messi only for the final half hour.
He gave Andres Iniesta and Sergio Busquets a runout in the second half but centre back Gerard Pique, fullback Jordi Alba and forward Pedro did not feature.
Barca are also expecting to have playmaker Xavi available after he returned to training this week following a minor muscle strain.
'It's a difficult situation to be in, without the boss'
Image: Barcelona's coach Tito VilanovaPhotographs: Jon Nazca/Reuters
However, Vilanova will again be absent from the bench and it is hard not to attribute at least part of Barca's recent dip in form to their coach's enforced exile.
"We really miss him," Pique was quoted as saying on the club's website on Sunday.
"It's a difficult situation to be in, without the boss -- it's like a company without its chairman, but we will come through this," added the Spain international.
"Tito is helping us from New York and the most important thing is his health. We're not putting any pressure on him and we'll be waiting for him till he gets better.
"We'll attack from the off -- which is our way of doing things -- and we hope to win 3-0."
'We cannot underestimate the best team in the world'
Image: Giampaolo Pazzini of MilanPhotographs: Tullio M. Puglia/Getty Images
Milan warmed up for the trip to Spain with a hard-fought 2-0 win at Serie A rivals Genoa on Friday.
Victory came at a cost, however, and the club said on Sunday goalscorer Giampaolo Pazzini had sustained a micro-fracture in his right fibula and was out of the Barca game.
Fullback Kevin Constant, who was sent off against Genoa for lashing out at an opponent, said he expected Barca to come at Milan hard from the start.
"We know that Tuesday's match will be different to the first leg," he said.
"We are starting with a 2-0 lead and we are not going there to defend but to try to win this game," the Guinean added.
"They will have a lot of ball possession but when it is our turn we have to be the ones to circulate it and try to score. We cannot underestimate the best team in the world."
History is against Barcelona
Image: Barcelona players take part in a training sessionPhotographs: Maxim Shemetov/Reuters
Barcelona have not lost a European tie at home for more than three years and knocked Milan out in last season's quarter-finals, their 16th meeting, and in the 2005-06 semi-finals.
History is against them, however, as no team has ever overturned a two-goal first-leg deficit without the benefit of an away goal.
Barca will hope to emulate Depor, who lost 4-1 at Milan in the 2003-04 quarter-finals but beat them 4-0 in the return leg, the biggest first-leg victory overturned in Champions League history.
Probable teams:
Barcelona: 13-Jose Manuel Pinto; 2-Daniel Alves, 3-Gerard Pique, 14-Javier Mascherano, 18-Jordi Alba; 6-Xavi, 16-Sergio Busquets, 4-Cesc Fabregas; 17-Pedro, 10-Lionel Messi, 8-Andres Iniesta
AC Milan: 32-Christian Abbiati; 2-Mattia De Sciglio, 76-Mario Yepes, 17-Cristian Zapata, 21-Kevin Constant; 23-Massimo Ambrosini, 18-Riccardo Montolivo, 4-Sulley Muntari; 19-M'Baye Niang, 92-Stephan El Shaarawy, 10-Kevin Prince-Boateng
Comment
article