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Semi-final second leg facts and figures

UEFA.com rounds up the key statistics from this week's second legs, including past Spain-Italy finals and a notable landmark for Xavi Hernández and Iker Casillas.

Juventus celebrate in Madrid
Juventus celebrate in Madrid ©AFP/Getty Images

• The semi-final victories for FC Barcelona and Juventus mean that the 2015 UEFA Champions League final will be the first for 17 years between clubs from Spain and Italy, the most recent being Real Madrid CF's 1-0 win over Juventus in Amsterdam in 1998. The competition's only other Spain v Italy final in the UEFA Champions League era was in 1994, when Barcelona lost 4-0 to AC Milan in Athens.

• While Juve have yet to win a European Cup final against Spanish opponents, Barça claimed the trophy for the first time in 1992 against Italian opposition, defeating UC Sampdoria 1-0 after extra time at Wembley.

• Cristiano Ronaldo's penalty for Real Madrid against Juventus took his goal tally for the 2014/15 season to ten goals. It is the fourth successive season that he has reached double figures in a UEFA Champions League campaign, extending his own competition record. Only two other players have managed the feat two seasons running – Ruud van Nistelrooy for Manchester United FC in 2001/02 and 2002/03 and Lionel Messi in 2010/11 and 2011/12.

• Messi holds the record for being crowned UEFA Champions League top scorer on most occasions – four (to Ronaldo and Van Nistelrooy's three apiece). He is level at the top of this season's standings with Ronaldo going into the final, but his team-mate Neymar, who scored three times in the semi-final, is now just one back on nine and could yet become the first player other than Messi and Ronaldo to top the standings – either jointly or alone – since another Brazilian, Kaká, in 2006/07.

• Should Messi score against Juventus in Berlin, he will become the first player to find the net in three UEFA Champions League finals, having done so already on his two previous appearances, in 2009 and 2011. Raúl González (2000, 2002), Samuel Eto'o (2006, 2009) and Ronaldo (2008, 2014) are the only others to have scored in two.

• Should Patrice Evra feature against Barça, he will join Clarence Seedorf in making his fifth appearance in a UEFA Champions League final. Only Paolo Maldini – with six outings for Milan – has played in more.

• Evra is also bidding to become the 13th player to win the competition with more than one club.

• Having featured for Real Madrid in the 2014 final, Juventus striker Álvaro Morata could become only the fourth player to appear in UEFA Champions League final victories in successive seasons with two different clubs. Marcel Desailly (Olympique de Marseille 1993, AC Milan 1994), Paulo Sousa (Juventus 1996, Borussia Dortmund 1997) and Samuel Eto'o (Barcelona 2009, FC Internazionale Milano 2010) are the others.

Watch Juventus beat Barcelona in 2003

• Xavi Hernández and Iker Casillas both reached the milestone of 150 UEFA Champions League appearances in the semi-final second legs, the Barcelona midfielder beating the Madrid goalkeeper to the figure by 24 hours thanks to his substitute appearance in Munich.

• Juventus's 1-1 draw against Madrid made it five out five UEFA Champions League semi-final triumphs for the Turin club after they had won the home leg of the tie.

• Barcelona's semi-final success means they will match Real Madrid's record of 74 matches played in the knockout phase in the UEFA Champions League when they take on Juventus in Berlin.

• Barça and Juve are both through to their fifth UEFA Champions League final, matching the feat of FC Bayern München. The record number of participations still belongs to AC Milan, with six.

• Barcelona will be bidding in Berlin to equal Real Madrid's record of four UEFA Champions League triumphs, while Juventus will be seeking to become only the sixth club to claim multiple wins.

• Should Juventus lose against Barcelona in the Olympiastadion, they will become the first team to be defeated in four UEFA Champions League finals after previous reverses in 1997, 1998 and 2003. They currently share that unenviable record with Milan and Bayern.

• Barça and Juve are both currently on course for a treble of domestic championship, domestic cup and UEFA Champions League. Should the Catalan club achieve it, they will become the first club to do so twice, following their success in 2008/09. There have been three other treble winners – Manchester United (1998/99), Inter (2009/10) and Bayern (2012/13).

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