UEFA.com works better on other browsers
For the best possible experience, we recommend using Chrome, Firefox or Microsoft Edge.

Bayern need Turin break

It is win or bust for FC Bayern München on Matchday 6 when they travel to Juventus, who are unbeaten in 16 European home games and needing just a point to reach the first knockout round at their opponents' expense.

Bayern need Turin break
Bayern need Turin break ©UEFA.com

It is win or bust for FC Bayern München when they visit Juventus for their concluding fixture in UEFA Champions League Group A.

• Juventus enter the game a point ahead of Bayern and requiring just a draw to join section winners FC Girondins de Bordeaux in the last 16.

• The Serie A side have a formidable recent home record in Europe and the historical omens do not favour Bayern either – they were beaten on their two previous trips to Turin and their coach Louis van Gaal once lost a UEFA Champions League final against Juventus.

Previous meetings
• The teams drew 0-0 in Munich on 30 September.

• Juventus were 2-1 winners when the clubs last met in Italy in the UEFA Champions League group stage in November 2005. David Trezeguet (62, 85) struck both Bianconeri goals, sandwiching a Sebastien Deisler (66) effort for Bayern. Juventus ended with ten men after Zlatan Ibrahimović's 90th-minute sending-off.

• The full lineups that evening were:
Juventus:
Abbiati, Zambrotta, Thuram, Cannavaro, Chiellini, Kovač (Camoranesi 58; Mutu 76), Emerson, Vieira, Del Piero (Nedvěd 46), Trezeguet, Ibrahimović.
Bayern:
Kahn, Sagnol, Lucio, Ismaël, Schweinsteiger, Zé Roberto, Demichelis (Scholl 87), Ballack, Deisler, Pizarro, Makaay (Guerrero 88).

• Juve also beat Bayern at home in the 2004/05 group stage, Pavel Nedvěd's 75th-minute goal securing a 1-0 victory. Ciro Ferrara, now Juventus coach, was in their team that evening.

Match background
• Juventus need only preserve their 16-game unbeaten home record in the UEFA Champions League to advance to the knockout stage.

• The Bianconeri suffered their last home reverse in Europe when losing 1-0 to RC Deportivo La Coruña in the first knockout round in 2003/04.

• Since then they have recorded eleven wins and six draws, including this term's 1-1 home result against Bordeaux and victory over Maccabi Haifa FC. Their defensive record in this time has been formidable with eleven clean sheets and just six goals conceded.

• Qualifiers included, the unbeaten run stands at 18 matches.

• Juventus's last home fixture against a Bundesliga outfit brought a 2-1 success against Werder Bremen in the 2005/06 first knockout round – Trezeguet cancelled out an early Bremen goal before Emerson's 88th-minute winner ensured the Bianconeri scraped through on away goals.

• Hamburger SV were the last German team to win at Juventus, prevailing 3-1 in the 2000/01 group stage. Bayern goalkeeper Hans-Jörg Butt was in the Hamburg lineup while Ferrara featured for Juve along with Alessandro Del Piero and Trezeguet.

• Bayern will travel to Italy with a strong recent record away from home in the UEFA Champions League – their last 12 fixtures have produced six wins, three draws and three defeats.

• This sequence includes draws at ACF Fiorentina (1-1 in the 2008/09 group stage) and AC Milan (2-2 in the 2006/07 quarter-finals).

• Bayern last won in Italy in September 2006 when goals from Claudio Pizarro and Lukas Podolski earned a 2-0 success at FC Internazionale Milano in the UEFA Champions League group stage.

• Juventus lost European Champion Clubs' Cup finals against German clubs in 1983 (Hamburg 0-1) and, with Ferrara in the team, 1997 (BV Borussia Dortmund 1-3). They defeated Dortmund 6-1 on aggregate to land the UEFA Cup in 1993.

• Of the 16 teams occupying top-two positions in their UEFA Champions League groups this season, only Olympiacos FC have scored as few goals as Juventus (three).

Team ties
• The two rival coaches met in the 1996 UEFA Champions League final in Rome when Bayern's Van Gaal was in charge of an AFC Ajax side beaten on penalties by a Juventus team featuring Ferrara, his present-day Bianconeri counterpart.

• Van Gaal had led Ajax to victory against another Italian side, Milan, in the final 12 months earlier.

• Van Gaal also guided Ajax past Juve's city rivals, Torino FC, in the 1992 UEFA Cup final.

• Ferrara was in the SSC Napoli team that got the better of Bayern in the 1988/89 UEFA Cup semi-finals, drawing 2-2 in Munich to complete a 4-2 aggregate success.

• Hasan Salihamidžić spent nine years with Bayern from 1998 to 2007 and was part of their UEFA Champions League-winning team in 2001.

• Fabio Grosso faced Bayern at the equivalent stage of the last season's competition with Olympique Lyonnais – and finished on the losing side in a 3-2 defeat. Felipe Melo was playing in the same section for Fiorentina.

• Grosso and Del Piero scored Italy's goals against Germany in their 2006 FIFA World Cup semi-final. Gianluigi Buffon, Fabio Cannavaro, Mauro Camoranesi and Vincenzo Iaquinta were also in the victorious Azzurri side against a Germany team including Bayern trio Miroslav Klose, Philipp Lahm and Bastian Schweinsteiger.

• Bayern goalkeeper Butt has scored two UEFA Champions League goals against Juventus – converting one spot-kick for Hamburg in a 4-4 draw in 2000/01 and another for Bayer 04 Leverkusen in a 3-1 win the following season.

• Bayern's Italy striker Luca Toni played against Juventus for US Città di Palermo and Fiorentina in Serie A. He was on target for the Viola in a 1-1 draw in Turin in April 2006.

• Arjen Robben appeared as a substitute for Real Madrid CF when they lost 2-1 at Juventus in the 2008/09 group stage. He was a colleague of Juve defender Cannavaro at Madrid.