
• Bash F5 for the latest updates • Send your tiki-taka to scott.murray@guardian.co.uk • Click here for tonight’s other scores Scott will be here from 7pm. Ish. In the meantime, you can enjoy this superb animation of Barcelona’s 5-0 win earlier this season and also take a look at Sid Lowe’s pre-match report: This time it’s personal. Barcelona’s coach, Josep Guardiola, finally exploded, sending a year of pent-up anger and frustration gushing forth as he responded to José Mourinho on the eve of the Champions League semi-final against Real Madrid. The question now is whether Mourinho will feel that he has won the mental battle, dragging Guardiola into territory that is not his own, or if Guardiola will feel a release at having at last had his say. And what a say it was. The days of a respectful silence, of turning the other cheek, are definitively over. This was more like the aggressive weigh-in before a prize fight, complete with an air of “you and me outside”. Mourinho had pricked Guardiola’s pride once too often by accusing him of complaining about referees who get decisions right. It was an accusation that Guardiola, normally so measured, was not prepared to let pass – the last straw after a year that has been a war of attrition. Guardiola was finally drawn into battle. “He called me Pep, so I answered,” Guardiola said at the end of a breathtaking 45 minutes. “Normally, he talks in general terms about a team, a club or a manager, but this time he named me. If he says: ‘Pep,’ I say: ‘Hey, José.’” He said more than “hey”. Sitting down in the press room at the Santiago Bernabéu, he said: “As Mourinho has spoken so candidly about me and spoken about me by name, and using tú [the informal form of you], then I will do the same.” He then asked which of the gathered cameras was “Mourinho’s camera” and began. Article continues here Champions League Real Madrid Barcelona Scott Murray guardian.co.uk