The UEFA Champions League table is starting to take shape heading into December and this week there are a number of big games coming up and group leaders like Manchester United, Real Madrid, Barcelona, Arsenal, Paris Saint-Germain, Chelsea and Bayern Munich will be looking to continue to hold onto their leads and that will make this week's matchups very tough and entertaining to watch.
Man U has a three point lead in their group and Real Madrid is playing well with a huge lead at 13 points with the next team closest at six, while PSG and Bayern Munich are also holding nice leads in their groups. Barcelona is up two points after losing last week against Ajax and now the team has a huge matchup against Celtic coming on Wednesday and that match will be very big for the group, as AC Milan and Ajax also play that same day.
Some of the other top matches includes Arsenal taking on Napoli, while Manchester United will have Shakhtar Donetsk and Real Madrid plays FC Copenhagen. Some other big games include teams like PSG as well as Real Sociedad, Bayern Munich and Borussia Dortmund.
Check here for the Champions League table and schedule.
Barcelona's 2-1 loss at Ajax Amsterdam in the Champions League last week was down to a lack of intensity while Sunday's 1-0 reverse at Athletic Bilbao in La Liga exposed their relative physical frailty.
Those were two of the explanations coach Gerardo Martino and the players offered after the Spanish champions suffered their first two defeats of the season during a miserable week that saw them surrender their three-point lead over Atletico Madrid at the top of the La Liga.
Argentine Martino, in his first campaign in charge since taking over from Tito Vilanova, will need to quickly identify and fix whatever it is that is ailing his side or risk missing out on major silverware for the first time since the 2007-08 season.
Barca are through to the last 16 of Europe's elite club competition and can secure top spot in Group H if they avoid defeat at home to Celtic on December 11.
They also remain top of the domestic league on goal difference but there is a sense that when the season reaches its climax around April the flaws that were evident over the past week will be even more cruelly exposed.
On current form, a disaster similar to the 7-0 aggregate drubbing they received at the hands of Bayern Munich in the Champions League semi-finals last term would not be a major surprise.
Barca do have a number of key players sidelined by injury, including goalkeeper Victor Valdes and World Player of the Year Lionel Messi, who is not due back until the middle of next month.
But with players of the caliber of Neymar, who fluffed a number of chances on Sunday, Cesc Fabregas, Andres Iniesta and Alexis Sanchez, Barca should be winning games against sides like fifth-placed Bilbao comfortably, at the very least avoiding defeat.
Midfielder Sergio Busquets conceded that Bilbao had been more effective at closing the Barca players down in their own half at the San Mames.
"They are generally stronger than us, we are not a team like Athletic for example with all the players pressuring up the pitch," the Spain international added.
"We have a number of players out injured and there is no need for alarm."
Martino also called for calm and said there had been nothing in Barca's performance that was a particular cause for concern.
"There is cause for concern when the team does not know what to do and I did not see any evidence of that," he told a news conference.
Barca's next outing is a King's Cup last 32, first leg at third-tier Cartagena on Friday before they host Celtic at the Nou Camp the following Wednesday.
(Reuters)