They
could both be forgiven for dreaming of more lucrative adventures in the
UEFA Champions League come next season, but on Thursday Chelsea and
Tottenham will have their eyes focused on a place in UEFA Europa League quarter-finals.


Both
must put thoughts of the UEFA Champions League aside at least for 90
minutes as they prepare to meet Steaua Bucharest and Inter Milan
respectively.
Spurs, twice winners of
Europa League predecessor tournament the UEFA Cup, would have been
competing in the Champions League this season, had Chelsea's triumph in
the final over Bayern Munich not torpedoed those ambitions.
However,
the Blues themselves suffered the heartache of being dumped into the
Europa melting pot when they became the first Champions League winners
to exit the group stage.
Much water has
flowed under Chelsea's Stamford Bridge since they saw off Bayern, with
Champions League-winning coach Roberto Di Matteo unceremoniously sacked
and Rafa Benitez installed as an interim measure - to the dismay of many
of the club's supporters.
Yet Benitez,
while recognising that Champions League qualification is the overriding
goal, would happily lift a trophy which would enable Chelsea to complete
the set of European Cup, the now defunct Cup Winners' Cup and also UEFA
Cup/UEFA Europa League. To date, only Bayern, Ajax and Juventus have managed to win all three.
Benitez
has to juggle with the additional burden of a top four league finish
with next weekend's FA Cup quarter-final at Manchester United also
looming.
"We have to go to Bucharest before we can concentrate on (the United) game," he insisted.
Benitez
has a selection dilemma regarding skipper John Terry, who is returning
from a knee injury, while Gary Cahill is getting over a virus, leaving
Branislav Ivanovic and David Luiz as central defensive partners.
The
former Liverpool boss, who won the Champions League at Anfield and the
UEFA Cup with Valencia, said of Terry: "He's training. Match fitness and
training sessions are two different things and he's improving."
Momentum high for Tottenham
Spurs counterpart Andre Villas-Boas can be satisfied that his side are on a roll after beating Arsenal to move third.
Spurs counterpart Andre Villas-Boas can be satisfied that his side are on a roll after beating Arsenal to move third.
The
tie will have a job to reach the thrill levels of the Champions League
group matches against Inter two seasons ago, when Gareth Bale hit a
hat-trick in the San Siro only to finish on the losing side before Spurs
won the return.
Team-mate Michael Dawson
says with Bale around anything is possible. "He's one of the best
players in the world at the moment, and probably the best in the world
for me right now."
Villas-Boas has already won the tournament with Porto, two years ago before his ill-fated spell at Stamford Bridge.
Spurs
have twice lifted the UEFA Cup, which Inter have themselves won on
three occasions, and the hosts will beware of a side which can boast
five wins in six matches on their European travels this term.
Newcastle
complete the English contingent but, in the absence of injured skipper
Fabricio Coloccini, face a trip into the unknown as they take on Guus
Hiddink's Anzhi Makhachkala of Russia in Moscow.
Makhachkala
have won all their "home" games to date, including a group success over
Liverpool. The Caucasus-based side play their home matches in Moscow as
their home republic of Dagestan is deemed too dangerous.
Newcastle
coach Alan Pardew said: It would be massive if we could beat this team.
They are a really strong side." Particularly as they include former
Barcelona striker Samuel Eto'o.
Other ties
see former European champions Benfica host Bordeaux and Stuttgart take
on Lazio, who have to play two home European matches behind closed doors
for their fans' racist behaviour.
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