Sevilla
have the chance to make history by winning the Europa League for a
third year in succession - a feat that no club has ever managed before.
Standing in their way of doing that in Basel on Wednesday night are
Jurgen Klopp's Liverpool side, who have been extremely impressive in
their run to the final.
Gazzetta World report that only twice before in this competition,
both under the old UEFA Cup guise and the current incarnation, have
teams won two successive titles - Real Madrid and incidentally, Sevilla -
but never has a side managed to make it a hat-trick.
That is the opportunity that awaits the Andalusian outfit in
Switzerland if they can prevent Liverpool from picking up their first
European title since stunning AC Milan in Istanbul in 2005.
Interestingly, something simply has to give at St Jakob-Park because
these sides have appeared in seven Europa League/UEFA Cup finals between
them, four for Sevilla and three for the Reds, and neither has ever
tasted defeat.
Injuries and Suspensions
Despite there being a concern over the fitness of Liverpool talisman
Jordan Henderson, he is expected to make his recovery from injury in
time to take to the field.
Divock Origi is currently trying to shake off an ankle injury and
will face a late fitness test but goalkeeper Danny Ward as well as Joe
Gomez and Jordan Rossiter are all to miss out, as does Mamadou Sakho
through suspension.
For Unai Emery's men, the only injury concerns hang over Jose Antonio
Reyes and Michael Krohn-Dehli, neither of whom have made an appearance
since last month.
History
Wednesday marks the first ever meeting between the two. It is the
Merseyside outfit's 12th European final, having previously played in
seven Champions League/European Cup finals, three in the UEFA Cup and
one in the European Cup Winners' Cup.
They do have previous experience of taking on Spanish opposition in
finals though and were victorious on both occasions, against Real Madrid
in 1981 and then against Alaves 20 years later.
Sevilla, who are already the first team ever to reach three straight
finals, thrashed English opposition at this stage of the competition
when they beat Middlesbrough 4-0 a decade ago, thanks to an
inspirational display from Enzo Maresca.
The Spaniards also have previous experience of playing at Wednesday's
venue in this year's Europa League, having drawn 0-0 with Basel in
March, as they eliminated the host club.
Player to Watch: Kevin Gameiro
Scoring first in these finals has typically proven to be very
important. Only once in the past 10 years has the team who netted first
not gone on to lift the trophy.
That came last year when Fiorentina's Nikola Kalinic put Dnipro in
front early only for current AC Milan striker Carlos Bacca to turn the
tide in Sevilla's favour and Gameiro can perform a similar role this
time around.
Of Sevilla's 14 goals in this year's competition, he has actively
participated in nine of them, with seven scored and making two assists,
which includes six strikes and two assists in his last five games.
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