Juventus As winners of the
1997–98 Serie A title, Juventus qualified for the
1998–99 UEFA Champions League group stage automatically and were placed into Pot 1 for the draw, along with title holders
Real Madrid and the domestic champions of Germany, Spain, France and the Netherlands:
1. FC Kaiserslautern,
Barcelona,
Lens and
Ajax. They were drawn into Group B along with Spanish club
Athletic Bilbao, Norwegian side
Rosenborg and
Galatasaray from Turkey. After five straight draws – a Champions League record at the time – Juventus went into the final matchday needing to beat Rosenborg at the
Stadio Delle Alpi and hope that Galatasaray lost to Athletic Bilbao at
San Mamés. First-half goals from
Filippo Inzaghi and
Nicola Amoruso gave Juventus the victory they required, while Athletic's
Julen Guerrero scored the only goal in the other game. That left the top three teams level on eight points; their order was determined by their head-to-head record, and since Galatasaray and Rosenborg had beaten each other in their matches on Matchdays 3 and 4, the three teams were separated by Juventus' final-day victory over the Norwegians. That made Juventus the first club to reach the Champions League knockout phase without winning any of their first five group matches. Juventus were paired with Group A winners
Olympiacos in the quarter-finals. A 2–1 win at the Stadio Delle Alpi in the first leg gave Juventus the advantage thanks to goals from Inzaghi and Antonio Conte; however, a late penalty from
Andreas Niniadis meant Olympiacos only needed to win 1–0 in Athens to go through on the away goals rule.
Siniša Gogić scored in the 12th minute to give the Greek side the scoreline they needed, but Conte scored in the 85th minute to make it 1–1 and send Juventus through with a 3–2 aggregate win.
Manchester United Manchester United were the runners-up in the
1997–98 FA Premier League season, so they had to take part in qualifying in order to reach the Champions League group stage. They were drawn against Polish champions
ŁKS Łódź, and goals from Ryan Giggs and
Andy Cole in the first leg at Old Trafford gave them a 2–0 aggregate win. Because England ranked only sixth in the UEFA association club coefficient rankings, Manchester United were placed in Pot 3 for the group stage draw, along with
Benfica, Olympiacos,
Panathinaikos, Rosenborg and
Sturm Graz. They were drawn into Group D along with Spanish champions Barcelona, German side
Bayern Munich and Danish champions
Brøndby in what became known as the "group of death". United were in third place after their opening two matches – draws at home to Barcelona (3–3) and away to Bayern (2–2) – but victories of 6–2 and 5–0 over Brøndby on Matchdays 3 and 4 put them top with two matches to play. Another 3–3 draw with Barcelona meant Bayern were able to go ahead by a point in the group standings with a 2–0 win over Brøndby, leaving United needing victory over Bayern on the final day to guarantee qualification as group winners; only the two best-ranked runners-up went through to the quarter-finals.
Roy Keane put United ahead just before half-time, but
Hasan Salihamidžić's equaliser 10 minutes into the second half meant the match finished 1–1. Bayern won the group, but United's 10 points were enough to put them through as the second-best runners-up. In the quarter-finals, United faced Italian side
Internazionale. They won the first leg at Old Trafford 2–0 thanks to first-half goals from
Dwight Yorke, and Inter's failure to score an away goal further increased United's advantage.
Nicola Ventola pulled a goal back for the Italians midway through the second half of the return leg at the
San Siro, but Paul Scholes' away goal two minutes from the end assured a 3–1 aggregate win for United. ==Match==