A first all-English Champions League final is tantalisingly close as Manchester United, Chelsea and Liverpool prepare for this week's decisive semi-final second-leg games.

Only Barcelona, who face Manchester United today after a goalless first leg in Spain, have a chance of representing elsewhere in Europe at next month's final.

Odds and history point to a Chelsea vs Manchester United showdown in Moscow on May 21, 10 days after the sides will have settled the one-two finishing order in the tightest Premier League contest for years.

Chelsea host Liverpool tomorrow in pole position after John Arne Riise's injury-time own goal gave them a 1-1 Anfield draw in the first leg.

To reach their third final in four seasons Liverpool will, at the least, have to score at Stamford Bridge for the first time in nine attempts.

United are still rueing Cristiano Ronaldo's penalty miss in the Nou Camp but the draw nevertheless gives them the edge over Barcelona.

Since the start of the Champions League in 1992/93 there have been 20 goalless first legs in knockout ties and 14 of them have been won by the team playing at home in the second leg.

Everything changed for Liverpool after Riise's blunder and now they will not be able to sit back and defend to secure a third Champions League semi-final success against Chelsea. Not since Bruno Cheyrou earned them a 1-0 victory in January 2004 have Liverpool found the net at Stamford Bridge.

However, in the irrepressible Spaniard Fernando Torres, they have a cutting edge that has been sorely missing in recent years. The Spaniard has scored 30 goals, including the opener in a 1-1 Anfield league draw between the two in August.

"The difference is we have never gone to Stamford Bridge with a player like Torres before," said captain Steven Gerrard.

Torres and Gerrard were among a host of players rested from Saturday's 2-2 draw at Birmingham City but Chelsea could not afford such a luxury for their table-topping clash with Manchester United.

They won 2-1 to draw level with their rivals but it was a tough, draining game and could be a factor tomorrow, particularly if the match is a repeat of last season and goes to extra time and even penalties.

It is a similar situation at Old Trafford where Barcelona will arrive relatively fresh after resting most of their first team for Saturday's 2-0 defeat at Deportivo La Coruna.

United did manage to protect a handful of first-teamers, though Ronaldo was pressed into action from the bench, but most of their other top players were involved and Wayne Rooney, scorer of their goal, picked up a hip injury that leaves a doubt over his participation.

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