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David Beckham insists he will not show any nerves when he faces Manchester United at Old Trafford for the first time with AC Milan on Wednesday night.
The midfielder will line up against his former club in the Champions League last 16 second leg tie, with Milan needing to overturn a 3-2 deficit.
But the 34-year-old, still revered by United fans, said: "I'm not nervous.
"Coming back to Manchester as a Milan player is exciting. It will be a tough game for us but nothing is impossible."
The match will see Beckham line up as part of the opposition at Old Trafford for the first time since he left United for Real Madrid in 2003.
He faces a United side boosted by the return to fitness of Wayne Rooney - who scored twice in the first leg - but that will be without Wes Brown, Ryan Giggs and Michael Carrick through injury and suspension.
Still, despite receiving a hero's welcome on his arrival at Manchester airport on Tuesday, Beckham is not guaranteed a start - and United boss Sir Alex Ferguson has revealed he is struggling to predict Milan's team as a result.
"I am finding it difficult to pick their team, I don't know whether Beckham will start," said the Scot.
"I have not got that down in my conclusions about their team. He has not started a game since the first leg, so it is difficult to say what impact he will have on the game.
"But he will be there and the one thing you have to be aware of is his delivery of the ball, which is fantastic. That is the threat. There are a lot of threats in their team of course, but we are well aware of David's."
Whether he starts or not, though, Beckham admits this is the first time he has ever wanted the club he supported as a boy to lose.
"I will always be a Manchester fan and this is perhaps the first time in my life that I want them to lose," he told the AC Milan website. "I'll meet up with many friends and all the people who supported me for many years on the night.
"I played in that stadium for many years and I know what it means to be a Manchester United player.
"But I also know what it means for opponents to play there. It is always difficult to win, especially 2-0. We know we'll have to go for it, play good passes and create many moves, we have many players who can score. We are aware of the fact that it will be a very difficult match, but nothing's impossible.
"Milan have a lot of experience in Europe, they're one of the best clubs in the world."
If selected, Beckham could once again line up against former team-mate and long-term friend Paul Scholes, who believes the return to Old Trafford of the ex-England skipper will ensure a cracking atmosphere.
"United fans still love him for what he did for this club and he will get a fantastic ovation," said Scholes, who made the United first-team alongside Beckham in the 1990s.
"He will need to be watched though. If you give him time and room on the ball there is no doubt he will pick players out. From free kicks as well, his delivery is as great as ever."
Milan, though, will have to create history if they are to reach the quarter-finals - Manchester United have never been eliminated in Europe after winning an away first leg.
Still, Milan president Silvio Berlusconi remains defiant, saying: "We don't fear any team in the world, not even Manchester United. On the contrary, it's the others who must fear us."
Ferguson, meanwhile, has urged supporters to keep their protests against the Glazer family's ownership of the club away from the match.
There has been some suggestion that fans will delay their entrance into the match by 10 minutes, but Ferguson said: "They won't do that, it is too important a game.
"Old Trafford will be rocking and I am sure whether they are wearing the traditional red and white or the protest green and gold scarves, the fans will be united and singing with one voice to get us through."
Arsenal boss Arsene Wenger on his side's task against Porto: "I do not think anyone will be complacent. We know it will be a tricky game, but we believe we can do it. We have good confidence, we are in a good position, so let's go for it. We have scored away from home which is still a massive advantage, and that is why were are confident we can do it.
Porto coach Jesualdo Ferreira on his side's hopes of progressing to the last eight of the Champions League:
"We know their away goal puts them in a very good position. For that reason we need to fight, be positive, get a good result and qualify. Last year we reached the quarter-finals and our objective is to do that again. I want to put right the fact that Porto have not won in England before - there's always a first time for everything."
Look like Arsenal are thru, saw a bit of the game Narsi scored a beauty, scorching 3 Porto players in the box and scores from an acute angle. Arsenal leads 4-nil with 25minutes to go
Bayern Munich reached the quarter-finals of the Champions League on away goals after losing 3-2 to Fiorentina.
Juan Vargas gave Fiorentina a half-time lead from an acute angle before Stevan Jovetic made it 2-0 from 12 yards.
Mark van Bommel's 20-yard shot brought Bayern level on aggregate at 3-3 but Jovetic tucked the ball in to put the home side back in the ascendancy.
However, 72 seconds later Arjen Robben smashed in from 30 yards to make it 4-4 on aggregate and put Bayern through.
Bayern's two goals maintained their impressive Champions League record of scoring in away ties - they have now notched in 18 of their last 19.
But it was far from a straightforward night for the Germans in the Artemio Franchi Stadium.
Bayern struggled to clear their lines in the first half as Fiorentina, playing with a strong breeze at their backs, adapted better to the conditions.
And it was no surprise that the opening goal came from a speculative wind-assisted effort.
Marco Marchionni's 40-yard shot bounced awkwardly in front of Bayern keeper Hans-Joerg Butt, who could only palm the effort into the path of Vargas, who swept home from a tight angle with his left foot.
Fiorentina were controlling the game and nullified the threat of Robben and Franck Ribery by sending three players every time the ball made its way to the Bayern wingers.
The only time Robben did manage to slip unnoticed into the Fiorentina penalty box, home keeper Sebastien Frey superbly tipped away his volley.
After the break Alberto Gilardino scuffed a shot from inside the six yard box as Fiorentina looked to extend their lead.
However, the Italian side's top scorer made amends moments later with an exquisite back-heeled lay-off to set up Jovetic who doubled the lead on the night and put Fiorentina 3-2 ahead on aggregate.
The goal sparked Bayern into life and substitute Miroslav Klose, who scored the highly controversial winner in the first leg, was inches away from turning in a Robben free-kick.
Bayern finally restored parity on aggregate and away goals when Van Bommel guided Ribery's square pass beyond Frey's right-hand and into the bottom corner with a controlled strike.
Any thoughts of extra-time were quickly extinguished though when Gilardino and Jovetic combined again, with the former nodding down for the latter to score from close range under Butt.
A crazy 11 minutes was completed seconds later when Robben was shown inside by the Fiorentina defence and he took full advantage, drilling a 30-yard left-foot effort into the top corner beyond Frey's despairing dive.
The 3-2 defeat on the night is Bayern's first in 19 games, although qualifying for the Champions League quarter-final is adequate compensation.
Man Utd goal: That's the tie done and dusted. Paul Scholes makes the goal, playing in Ji-Sung Park with a deft through-ball. Park finishes it with aplomb, taking a clever touch to lose his marker and burying his shot low into the opposite corner of the net from a tight-ish angle. Game over.
Wayne Rooney scored twice in another irresistible display as Manchester United eased into the Champions League quarter-finals at AC Milan's expense.
Leading 3-2 from the first leg, Rooney eased United in front, heading in Gary Neville's cross, and then clipped his 30th goal this season from Nani's pass.
Ji-Sung Park and Darren Fletcher dinked in two more as United romped through.
Ronaldinho and Klass Jan Huntelaar went close with headers but even substitute David Beckham could not inspire Milan.
Ronaldo had a night of huge frustration at the Bernabeu European giants Real Madrid crashed out of the Champions League at the first knock-out round for the sixth year in succession after being held by Lyon.
The nine-times champions of Europe dominated the first-half and should have been out of sight at the break.
Cristiano Ronaldo levelled the tie when he fired in left-footed on six minutes, but the home side failed to capitalise.
Lyon were a different side after the break, with several chances before Miralem Pjanic drifted in to score.
Real were in irresistible form from the outset and it seemed inconceivable that they would fail to find the net at least twice to overturn the tie.
They might have scored straight from the kick-off as Kaka ghosted through only to see his low shot kept out by Lyon keeper Hugo Lloris.
The wait for the opening goal to level up the tie was not a long one, however, as a spirited Ronaldo surged down the left flank and surprised Lloris with a first time left-footed shot that went through the keeper's legs.
Wave after wave of Real attacks followed, but the patient build-up and elegant passing patterns could not create a second goal.
Gonzalo Higuain might have had a hat-trick, heading narrowly over, superbly denied by an outstretched Lloris left-hand low to his left - and the most clear-cut of all - hitting the post having rounded the keeper.
Lyon made two changes at the break and showed far more attacking intent, with Sidney Govou firing wildly over when well placed inside the area and Lisandro Lopez testing Iker Casillas with a fierce, swerving shot from distance.
With Real struggling to impose themselves, the visitors went close again and were unfortunate that Pjanic's teasing free-kick was closest to centre-half Cris, who failed to make proper contact inside the six-yard box when any significant touch would surely have found the target.
But Pjanic was the finisher as a clinical break saw him in space inside the area and he made no mistake with a firm shot from 12 yards.
Lisandro Lopez missed a golden opportunity to make it 2-1 on the night when he dragged horribly wide after Lyon had three on one on the break, but it did not prevent his side from reaching their fourth Champions League quarter-final, their first since 2006.