Newcastle United eye history in Champions League clash with Barcelona
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Newcastle United's Harvey Barnes celebrates scoring their first goal with his teammates in the 3-1 FA Cup fifth-round loss to Manchester City at St James' Park on March 7, 2026.
PHOTO: REUTERS
LONDON – Eddie Howe has challenged Newcastle United to produce the performance of a lifetime as they aim to win the “biggest game” in the club’s history against Barcelona on March 10.
Howe’s side will make only their second appearance in the Champions League last 16 when the La Liga leaders arrive on Tyneside for a highly anticipated first-leg clash.
For the first time since 2002-03, when they reached the second group phase, Newcastle are one of the 16 clubs remaining in a Champions League campaign.
But having eased past Azerbaijani underdogs Qarabag in the play-off round, Howe knows Newcastle will have to make a significant step up in class to stun Hansi Flick’s star-studded team.
“We’ve never been in this position in the Champions League before and it’s the best competition there is, so for obvious reasons, it’s a massive game in our history,” Howe said.
“We need to approach it that way and we need the supporters to think that way.”
Newcastle famously beat Barca 3-2 thanks to a Faustino Asprilla hat-trick in the clubs’ first Champions League meeting in 1997.
That was the peak of the Magpies’ brief spell as the English Premier League’s great entertainers.
Decades in the doldrums followed, reducing the club to laughing-stock status under unpopular former owner Mike Ashley.
Those dark days included relegations to the second tier in 2009 and 2016.
Starved of success for so long, Newcastle have enjoyed a renaissance since their Saudi owners took charge in 2021.
Barcelona’s visit to St James’ Park is the kind of glamour night that the Toon Army have dreamt of since the takeover.
In 2025, Newcastle ended a 56-year trophy drought by beating Liverpool in the League Cup final.
Now they are hoping to reach the Champions League quarter-finals for the first time.
Beating the five-time European champions would be a massive moment in Newcastle’s history, especially as their progress has been in danger of stalling this season.
Newcastle are languishing in 12th in the Premier League and were knocked out of the FA Cup fifth round by Manchester City on March 7.
Booed off following a 3-2 loss against Brentford at St James’ Park earlier this season, Howe has struggled to balance Newcastle’s ambitions with the reality of financial rules that have restricted the club’s ability to use the vast wealth of their Saudi backers.
Having sold Alexander Isak to Liverpool in September, Newcastle have been unable to reproduce the dynamic form that carried them to silverware and Champions League qualification last season.
The March 7 game was Newcastle’s 47th of the season and 19th in 63 days, a gruelling schedule that has taken a toll on a squad depleted by injuries.
Howe will try to assemble a fresh line-up against Barcelona, having rested Dan Burn, Joelinton and Anthony Gordon for the City clash.
“I don’t think we’ve got the strength at the moment to make loads of changes and keep the same strength in our performance,” Howe conceded.
“We need to try to find some energy from somewhere that will elevate our performance to a level that we’ve not seen before this season because I think that’s the only way we’ll get through.”
Despite all their problems, Newcastle have won six Champions League games in a single campaign for the first time. AFP


