For someone who doesnt understand the game, the idea of the sports most important club competition taking 70 days off during the season would be ridiculous. Yet, that is how long we must now wait for the next games to be played in the Champions League. When we see it again it will look much different and the teams could be playing much different. From a tournament where teams must play six group games to prove they belong in Europes sweet sixteen it evolves into a straight two-legged knock-out competition. Get through six more games and you will be in the final in Lisbon on May 24. It sounds simple but it is far from that. Arsene Wenger will repeatedly tell you that the Champions League is two tournaments in one. And he is correct. The first one is about survival and down to how difficult your group is. Only once the second one begins, can you start to think of playing in a final for the right to lift the European Cup, but to get there teams must jump the hurdles of knock-out football where a teams chances of qualifying can be decided in a moment. Ahead of the draw for the last 16 here is a look at the teams from strongest to weakest. 1. Bayern Munich - The reigning European champions have a great opportunity at becoming the first team to claim the European Cup in back-to-back seasons since the great Milan team of 1989-90. No team has done this under the Champions League format yet Pep Guardiolas team look to have all the pieces in place to buck the trend. A loss in the final match against Manchester City aside (when topping the group was virtually secured) the German side had an excellent group campaign featuring five impressive wins, including a demolition of Manchester City at the Etihad. They will be the team no group runner-up will want to play. 2. Real Madrid - It is hard to believe it has been almost 12 years since Real last made it to the final. Can Carlo Ancelotti do what Jose Mourinho couldnt and give the Spanish giants an elusive 10th European crown? Form in La Liga earlier this season was mixed but in Europe they have been excellent and will be better for the stern tests caused by them in both games against Juventus. Unlike last season, when Borussia Dortmund topped their group, Cristiano Ronaldo and company will avoid the group winners in the last 16. Back-to-back semifinal losses to brilliant German sides in the last two years has halted their challenge but if they can avoid Bayern over two legs this season they will have a great shot at glory. 3. PSG - It is hard to believe that a team who have spent so much money in the last two years remain under the radar but that is the case with Paris Saint-Germain. Quietly, they have gone about putting together a team full of quality and character. It is what served them very well last season, when they were narrowly defeated by Barcelona in the quarter-finals, but if those two teams met today over two legs I would take the French champs. Last season - just their second in this competition since 1994-95 - was all a bit new for PSG but now they seem primed for a real challenge. In Edinson Cavani and Zlatan Ibrahimovic they have obvious difference makers but it is in midfield, with Thiago Motta and Blaise Matuidi, where they can take a stranglehold of key games. 4. Barcelona - We have still yet to see how Barcelona can bounce back from the drubbing they took at the hands of Bayern in last years semifinal. A group with Milan, Ajax and Celtic was a reasonable challenge but the Spanish champions were far from their best in those three away games (winning just one) and until they come up against a legitimate contender in this competition we wont be able to know just how much of a threat they are to win this competition. Of course, any team with Lionel Messi, Xavi and Andres Iniesta in it deserves respect, and no one will want to be drawn against them in the last 16 but whether they will bring fear to the three clubs ahead of them depends on the health of Messi. 5. Manchester City - The highest group runner-up on the list will be desperate to avoid the three teams above them on this list as they look to progress in their first-ever Champions League knock out campaign. Manuel Pellegrinis men used the Champions League games as a true showcase (Bayern at home aside) to show the improvements they have made since the Chilean took over from Roberto Mancini. They will want to avoid Real Madrid, Barcelona and PSG but the truth is those teams will want to avoid City as well. If the spine of Kompany, Toure and Aguero remains healthy then look out. 6. Atletico Madrid - If people are sleeping on PSG then they are unconscious on Atletico Madrid. Having only played one season of Champions League football in the last 16 campaigns, the seedings were heavily against them but they breezed through Portos group, playing as well on the continent as they did domestically. Into the last 16 as a group winner they are now primed for a serious challenge and do not be surprised if they do what Borussia Dortmund did last season and win the hearts of many by making a serious run at the Cup. 7. Borussia Dortmund - It has been a tale of three Champions League seasons for Jorgen Klopps men. Two years ago they were fancied by many to do damage but finished last in their group. Last season some thought they were still too inexperienced but they topped a group over Real Madrid and then beat the Spanish team again in the semifinals. Now, in year three, expectations are high again and the German side have fallen in between year one and two in terms of consistent performances. They were very impressive in a win at Arsenal before losing to them at home and they were average at Marseille on Wednesday yet a late winner, coupled with an Arsenal loss, hands them the crucial top spot in Group F. 8. Chelsea - Any team in this competition with Jose Mourinho as manager has a chance. Jose is obsessed by the Champions League, just like club owner Roman Abramovich, but he will have to perform some magic to get this current crop of players back to European glory. "We are not amongst the favourites to win," Mourinho admitted this week. Clearly. In a relatively easy group, Chelsea made hard work of qualification, twice losing to Basel when their team was exposed on the counter-attack against a high defensive line. If any group winners need a comfortable last 16 draw to help build confidence and momentum it is Mourinhos men. 9. Arsenal - When the draw was made a Mesut Ozil-less Arsenal (that is an awful thought for their fans, isnt it?) were picked to be eliminated by some. In the end they should have won the group and were minutes away from doing so. Dortmunds dramatic late winner in Marseille, sent Arsenal to second and once again they will be looking at a potential nightmare draw on Monday. In less than five minutes they went from avoiding every team in the top 10 on this list to now looking at getting one of Bayern Munich, Real Madrid, PSG, Barcelona, Atletico Madrid. Massive difference. 10. Manchester United - David Moyes may feel his team is amongst the favourites to win the competition but, for me, they are tenth out of the 10 teams who could have a shot at lifting the Cup in Portugal. That makes Uniteds chances an extreme long shot. Against Real Madrid last season they showed they can be organized against a technically superior side and they will have to be at their best defensively in this competition, while finding their superior home form, if they want to make strides past the quarter-finals. At their current state, the Group A winners will likely get a runner-up who they can beat in the last 16 (cannot play Man City) but after that it will get very difficult for the English champions. 11. AC Milan - Milan are far from a good side but what they have is experience. It has been too long since they were described as a super power but it was only two years ago when Pep Guardiola, then manager of Barcelona, admitted he was deeply worried about being drawn against the Italian side in the last 16. That will remain the same this season. Max Allegris team will be underdogs against any last 16 opponent but by February (much like last season) will be playing much better than now and with their defence, and Mario Balotelli, they will be a team few group winners will want to face. 12. Galatasaray - We all know by now how the Turkish champions reached this stage and the goal scored by Wesley Sneijder on a field fit for cows will be told by many for years to come. Not many people expected them to advance ahead of Juventus, in a group also featuring Real Madrid, but a side who takes four points from two games against Juve needs to be respected, no matter what the conditions were. Last year they reached the quarter-finals and that will be their aim this season. Dont expect them to be rolled over. 13. Bayer Leverkusen - Every season a group winner or three is beaten in the last 16 by a runner-up and Leverkusen could easily make a run towards the last eight. They struggled against Manchester United in Group A but played with no fear at Old Trafford early in the campaign and continue to play well in the Bundesliga. If they can keep up their domestic form, and avoid a giant in the draw, they could progress but wont be helped by having to avoid United, one of the weakest group winners. 14. Schalke - The German team progressed through a difficult group with Chelsea and Basel and, much like Bayer Leverkusen, will be thankful not to have to play Bayern Munich (or Dortmund) in the last sixteen. It will still be tough for them to beat any of their potential round 16 opponents. 15. Zenit - The Russians backdoored their way in after a dismal 4-1 loss to Austria Wien on matchday six. Thankfully, Atletico beat Porto to help them through but that proved to be a great result for many of the group winners who will much rather play Zenit over two legs than Porto. Russia in February is not a trip you want to take but if you have to the competition you face there should be fine. 16. Olympiacos - The Greek champions have reached the last 16 for the third time in the last seven seasons and that is a significant achievement in itself. A wonderful home win over Benfica was the difference between the last 16 and a spot in the Europa League this time around and that victory showed how difficult it is to play them in Greece. Kostas Mitroglou has become a household name in Europe and gets another opportunity to show what he can do on Europes biggest stage. With the group winners all looking strong it is tough to see them moving on in the next round but, as Wenger said, a new competition could lead to a number of surprises within the knockout stage. Let us know who you think can win it, your dark horse and who you want your team to draw in the next round. Fake Cardinals Jerseys . Unfortunately for Toronto, that surge was too much to handle as the Stars scored six straight goals and ended the Marlies season with a 6-2 victory on Tuesday. Toronto had built a 2-0 lead on goals by Frazer McLaren and Peter Holland, but Texas charged back with a wild rally late in the second period to spark its trip to the Calder Cup final. John Gant Jersey .Carla Fontes hadnt cut her hair since intermediate school, but her coach at Waiakea High School, Stan Haraguchi, thought the locks flowing below her waist were interfering with the sport. https://www.cheapcardinalsonline.com/564t-mike-matheny-jersey-cardinals.html .C. - NASCAR team owner Rick Hendrick headlines this years electees into the North Carolina Sports Hall of Fame. Rogers Hornsby Cardinals Jersey . Halak did not get the start in the Washington Capitals Tuesday night game against the St. Red Schoendienst Jersey . Last year, Matt Kuchar closed with a 4-under 68 to beat Kevin Chappell by two strokes for his second win of the 2013 season and sixth of his career.At Tuesdays pre-match press conference, Toronto FC Head Coach Ryan Nelsen attempted to explain to the English media the difficulty of having to play a mid-season friendly against Tottenham Hotspur at this particular time of the year. “It would be like us playing a game in the Christmas period when youre third in the league and youve got Man City to play on Saturday,” he said. The timing couldnt be much worse. The Champions – Sporting Kansas City - are due in town on Saturday, as Nelsens team moves through its busiest month of the MLS season with seven league games during the month of July. Hes already without some of his key players through injury, including captain Steven Caldwell and starting right back Mark Bloom. But whatever problems are posed by playing the extra game, I agree with Michael Bradleys assessment of the situation. International friendlies are of benefit to Major League Soccer and the growth of the game in North America. While they are certainly far from ideal, they are here to stay, and they have an important role to play. For a start, Wednesdays game against Tottenham is about much more than welcoming international opposition. This match is part of a four-year marketing and commercial deal struck between the two clubs as part of Jermain Defoes transfer. For both Toronto FC and Spurs, its about the bigger picture. Soccer is a global game, and a big part of achieving success is about building and managing relationships, not just within your own league, but around the world. As Toronto FC – and MLS as a whole – aims to continue its rapid growth, international friendlies are an important piece of the puzzle as they provide an opportunity to get a wider circle of attention both in the local community, across North America, and in other countries as well. From a playing perspective it can also have a positive impact. Its a chance for some of the squad players to get a competitive game, and for some of the clubs youngsters to test themselves against a standard of opposition they wouldnt usually face. IIn 2010 when Toronto FC played Bolton Wanderers at BMO Field, the Man of the Match was a young teenager who hadnt even signed a professional contract at that stage.dddddddddddd Doneil Henry has gone on to become a first team regular with the club who has aspirations of playing in Europe. That Bolton match was an early stepping stone for the Canadian international. As he sat alongside Spurs star Christian Eriksen and manager Mauricio Pochettino at BMO Field on Tuesday, Henry said: “This is where I want to be and where I want to play one day. I just want to learn and show what I can do.” So this match is another opportunity for him to prove himself. We likely wont see much of Torontos leading players against Spurs. Ryan Nelsen needs to be cautious, and rightly so. He will give some of his starters 45 minutes, and rest others completely. But for a number of men within his squad this game will provide a chance to shine and it will be interesting to see if they can take it. Tottenham arrived in Toronto on Monday direct from Seattle where they tied the Sounders 3-3 in an entertaining game in the first game of their three-match North American tour. They are without their World Cup players who have been given extra time to rest, and last years leading scorer Emmanuel Adebayor who is recovering in London following a mild bout of malaria. But young Danish star Christian Eriksen is expected to see his first action of preseason as Spurs continue to prepare for the Premier Leagues opening weekend in mid-August. Last year Spurs finished sixth in the English top flight, but are under new management with a new direction after Mauricio Pochettinos arrival from Southampton. Eriksen was pretty blunt when asked what Tottenham will need to improve upon this season, with consistency the theme. “We had some really good games and some really bad games,” he said. “For us its about being more stable and also getting points against the big teams.” Watch Toronto FC vs. Tottenham Hotspur live tonight on TSN at 7pm et/4pm pt. ' ' '