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Uefa Champions League: 2004 05 Crack

By: The Retro Pitch Published: April 17, 2026

This is the story of the season where the underdog didn’t just bite—it shattered the glass ceiling. The 2004–05 edition had a familiar hierarchy. AC Milan , boasting Dida, Cafu, Nesta, Maldini, Seedorf, Pirlo, Kaka, and Shevchenko, looked invincible. Chelsea , under the freshly minted "Special One" José Mourinho, had just bulldozed the Premier League. Barcelona was beginning its ascent under Frank Rijkaard, with a certain Ronaldinho Gaúcho.

If you simulated the 2005 final 1,000 times on a computer, AC Milan would win 999 of them. But football is not played on a spreadsheet. It is played on a humid Turkish night, where men turn into legends and 3–0 leads evaporate in six maddening minutes. Uefa Champions League 2004 05 Crack

"Hello, hello!" screamed Andy Gray.

Then there was . Rafa Benítez’s side had limped out of the Premier League title race by October. They were defensive, pragmatic, and, frankly, boring. They finished second in their group behind Monaco , losing 1–0 to Olympiacos at home. By: The Retro Pitch Published: April 17, 2026

Then came the shootout. And the final act of the "crack."

For AC Milan, the scar remains. For Liverpool, it is the foundation of the modern club’s return to glory. And for the rest of us? It remains the single greatest argument against giving up. Chelsea , under the freshly minted "Special One"

To advance, they needed a miracle on the final matchday. Needing to win by two goals in the 88th minute, the "crack" appeared for the first time. A corner fell to a kid from Whiston. Steven Gerrard, thigh planted, volleyed a dipping, swerving missile into the top corner from 25 yards.

In the sterile world of modern football analytics, where Expected Goals (xG) and tactical periodization rule the discourse, we often forget that the game’s greatest beauty lies in its glitches. The 2004–05 UEFA Champions League season was the ultimate "crack"—a seismic rupture in the fabric of European football logic.

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LEAP is my personal collection of electronics projects - usually involving an Arduino or other microprocessor in one way or another. Some are full-blown projects, while many are trivial breadboard experiments, intended to learn and explore something interesting.

Projects are often inspired by things found wild on the net, or ideas from the many great electronics podcasts and YouTube channels. Feel free to borrow liberally, and if you spot any issues do let me know or send a pull-request.

NOTE: For a while I included various scale modelling projects here too, but I've now split them off into a new repository: check out LittleModelArt if you are looking for these projects.

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