Most of the extra games you play in the CL are primarily because of the group stages - Clubs now have big squads to cope with those extra fixtures - The groups are seeded in such a way, that, more often than not, the 2 best sides generally get through to the knock-out stages. & that's something, with the exception of the odd couple of occasions, that Manchester United had done for most of the time that you competed in it under Ferguson. The fact that there are more teams in the competition is irrelevant, because you don't have to play every single side in order to win it.
Liverpool didn't have to play every team to win it when they won it. In fact they played far fewer than you do in the CL. Liverpool played 9 games in three EC wins, and 7 games in one. They also played shite teams in about half of those games. The same can't be said for the CL games because the shite teams get knocked out in the qualifiers.
Once you make it to the knock-out phase it becomes exactly the same as the old European Cup. & it's here that United have fallen short over the past 20 years or so. We've been told on here recently that finishing 2nd means nothing. It simply means you've failed. So you putting down an extensive list of your 'great record' in the CL (quarter finals, semi final, beaten finalists etc) also means nothing. It also just highlights how you've 'failed' to re-produce your domestic dominance to the big European stage.
No one has managed to transfer their domestic dominance to the European stage in the CL era. No one has retained it, and only a handful of teams have reached consecutive finals. Do I need to remind you that United reached 3 finals in 4 years, winning one of them? That's something that's not been done since the early years when it was still a competition just for champions. If your measure for dominance is winning both the European and Domestic titles in consecutive years, you're going to find that no one's managed to do that since Milan in 89 & 90.
Again, in 22 years of existence, no one has retained the CL. The closest teams have come were Milan and Juventus in the early-mid nineties, and Manchester United in the late 00s. 3 teams have played in the final the year after winning it, the most recent of which, and the only in the current format, is United. Madrid won 5 ECs in a row, Benfica 2, Inter 2, Ajax 3, Bayern 3, Liverpool 2, Forest 2, and Milan 2. That's 8 teams winning it in consecutive years, on 3 occasions more than once. Additionally, Real Madrid played 8 finals in 11 years, winning 6, Benfica played 5 in 8, winning 2, Ajax played 4 in 5, winning 3, and Liverpool played 5 in 9, winning 4.
Essentially, you're slating the knockout record of a team with the best run of "dominance" in contemporary CL football.
Can you tell me something ? When United were effectively knocked out of the CL a couple of seasons ago by Basel. Did UEFA's coefficient system have Switzerland down as a top 8 nation ? & when you were outplayed in both legs by the 6th best side in Spain following your exit from the CL into the Europa League. Was this down to the fact that you were simply unfortunate having to play a side that came from a country that was top of the coefficient table ? & when you thrashed Schalke in the semi-finals of the CL a few years back, were you proud of that achievement, considering that they finished in 14th place, just 6 points clear of relegation, in the Bundesliga ? (Another country with a very high coefficient)
Makes you think doesn't it ?
Dangerous game for a scouser to be starting the whole "where they finished in the league" thing, given that your last European success came after finishing 5th. Did Juventus, the Italian champions for that year, or Milan, the runners up, think that Liverpool were a poor team because they were only the 5th best side in England? Did Bayern Munich, the German runners up, or Barcelona, the Spanish runners up, think Chelsea were a poor team because they were only the 6th best team in England? Or did they, perhaps, consider that both were good sides at the time and were hard to beat?
Did Liverpool consider it an achievement to scrape their way through a group stage containing the 3rd best team in France and the 8th best team in Spain? Did Liverpool consider it an achievement when they beat the 6th best team in Northern Ireland, the 5th best team in France, and the 3rd best team in Switzerland (who they played in the semi-final) on their way to winning their first EC? Did they consider it an achievement to not even have to play the first of their second win, and then breeze past 2 teams to make the semi-final? Did they consider it an achievement when they battered a shockingly bad Finnish team 11-2 in the first round of their 3rd, only to breeze past 2 teams to make the semi-final again?
Also, the Schalke team that we played in the semi-final in 10-11? The one that won the German cup that year? The one that battered Inter Milan, treble winners the year before, and cup winners and Serie A runners up that season? The same Schalke that beat Valencia, 3rd best in Spain to only a dominant Real Madrid and Barcelona? The same Schalke that topped their group winning 4 of 6 games, and only losing once? A group that contained the Portuguese champions and French runners up from the previous season? Teams that finished 2nd and 3rd that year? And if we're praising champions so much, the Israeli champions were there too.
Tell me, in 09-10, how did Liverpool feel about finishing 3rd in a group that was won by the 11th best team in Italy, Fiorentina? How did they feel when they got knocked out of the Europa League, that same season, by the 9th best team in Spain, Atletico Madrid? Did they look at Fiorentina go out only on goal difference against that year's finalists and Bundesliga winners, Bayern Munich, and think that Fiorentina were a poor team? Did they look at the eventual winners of the Europa League, Atletico Madrid, and think that they got knocked out by a side much worse than themselves?
You're full of shit, redman. Liverpool dominating Europe as they did back then was a marvelous achievement, but it's incredibly clear that the CL, especially in its current format, is far harder to win that the EC was. Liverpool could only beat what was put in front of them, and they did so more often than not over that period. However, I certainly won't be claiming that a cup win that involved playing 4 of 9 games against the champions of Malta and Poland as more impressive than a cup win that involved playing the Spanish champions twice, the German runners up three times, the Italian champions twice, and the Italian runners up twice, or one that involved playing the Portuguese runners up twice, the Ukrainian champions twice, the Italian runners up four times, the French champions twice, the Spanish runners up twice, and the English runners up once.