
Sporting's Do-or-Die Champions League Thriller: Can They Topple Bodø/Glimt's 3-0 Lead?
Sporting CP face a monumental task overturning a 3-0 deficit against Bodø/Glimt in the Champions League last-16 second leg at Estádio José Alvalade. With flawless home form but injury woes, they chase history, while the rested Norwegians eye a quarter-final spot. Global viewing options and VPN tips ensure fans worldwide won't miss the action.
Sporting's Do-or-Die Champions League Thriller: Can They Topple Bodø/Glimt's 3-0 Lead?
Picture this: you're Sporting CP, kings of your own castle in Lisbon, but you've got to overturn a 3-0 deficit against Norwegian upstarts Bodø/Glimt in the Champions League last-16 second leg. It's like being three pints down in a pub quiz but needing a miracle comeback. The Estádio José Alvalade awaits on 17 March – kick-off at 12:45 EST / 17:45 GMT – and the air's thick with drama.
Where to Catch the Action (and How to Sneak Past Geo-Blocks)
No excuses for missing this – we've got your global viewing guide sorted. In the USA, fire up Fubo. UK punters, TNT Sports has you covered. Aussies, tune into Stan Sport; Canadians, Fubo Canada; Indians, JioStar or similar. South Africa and sub-Saharan Africa? SuperSport. Malaysia and the Middle East go beIN Sports.
Stuck abroad? Grab a VPN like ExpressVPN to dodge those pesky geo-restrictions. Download the app, connect to a server in your target country (say, UK for TNT), clear your cache, and stream away. For the big screen, Smart TVs and Fire Sticks play nice with VPN apps; Apple TV or Roku? Use Smart DNS or cast from your phone. Easy as pie – or should I say, pastéis de nata?
The Herculean Task Facing Sporting
Bodø/Glimt turned heads with a 3-0 demolition in Norway, goals from Sondre Fet, Ole Blomberg, and Kasper Høgh leaving Sporting shell-shocked on a frosty night at Aspmyra Stadion. These debutants have been the fairytale of the competition, knocking over big guns like Manchester City, Atlético Madrid, and Inter. Under Kjetil Knutsen, they've notched four straight wins – first Norwegian side to do it – and they're rested, skipping early Eliteserien games.
Sporting? They've only flipped a three-goal European deficit once, against Manchester United in the 1963-64 Cup Winners' Cup. Daunting, but home form's flawless: four wins from four at Alvalade this term. Fresh legs help too – their league clash with Tondela got postponed, and Maximiliano Araujo plus Pedro Gonçalves are back from bans. It's now or never for Rúben Amorim's lot.
Glimt stand on history's doorstep: first Norwegian club to quarters since Rosenborg in '97. They've won seven of nine recent UEFA two-legged ties, all when leading 3-0 after leg one. Knutsen's stuck with the same XI for five Europe games – why tinker with genius?
Injury Woes, Stats, and What to Expect
Sporting miss Fotis Ioannidis (knee), Ricardo Mangas (knee), and Geovany Quenda (foot) – proper headaches. Glimt? Full squad, no excuses. Defences leaking like sieves: 14 goals shipped by Sporting, 17 by Bodø/Glimt. Expect goals galore, end-to-end stuff.
Both sides well-rested – Portuguese league match shuffled, Norwegians delaying domestic kick-off. Hauge and co. embody Norway's footy surge; Sporting need Alvalade magic. Will it be heroic turnaround or Glimt's glory? Pour another round, lads – this one's unmissable.