After drawing with Valencia, the current Barca side have now gone 29
games without suffering defeat in all competitions, the longest run in
the history of the club
Pep Guardiola's long-standing unbeaten record in charge of Barcelona has been broken after the current Barca side struck late in the Copa del Rey to extend their streak to 29 games.
The
previous record was set by Guardiola's all-conquering Barca side in the
2010-11 season, his penultimate year at the club, but Luis Enrique's
MSN-led team drew level with the 28-match benchmark after Sunday's 2-0
win over Levante.
The Catalans appeared to be heading for defeat
at the Mestalla on Wednesday night after Alvaro Negredo gave Valencia
the lead, but substitute Wilfrid Kaptoum came off the bench to score the
all-important goal that breaks the record.
It was the
19-year-old's first strike for the club and means Barca have now put
together 23 wins and six draws in all competitions since they last lost a
match, all the way back on October 3 against Sevilla.
The
two sides are likely to do battle again in the final of the Copa del
Rey, with Unai Emery's men boasting a commanding lead over Celta Vigo in
the second semi-final.
During Barcelona's incredible unbeaten
run, they have reached the final of the domestic cup, progressed to the
last 16 of the Champions League and moved to the top of the Liga table -
they are three points clear with a game in hand.
During the
130-day run, Barcelona scored a mind-boggling 87 goals and conceded just
15, with Luis Suarez top-scoring over the four-month period with 30
goals (Lionel Messi follows in second place with 18).
Next up for
Barcelona is Celta, who face Sevilla on Thursday night, who pose a
serious threat to their unbeaten record after beating the Catalan club
in the reverse fixture in September.
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