BARCELONA, Spain (AP) — Barcelona hopes to recover Lionel Messi from injury by Wednesday with its Champions League quarterfinal against Paris Saint-Germain poised 2-2, but Cesc Fabregas' first career hat trick over the weekend showed they have a Plan B just in case.
If Messi can't heal a right hamstring he pulled during the last week's first leg in Paris, Barcelona may opt to use Fabregas in the position of "false nine" that has proven to be successful with the Spanish national team.
Fabregas filled in perfectly for the absent Argentine in Saturday's 5-0 rout of Mallorca, with forward Alexis Sanchez also making his claim to start against PSG with a brace and two assists for the former Arsenal midfielder.
Also in the last eight on Wednesday, newly crowned German champion Bayern Munich will take its 2-0 advantage to Juventus, after nine-time champion Real Madrid visits Galatasaray and Malaga is at Borussia Dortmund on Tuesday.
"When you don't have a player like Messi, it's obvious that you have a problem," Barcelona assistant coach Jordi Roura said. "(But) the squad has shown that it has enormous quality."
Barcelona can rely on its strong home record to reach its sixth straight semifinal. The Catalan side hasn't lost at Camp Nou in European competition since Oct. 20, 2009, when it fell 2-1 to Rubin Kazan, and PSG must win or get a draw of three goals or more to move on.
PSG proved it can unsettle Barcelona from its gutsy first-leg performance steered by striker Zlatan Ibrahimovic, who canceled out Messi's opener before setting up Blaise Matuidi's last-gasp equalizer.
Ibrahimovic's big body up front will again be PSG's main threat against a defense that has been hit by injuries. Center backs Carles Puyol and Javier Mascherano are both out, leaving coach Tito Vilanova with the option of either little used Marc Bartra or a recycled defensive midfielder to pair with Gerard Pique.
Barcelona got a boost Saturday by the return of Eric Abidal as a late substitute a year after he underwent a liver transplant, but it is unlikely he is in condition to play against PSG.
PSG coach Carlo Ancelotti also has health worries. Defender Thiago Silva has a knee injury and sat out Saturday's 2-0 victory against Rennes. Thiago Motta and Alex are also doubts.
"Everyone knows it will be difficult, I don't know how much chance we have to progress," Ancelotti said. "We have to be tough. We're not going there to defend, we can't afford to. We have to be brave, because to get to the semifinals we have to win."
Bayern curtailed Saturday's Bundesliga title celebrations to remain focused on its upcoming trip to Juventus.
Jupp Heynckes' side clinched the championship with a record six games to spare by beating Eintracht Frankfurt 1-0, but there were none of the traditional "beer showers" that usually accompany German title celebrations.
"We're not at the finish line yet," said Bayern captain Philipp Lahm. "There's a long way to go because we still have big targets."
Juventus was dominated for most of last Tuesday's first leg, and was lucky to escape Munich only 2-0 down.
Mirko Vucinic scored two goals as Juventus beat bottom club Pescara 2-1 on Saturday to maintain its march to a second successive Serie A title.
"We really want to have a great game so this dream can continue, even though we know it will be very difficult," Vucinic said. "But believing in dreams doesn't cost anything, we will do everything to try and turn the result around. We have to treat the game as if it was a war."
Juventus' task is made more difficult by personnel problems. Midfielder Arturo Vidal and defender Stephan Lichtsteiner, who both started in Munich, are suspended, and striker Sebastian Giovinco is injured.
Goalkeeper Gianluigi Buffon, who was criticized after the first leg, was benched Saturday with the flu but will almost certainly be back.
Madrid put one foot into the semifinals with a 3-0 victory over Galatasaray at the Santiago Bernabeu from goals by the scoring trio of Cristiano Ronaldo, Karim Benzema and Gonzalo Higuain.
Ronaldo went on at halftime to score one goal and set up another in Madrid's 5-1 rout of Levante on Saturday.
"The series isn't over, although 3-0 is a good advantage," Ronaldo said. "If we go with the ambition to score a goal, we will go through fine."
Malaga struggled to hold on for a 0-0 draw against the sprightly Dortmund in their first meeting thanks to Willy Caballero's sound goalkeeping and the German side's lack of finishing touch.
Malaga and Dortmund both rested several of their first-choice players over the weekend.
Malaga manager Manuel Pellegrini went home to Chile after Saturday's 4-2 loss at Real Sociedad to attend his father's funeral.