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Archive for Marzo 14th, 2011

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As if there was ever any doubt. Brisbane Roar are the new A-League champions and it took every weapon in their arsenal, every trick up their sleeve and every fibre of every exhausted muscle to do it. But that’s why this team has been impossible to topple for all of 28 matches on their way to the most deserved of titles. They simply find a way.

Brisbane Roar’s attractive football has earned them the unofficial tag of the best side in Australian league history, but it’s their superiority in so many of the unseen facets of football that has earned them the reputation-justifying silverware they so desperately craved. They are fitter, more determined and possess the deepest wells of self-belief.

As though it was scripted, Brisbane were forced to put all their best assets – visible and hidden – on show in this most epic of season finales. They defended resolutely for 20 minutes as the Mariners shot out of the blocks, then turned on the style as they dominated the next hour of play. When that didn’t work, their concentration did not waver. Their fitness became a factor as Central Coast faded late in regular time, and they saw out the 90 minutes having dominated all but the scoreboard.

Then the Mariners, the most worthy of opponents and arguably a superior side to many A-League champions past, blitzed their way into a 2-0 lead to put one hand on the trophy that has eluded them twice before. But that only invited Brisbane to reach even deeper, this time into the place they keep miracles. Inspirational captain Matt McKay rallied his troops at the change of ends in extra time, urging one last push so as to not let this record-breaking season go to waste. His men responded. Two goals recovered, 50,168 screaming fans and a wave of momentum that made only one winner seem possible in the penalty shoot-out that followed.

The Mariners had heroes littered all over the field. Brisbane put in one of their better performances apart from execution in the final third, but Central Coast did not play near their best. Instead, they fell back on the naked desire to make it third time lucky in their still unfulfilled quest to be crowned champions. Teenage goalkeeper Mat Ryan stalled the surging Roar for longer than should be expected of a player of his years. Striker Adam Kwasnik put in maybe his best performance in a Mariners shirt, a match-winning display on any other occasion but this. Captain Alex Wilkinson, the hungriest of all to eradicate the demons of Grand Finals lost, was a pillar of strength for his team. The list could go on.

But the harshest truth is that the Mariners came closest to winning the Grand Final they least deserved to. They were disciplined and gallant but aside from an opening burst driven by adrenalin and their incredible jab-hook combination in the first half of extra time, they were mostly focused on holding off this irresistible rival and feeding off rare scraps in the hope of goals.

Those hopes were answered as the energy of influential teenage substitute Bernie Ibini-Isei drove them forward in extra time. Kwasnik’s marathon effort was finally rewarded with a poacher’s goal as Roar’s Michael Theoklitos failed to claim Pedj Bojic’s header above Ibini-Isei. Then Kwasnik turned provider to Coastie local Ollie Bozanic on a breakaway launched by Ibini-Isei.

But super-sub Henrique launched the fight-back by finishing a typically flowing Roar attack and Erik Paartalu, the giant of midfield in stature and performance, rose like an obelisk to head home Thomas Broich’s corner in a last-ditch comeback as swift as it was dramatic.

Lucky charm Theoklitos, winner now of three A-League Grand Finals, turned hero in the shoot-out to produce stunning saves either side from Daniel McBreen and Bojic. Henrique, the ‘Slippery Fish’ as he is known, could not slide clear of his team-mates after he coolly tucked the winning penalty into the right hand corner.

The one area the Mariners perhaps could claim victory was the tactical battle: they unsettled Brisbane’s passing game like few before them. But that will be of rare comfort to the heartbroken players, staff and supporters of the ‘little club that couldn’t quite’. They do deserve better and they can only hope the first year of the Graham Arnold era is a sign they will soon get another chance to be top dogs. Brisbane, too, will hope for a dynasty amid rumours Postecoglou will be tempted by a more lucrative opportunity at Melbourne Victory. This victory could well be the decisive factor in his choice of club and also in the FFA’s pursuit of new owners for what is now an extremely attractive prospect.

For the neutral, matches like this reek of predetermined fate. It’s the sort of narrative sports movies employ to thrill audiences naive enough not to know what’s coming. But aside from the 2,000 shattered but proud Coast supporters who braved the Suncorp cauldron, every orange-clad fanatic packed into the stadium will be able to recall this glorious spectacle for years to come – if they believed their eyes.

MAN OF THE MATCH: Matt McKay. The Brisbane captain took the game by the scruff in the second half of normal time. He racked up the passes from central midfield, all of them probing and constructive. And when Brisbane’s football failed, he turned to his leadership, delivering the speech that helped his team dream the impossible dream.

BRISBANE VERDICT: Simply unbeatable. They were tested to their absolute limits by a superb opponent but they refused to be the great team that fell just short. They were star performers but critically no player let them down, and they held their nerve brilliantly to score all four of their shoot-out penalties.

CENTRAL COAST VERDICT: Facing a better side, the gallant Mariners did everything in their power to force a result. They sweated buckets for the cause, defending with collective discipline to keep their sheet clean until they sniffed a chance to strike. They will be desperately disappointed with the result but when the pain fades they can turn to the fact it took the most incredible champions to shatter their dreams.

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Barcelona suffer in Sevilla

Barcelona saw their lead at the top of the Primera Division cut to five points after they were held at Sevilla tonight.

Substitute Bojan Krkic gave Barca the lead after half an hour but Jesus Navas levelled for the Andalusians early in the second half.

There were chances for both sides after that in an entertaining encounter and Barca boss Pep Guardiola will be happy with a point in the end against a dangerous and unpredictable Sevilla side.

Lionel Messi looked to have given Barca the lead when he curled home a free-kick after eight minutes, but the Argentina forward saw his effort ruled out, apparently for a Sergio Busquets foul.

Guardiola was forced into an early change as Pedro limped out of the action, with the Tenerife-born forward replaced by Bojan.

And the young striker was on the scoresheet following a lovely move.

Andres Iniesta found Dani Alves all alone in the area as he beat the offside trap with a glorious chipped pass and the Brazil full-back squared unselfishly for Bojan to slide the ball into the empty net.

David Villa then came close six minutes before the interval and Messi headed against the crossbar following a brilliant pass from Xavi, in a combination reminiscent of the second Barca goal in the final of the Champions League against Manchester United in 2009.

Messi then went clean through on goal a minute before the interval, but the Argentinian was upended by Javi Varas, who also touched the ball.

Messi looked injured as he walked off at the break, but the FIFA World Player of the Year was back out as the second half got under way.

Barca, having dominated virtually the whole first half, found themselves back to square one as Sevilla levelled four minutes into the second period.

Alvaro Negredo beat Alves to the ball on the edge of the box, moved diagonally towards the byline – taking Victor Valdes with him – and chipped an exquisite cross back over for Navas, who headed into the empty net.

Negredo then blasted over the bar with only Valdes to beat as Barca looked vulnerable.

Fredi Kanoute twice came close later on as Sevilla looked to turn the game completely on its head.

And Navas missed a wonderful opportunity with 15 minutes left when his side-footed effort was brilliantly saved by the feet of a full-stretch Valdes.

Barca also could have won it, however.

Messi came close with an individual effort after beating several Sevilla defenders, while Iniesta stuck a long-range effort against the bar with four minutes left.

And the visitors almost took all three points in added time, but Gary Medel hacked Iniesta’s shot off the line.

Barca now have 75 points, five more than Real Madrid, with 10 games left, while Sevilla remain in seventh.

Credit: http://soccernet.espn.go.com

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La Liga leaders Barcelona struggled to break down Sevilla and dropped two valuable points as they were held to a 1-1 draw having gone ahead.

Bojan had opened the scoring after Dani Alves calmly slipped the ball to the side to allow the 20-year-old to slot into the empty net. Lionel Messi then hit the bar with a header before being injured in a collision with goalkeeper Javi Varas, but recovered to appear for the second half.

However, Sevilla levelled the scores within five minutes as Alvaro Negredo’s cross found Jesus Navas on hand to nod home. Barcelona hit the bar again through Andres Iniesta, who also had a shot cleared off the line, but Sevilla hung on to deny them and allow Real Madrid to close the gap to five points.

Nine-man Sporting Gijon claimed a remarkable late draw against Villarreal thanks to an injury-time penalty from Diego Castro.

Villarreal looked set to put their poor recent domestic form behind them as they took a 29th-minute lead through freescoring striker Giuseppe Rossi before then seeing Sporting lose defenders Jose Angel (65 minutes) and Rafael Sastre (90) to red cards.

However, there was a late twist in the tale as struggling Sporting claimed a dramatic last-gasp equaliser from Castro, who showed remarkable composure and self-assurance in the circumstances to chip his spot-kick down the centre of the goal.

Real Mallorca‘s unlikely push for Europe suffered another setback as they were held 1-1 at Levante.

Juanlu put the hosts in front seven minutes before half-time, but Ivan Ramis’ superb free-kick drew Mallorca level early in the second half. The visitors rode their luck in the closing stages, though, as Vicente Iborra was denied by the crossbar and goalkeeper Dudu Aouate pulled off a fantastic save from Jefferson Montero.

Espanyol returned to winning ways with a 2-0 win at home to 10-man Deportivo La Coruna to climb to fifth in the table.

The Barcelona-based side had lost six of their last seven league matches and were unable to find a way past Deportivo early on, but their task was made easier when Pablo Alvarez was shown a second yellow card minutes before half-time.

The home team dominated after that and took the points thanks to fine goals from Ivan Alonso and Joan Verdu in the final half an hour and moved above Athletic Bilbao with the win, with the Basque side away to Getafe.

Ten-man Osasuna gave their hopes of survival another boost as they followed up last week’s away win over Malaga with their first victory over northern rivals Racing Santander since 2005, with a 3-1 success.

Two goals in five first-half minutes from Kike Sola and Javad Nekounam set Osasuna on their way and Fernando Soriano made it 3-0 in the 49th minute.

Racing pulled a goal back almost immediately through Markus Rosenberg and the Cantabrian side received a further boost 15 minutes from time when Osasuna midfielder Soriano was sent off after picking a second caution.

Osasuna were not to be denied though and they held on to record back-to-back victories for the first time in over a year, having last week claimed a first away victory since January 2010.

Malaga boosted their hopes of survival with a plucky win 2-0 at Real Sociedad.

The Andalusians rode their luck at times, but took all three points thanks to a goal in each half from Duda and Salomon Rondon. And although they remain bottom of the table with 10 rounds of the championship remaining, Manuel Pellegrini’s side are now level on points with both Almeria and Hercules, and just two adrift of 17th-placed Sporting Gijon.

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Higginbotham sends Stoke into semis

Stoke booked their first FA Cup semi-final appearance for 39 years after bouncing back from a controversial West Ham equaliser to win 2-1 at the Britannia Stadium.

The Potters’ first-half dominance was reflected in centre-back Robert Huth’s eighth goal of the season, but Frederic Piquionne’s clear handball was missed by referee Mike Jones as the striker went on to score.

When former Hammer Matt Etherington missed a penalty seconds into the second half it seemed it was not to be Stoke’s day but Danny Higginbotham drilled a free-kick through the wall which goalkeeper Robert Green could only push onto a post and into the net.

The match itself ended up being a classic cup tie with the hosts making all the running early on but having to survive a onslaught in the closing stages.

Had they not won the major talking point would have been the decision to allow Piquionne’s goal but the Potters just deserved to edge it, although West Ham’s belated contribution was worthy of a mention.

Having had just over a week to reflect on their 3-0 Premier League defeat at Upton Park, Stoke came out all guns blazing from the kick-off, creating two good chances in the opening 90 seconds.

Jermaine Pennant’s right-wing delivery was missed by Jon Walters with Kenwyne Jones following up behind unable to get a decisive touch, but his second cross moments later picked out Etherington, but his powerful header was kept out by Green.

It was no surprise when Stoke took the lead in the 12th minute but what was amazing was the poor way in which West Ham failed to deal with a Rory Delap long throw.

When the ball into the six-yard area from the left touchline no-one picked up the run of centre-back Huth who planted a straightforward header past Green.

The hosts almost had a second when Walters set Jones racing through the inside-right channel but could not quite make up enough ground to reach the return ball across the six-yard box.

Stoke’s wingers Pennant and Etherington were causing all kinds of problems, the latter threatening to cut open them open again with a run from the halfway line.

The visitors were in desperate need of a route back into the game and they were literally handed it on the half-hour.

Thomas Hitzlsperger’s ball over the top saw Piquionne get beyond Huth but the striker blatantly used his upper arm to control the pass before lobbing it over Thomas Sorensen.

Stoke were outraged the goal was allowed to stand, but it was not without consequence for the scorer who soon limped off injured as a result of Huth’s challenge as he tried to prevent Piquionne applying the final touch.

A late rally saw Delap and Walters both force low saves out of Green near his left-hand post before Stoke boss Tony Pulis walked off at half-time leaving counterpart Avram Grant under no illusions of what he thought of Piquionne’s goal.

Within 13 seconds of the restart Stoke were presented with the opportunity to go ahead again when Scott Parker fouled Etherington as he tricked his way into the penalty area.

The former West Ham midfielder picked himself up but did not place the spot-kick far enough into the corner and Green dived to his left to pull off the save.

Stoke continued to look more threatening and Jones had a header cleared off the line by Carlton Cole as their domination at set-pieces continued.

When referee Jones eventually did spot a handball, Cole blocking Pennant’s free-kick, it proved to be equally as significant as the one he missed in the first half – and this time to Stoke’s benefit.

With the ball teed up just inches from the edge of the area Higginbotham smashed a low shot through the wall which was so powerful Green could only palm it on to the post and back into the net.

Substitute Robbie Keane almost surprised Sorensen with a near-post shot but where the key decision had gone for the Hammers in the first half, they enjoyed no such luck in the latter stages with James Tomkins claiming a penalty for a foul by Walters only to be penalised himself.

West Ham’s fading fortune was highlighted when Matthew Upson crashed a header against the crossbar with four minutes to go as Stoke hung on for only the fourth FA Cup semi-final in their history.

  • Pulis pleased with Wembley dateAfter the match, Stoke manager Tony Pulis said he was pleased controversy did not overshadow the club booking their first FA Cup semi-final appearance for 39 years.”We have been very unfortunate this year, we have copped quite a few (bad decisions) in the league,” Pulis said.”We were very good for 25 minutes and then when they get their first shot on goal from that it was disappointing. From where I was standing it looked a stone-banker handball.”Matty came out in the second half and missed a penalty and that knocks you down again but great credit to the players – for a lesser team that would have affected them.”For two and a half years at this club, since we were promoted, we have been written off. “We have got to three quarter-finals of cup competitions now we have a semi-final. We’ve finished 12th and 11th in the Premier League and the players and chairman deserve a hell of a lot of credit.”Stoke, who are into the last four for only the fourth time in their history, now face Bolton at Wembley”I think it is being disrespectful to Bolton to say it is the draw we wanted, we just wanted to win today,” added Pulis.”We will treat them with total respect. If you look at Bolton and their history, they have been a Premier League side a lot longer than us and have established Premier League players. We will respect them and we know it will be a tough game for us.”West Ham boss Avram Grant was disappointed with some of the decisions his side encountered in the second half, claiming James Tomkins should have had a penalty late on instead of being penalised for a foul on Jon Walters.He said he felt the referee tried to even things up after missing Piquionne’s handball.”I think maybe this is the reason the referee started the second half very strange,” he said in reference to the award of Stoke’s penalty. Until they scored [the second] goal he gave fouls, a penalty, everything for them.”It was a penalty for us at the end which he didn’t give. What happened with Tomkins was more bushido (the Japanese code of conduct for samurai warriors). Maybe he felt a little bit guilty. I think it was the effect of the first goal for us.”
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