Champions League Round Up – Arsenal
Henry the hero for Arsenal
A last-gasp strike from Thierry Henry ensured Arsenal FC advanced into the second phase of the UEFA Champions League Group C along with Panathinaikos FC after the London club beat RCD Mallorca 3-1 at Highbury.
Automatic qualification
Arsenal, having been beaten by Mallorca 1-0 in the opening group game, needed to beat the Spanish side by two clear goals to guarantee automatic qualification. Manager Arsène Wenger’s side, after dominating the opening period, looked to have grabbed that two-goal advantage just past the hour through efforts from Robert Pires and Dennis Bergkamp, their goals coming in the space of two minutes.
Quick thinking
But Mallorca, who had adopted a more ambitious approach after the restart, refused to buckle. And on 74 minutes Álvaro Novo, released by Alejandro Campano’s intelligent pass, rounded goalkeeper Richard Wright to pull the score back to 2-1.
Calm finish
In response, Arsenal threw everything forward and Pires had a goal ruled out for offside, just before Henry’s late intervention. Henry’s goal owed everything to the quick thinking of Giovanni van Bronckhorst. With seconds of the game remaining the Dutch international took a quick free-kick and delivered the ball to Henry. The Frenchman, who had been struggling with a groin injury in the game’s latter stages, calmly stroked the ball past Leo Franco to send Highbury stadium delirious.
Perfect crosses
In the opening period Arsenal had attempted to go through the middle of the Mallorca defence with some intricate passing. When those first two Arsenal goals finally arrived, however, the Spanish side’s defence were breached by crosses from Fredrik Ljungberg and Van Bronckhorst. First, on 61 minutes, the Swedish midfielder crossed from the right and Pires sidefooted the ball home from a difficult angle. Then two minutes later, from the other side of the pitch, Van Bronckhorst got to the by-line and delivered a perfect cross for his countryman to head the ball past Franco.
Relentless pressure
The first half had been so different as Arsenal huffed and puffed. With Mallorca content to sit back and soak up Arsenal’s pressure, Wenger’s side searched relentlessly for the opening goal. Henry, who has scored in four of Arsenal’s five games in this first group stage, frequently drifted out wide to the flanks, trying to make space for Bergkamp, who was playing just behind the French striker.
Cerebral strike
Henry and Bergkamp had Arsenal’s two best chances just before the interval. First Henry reacted the quickest to Ljungberg’s cross from the right, but the Frenchman’s shot went fizzing past the post. Bergkamp’s effort was more cerebral. The Dutchman flicked the ball past Nadal and spotting Franco off his line, chipped the Mallorca goalkeeper, but his shot went narrowly past the post.
Lone striker Luque
Mallorca looked to Alberto Luque to snatch a goal. The young striker was nearly released by Fatih Akyel’s long pass, but Sol Campbell made an important tackle to clear the danger. Luque’s other effort – a long-range shot from the halfway line – was easily gathered by Wright.
Champions League Round Up – Liverpool
Liverpool given a fright in Portugal
Liverpool FC’s passage into the next stage of the UEFA Champions League will have to wait at least a week after they were held to a 1-1 draw by Boavista FC at the Bessa stadium.
Liverpool still top
The English side remain top of Group B on nine points, but Boavista and BV Borussia Dortmund are now only a point behind on eight. Next week’s final group matches (FC Dynamo Kyiv v Boavista and Liverpool v Dortmund) will decide which two of the three teams make it through.
Early chance
Liverpool started by far the stronger of the two sides, forcing Boavista back from the off, closing them down fast in midfield and almost going ahead as early as the second minute when a Gary McAllister strike was tipped over the bar for a corner by goalkeeper Ricardo Soares.
Wrong-footed keeper
Even the loss of defender Sami Hyypiä with a hamstring injury on six minutes failed to quell their forward momentum, and in the 17th minute they went ahead. Robbie Fowler was dragged down by Paulo Turra on the edge of the penalty area, leaving Danny Murphy to float his free-kick expertly over the Boavista wall and into the net past a wrong-footed Soares.
Completely different team
Whatever coach Jaime Pacheco said to his players at half-time it certainly did the trick as Boavista were a completely different team after the break, holding possession for long periods and clinically probing the Liverpool defence while they searched for an opening.
Missed crucial chance
Liverpool’s sorties upfield were few and far between but they could have put the game beyond Boavista’s reach after 53 minutes when Emile Heskey’s instinctive right-foot shot was superbly saved by Soares. The miss proved significant as eight minutes later the Portuguese league leaders were level.
Headed equaliser
Erwin Sánchez’s corner from the right found Elpídio Pereira. He was able to outjump McAllister and send his powerful header past Danny Murphy on the goal-line and into the net.
Dominated possession
Although Boavista continued to dominate possession after the equaliser, they could not land the knockout punch on a Liverpool side that had looked solid throughout and proved itself expert at soaking up pressure.
Ireland Soccer News
McCarthy has a lot to learn in Tehran
Mick McCarthy will be starting from scratch when he sits down to size up the Republic of Ireland’s potential World Cup play-off opponents when he takes his seat at the Azadi stadium in Tehran (kick-off 3.0 Irish time) this afternoon. But the Ireland boss insisted yesterday that today’s game between Iran and the United Arab Emirates as well as next week’s return leg in Abu Dhabi affords him an unprecedented opportunity to assess in advance the challenge his side will face.
“I know absolutely nothing about them,” he told RTÉ television as he prepared to fly to Iran yesterday, “but I’m getting something that I never get. I’m getting the opportunity to watch our opponents both home and away which never happens so I’m not complaining.” Neither, as it happens is the UAE’s Dutch coach Tini Ruijs who feels that his side may be in a position to capitalise on the disquiet in the Iranian camp following last weekend’s surprise defeat by Bahrain.
Since the 3-1 loss which cost Iran automatic qualification for next summer’s World Cup finals there have been rumours of match rigging, riots in the country’s three largest cities and questions asked about manager Miroslav Blazevic’s position. Despite having been reported to say that he would sack Blazevic if the Bahrain game ended badly, though, Irianian Football Federation president, Mohsen Safai Farahani, who is also a member of the Iranian cabinet, sidestepped questions about the manager this week and blamed Sunday’s defeat on a string of poor performances by the country’s players.
IFF offical Abass Toraian added that the players were “crying and ashamed”, after the game and we’re determined to make amends today but the home side’s chances of placating their supporters this afternoon are not helped by the fact that three of their regular starters are suspended in the wake of the stormy Bahrain encounter. Another couple of Blazevic’s original squad have been sent back to their club’s after apparently making clear their displeasure at finding themselves on the bench for recent games.
Likely to be missed most are Hertha Berlin’s Ali Daei and his strike partner Alireza Vahedi Nikbakht both of whom are amongst the players serving one match bans. “Our defence will be relieved of some of the danger, particularly from corners,” said Ruijs, who went on to claim that his less fancied side might just be in a position to pull off a shock.
Kevin Kilbane’s chances of playing in Ireland’s World Cup play-off games in the middle of next month were described as “hit and miss” by a senior Sunderland official last night.
He injured his ankle in the recent defeat by Manchester United and the problem has since turned out to be more serious than initially expected. Reports that he is currently in plaster have been denied and it is still hoped that if he can get back into training next week then he will be fit enough to join up with McCarthy’s squad for the build up to the November 10th game in Lansdowne Road.
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