La Liga in the UEFA Champions League: A Recap

by Andy Pineda on October 1, 2009 · 0 comments

Photo courtesy of izalldos

Photo cour­tesy of izalldos

Tues­day and Wednes­day brought about Match Day 2 in the UEFA Cham­pi­ons League, and the four rep­re­sen­ta­tives from Spain had inter­est­ing ties that helped shape their respec­tive groups.  On Tues­day, Sevilla FC vis­ited Rangers FC at the Ibrox Sta­dium, where the Euro­pean night atmos­phere is sec­ond to none, buoy­ing their beloved Gers, and FC Barcelona hosted FK Dynamo Kyiv at the Camp Nou, where both teams headed into this clash with unde­feated records in both league and in Europe.  On Wednes­day, Real Madrid faced Olympique de Mar­seille at the San­ti­ago Bern­abéu, where Gabriel Heinze and Fer­nando Mori­entes played against their for­mer employ­ers in white, and Atlético Madrid tried to for­get their domes­tic trou­bles at the Está­dio do Dragão against FC Porto.

Rangers knocked Sevilla on their heels in the first half, keep­ing up with Sevilla’s pass­ing foot­ball as well as using their robust style to wear down the oppo­si­tion.  The height of the half cul­mi­nated in the 36th minute, when Abdoulay Konko tack­led Steven Nai­smith inside the penalty area, and ref­eree Jonas Eriks­son con­tin­ued play.  There was lit­tle doubt about the legit­i­macy of Naismith’s claim for a penalty, as Konko made no con­tact with the ball and clearly took out the ankle of Naismith.

Up to that point, Rangers was even with Sevilla, but a piv­otal call, or non-call in this case, changes the momen­tum of a match, and instead of a likely 1–0 to the home side and an extra boost to an already rap­tur­ous Ibrox crowd, Sevilla rode its bit of luck and scored four goals in a span of twenty-four min­utes in the sec­ond half to secure the three points and seize con­trol of Group G.  Rangers would ruin Andrés Palop’s clean sheet in the 88th minute by a Nacho Novo strike, a goal fully deserved for their valiant per­for­mance, but Sevilla is the class of this group and should cruise to first place at the end of the group stage.

Even though Barcelona was at home and dom­i­nated their five games in La Liga, they were wary of Dynamo Kyiv and their attack­ing threats of Oleh Husyev, Andriy Shevchenko and Artem Milevskiy.  Dynamo remained com­pet­i­tive for the open­ing fif­teen min­utes, but even­tu­ally the Barcelona Way over­shad­owed any attempt of Kyiv to pro­duce any sig­nif­i­cant buildup play.  When Dynamo had pos­ses­sion, either Barcelona took it away quickly, or they resorted to long balls.  Barcelona forced them out of char­ac­ter, as they do with most teams, and their pos­ses­sion strat­egy cre­ated a plethora of chances, two of which they con­verted for a sim­ple 2–0 win.  The blau­grana will not be amused with their abnor­mal amount of give­aways or the lack of fin­ish­ing that could have spelled another two to three goals, but a solid team effort and a com­fort­able 2–0 win sends Barcelona to the top of the group.

Real Madrid and Manuel Pel­le­grini tweaked the for­ma­tion and lineup for Wednes­day evening’s fix­ture with Mar­seille by form­ing a three-man front line with the three big sign­ings of the off­sea­son: Karim Ben­zema, Cris­tiano Ronaldo, and Kaká.  With Guti behind the three as the roam­ing cre­ative force, there was no room for Raúl in the start­ing XI.  At the moment, Pellegrini’s rota­tional pol­icy has not cre­ated any prob­lems in the dress­ing room, and if they con­tinue to win, the play­ers will con­tinue to buy into him.  It is clear that Pel­le­grini does not quite have the grasp of how to shape this Madrid team in the best way pos­si­ble as of yet, and the first forty-five min­utes showed a work in progress despite its blis­ter­ing start domes­ti­cally.  A com­bi­na­tion of Marseille’s work rate and dis­ci­pline and Real Madrid’s ten­ta­tive­ness and lack of under­stand­ing within the attack­ing trio led to a dull first half.  In spite of a 57/43 pos­ses­sion ratio in favor of Los Blan­cos, Mar­seille was on equal foot­ing, can­celed out Madrid for the most part, and gen­er­ated chances of their own.

Sim­i­lar to the Sevilla-Rangers match, where Sevilla changed the momen­tum in a short time gap, Real Madrid tal­lied three times in a span of six min­utes, includ­ing a penalty result­ing from a sec­ond yel­low card for Mar­seille cen­tral defender Souley­mane Diawara that sealed any chance for Mar­seille to play their way back into the match.  Replays showed that Diawara made con­tact with the ball first, but the appar­ent sever­ity of the chal­lenge on Ronaldo forced ref­eree Mar­tin Hans­son to flash the yel­low card and send Diawara off.  With AC Milan suf­fer­ing a shock 0–1 defeat at the San Siro by the hands of FC Zürich, Real Madrid has com­plete con­trol of Group C.   This sea­son, Madrid has had a ten­dency to let the oppo­si­tion hang around and not step on their throats when they have the chance, but as the chem­istry con­tin­ues to develop and the famil­iar­ity increases, expect Real to salt these types of games away sooner and with more verve.

Poor Atlético Madrid.  They need some alone time to fig­ure out their prob­lems and defi­cien­cies.  In the lime­light of the Cham­pi­ons League and La Liga, how­ever, all their frail­ties are shown for every­one to see, and they can­not hide.  Their Cham­pi­ons League matchup with FC Porto could not come at a bet­ter time.  Already strug­gling in the league, Atlético saw this match as an oppor­tu­nity to leave their past trou­bles behind and start anew.  Even though Porto was a qual­ity side who advanced to the quar­ter­fi­nals of the Cham­pi­ons League last sea­son by defeat­ing Atlético on the away goals rule, a pos­i­tive result could spark a much-needed boost within the team.

An omi­nous sign came in the 26th minute when an appar­ent groin injury to backup goal­keeper Roberto forced man­ager Abel Resino to sub­sti­tute in eighteen-year-old Atlético Madrid prod­uct David de Gea for his first senior appear­ance.  Through the first 70+ min­utes, the match was lively yet scrappy with much con­ges­tion in the mid­field.  Porto had the slight edge, but there was hardly any­thing between them.  Then a slice a magic engi­neered by Porto swung the match in their favor.

In the 75th minute, Fal­cao scored an incred­i­ble goal to take the 1–0 lead.  Raul Meire­les started the move with a pinged cross-field ball to Hulk in the box.  Hulk then blasted his shot at the right near post but de Gea brushed it aside.  The rebound came straight back to Hulk, how­ever, but he com­pletely mishit it.  He was able to recover, set­tle the ball, and square a pass to Fal­cao, who attempted a dar­ing back heel and con­verted the shot to take a late 1–0 lead.  Los Col­choneros did not con­va­lesce and even­tu­ally con­ceded a sec­ond goal to suf­fer another defeat.  Now they have to travel to Stam­ford Bridge to con­front an in-form Chelsea team who will look to secure a likely spot into the knock­out stages with a win over Atlético on Match Day 3.  Abel Resino did get a pub­lic vote of con­fi­dence from the Atlético brass, but that kind of endorse­ment usu­ally means very lit­tle, and more results like this will lead to his sack­ing sooner rather than later.

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