La Liga Jornada 33 Review: Tenerife Rises to Within One Point of Relegation Salvation

by Andy Pineda on April 19, 2010 · 0 comments

Nino La Liga Jornada 33 Review: Tenerife Rises to Within One Point of Relegation SalvationNINO, NINO, NINO!” chanted Los Chichar­reros in the Esta­dio Heliodoro Rodríguez López.  When shouted aloud, the chant sounded like an onrush­ing ambu­lance through a traffic-jammed street, and for Getafe, who fell vic­tim to the bril­liance of Nino, they needed the assis­tance of EMT workers.

After a 0–0 draw at home to Real Val­ladolid last Sat­ur­day, a result most favored by new Val­ladolid entre­nador and for­mer Tener­ife head man Javier Clemente, Tener­ife stood seven points behind Málaga for the final place of safety in La Liga.  The crit­i­cisms laid upon this team fell squarely on José Luis Oltra’s naïve tac­tics.  In the same way that Tony Mowbray’s West Bromwich Albion team in last year’s Pre­mier League was deemed too naïve as they were rel­e­gated to the Coca-Cola Cham­pi­onship, Oltra’s Tener­ife incor­po­rated an open style that needed clin­i­cal fin­ish­ers in the front line to be suc­cess­ful because there would be sev­eral chances for their oppo­nents to cap­i­tal­ize on the counter-attack.

Nino and Ale­jan­dro Alfaro scored forty-nine goals between them in the Segunda División last sea­son, and Nino’s twenty-nine goals earned him the Pichichi tro­phy as the high­est goal scorer in the sec­ond divi­sion.  Sev­en­teen goals for the pair in the top flight this sea­son is not a bad return, but when their team has con­ceded the most goals in La Liga, sev­en­teen is sim­ply not enough.

No sin­gle match illus­trates Tenerife’s frus­tra­tion more than their 0–5 hum­bling by Barcelona at home at the dawn of the new year.  Through the first thirty-five min­utes, the islanders com­pletely out­played the Blau­grana in every facet of the game, but Alfaro failed to exploit three won­der­ful oppor­tu­ni­ties, two of them cre­ated by Nino.

Tenerife’s high defen­sive line ini­tially sur­prised Barça and put them off their game, but this gam­ble would soon prove to be sui­ci­dal, as Bojan Krkic’s blis­ter­ing pace left the Tener­ife defense in sham­bles, and Lionel Messi fin­ished Bojan’s cut­back pass with aplomb.

Sucker punched in the gut, the pru­dent play would have been to drop deeper and work more on the counter-attack.  Call him brave or declare him stub­born, Oltra kept to his strat­egy, and at full­time, Tener­ife con­ceded five goals, includ­ing an Eze­quiel Luna own goal and a Messi hat-trick.

While José Luis Oltra has some­what toned down his offen­sively aggres­sive tac­tics since that match, the flair asso­ci­ated with this team has not left them.  Con­se­quently, Tener­ife still had not won away from home all sea­son, an unwanted feat only shared by a few teams in all of the Euro­pean leagues.

Tener­ife righted this wrong on Tues­day evening when they went to Asturias and defeated Sport­ing Gijón 0–2 with that same end-to-end men­tal­ity instilled by Oltra.  Unfor­tu­nately for Tener­ife, their com­pa­tri­ots in the bot­tom three, Xerez and Real Val­ladolid, also won in the mid-week.  Rac­ing de San­tander, one of the teams tee­ter­ing just above the rel­e­ga­tion zone, scored a 3–1 vic­tory over Espanyol with the help of two deserved penal­ties, both of whom were scored by Mohammed Tchité, to fur­ther com­pli­cate the sit­u­a­tion for Tenerife.

Málaga, how­ever, heeded the bot­tom three’s protes­ta­tions of slow­ing down their point accu­mu­la­tion.  Two points in their last five con­tests left the Andalu­cians only three points above Tener­ife and the drop zone.

Tener­ife had to keep their focus on Getafe and away from the other matches affect­ing their stand­ing. No one under­stood this more than Juan Fran­cisco Martínez, oth­er­wise known as Nino.

Nino has played every minute in every match for Tener­ife this sea­son, an aston­ish­ing accom­plish­ment in this mod­ern age, where squad rota­tion and injuries beset even the fittest of play­ers.  Stand­ing at a rel­a­tively minus­cule 5′ 7″, a cen­ter for­ward like Nino would not strike fear into the hearts of cen­tral defend­ers.  Tossed around often due to his slight frame, Nino fought through these nicks and knocks to lead the line every sin­gle minute he plays on the pitch.  With the sea­son on the line, his hard work came to fruition with a hat-trick that will be remem­bered by Los Chichar­reros for many years.

After Pedro León scored early for Getafe, Nino’s equal­izer on the half-hour mark was the result, from all the dif­fer­ent ways he can score, of a header!  A seri­ously demented bet­ting man would have gone away with buck­et­ful of cash for pre­dict­ing a Nino header, but Román Martínez’s per­fectly weighted cross from deep in the right flank found a com­pletely unmarked Nino in mid­dle of the penalty area.  David Belenguer and David Cortés stood frozen as Nino rose in the air between them.  Of course, it would have to be unchal­lenged for Nino to score a header, but the box score will not indi­cate that he had enough room to build a house with all the space that the Getafe cen­tral defend­ers gave him.

His sec­ond goal to give Tener­ife the 2–1 lead showed his tech­ni­cal abil­ity to con­trol a ball in the air.  Marc Bertrán headed a hope­ful, loop­ing ball into the penalty box, and noth­ing seemed to come of it; how­ever, Nino kept him­self onside while the Getafe defend­ers were head­ing for­ward, and Nino found him­self all alone in the box.  He had to take down the lofted header softly, and his first touch was noth­ing short of immac­u­late.  It took a bounce, and he whacked it to the left far post, where Jordi Cod­ina could only watch as it passed by him into the back of the net.

Getafe would score to even the game at 2–2 sev­eral min­utes later, and it could have been a crush­ing blow to this club that con­tin­ues to fight for its La Liga life.  Nino would have none of that neg­a­tive behav­ior, and in the 76th minute, exactly a minute after Javier Cas­quero headed the tying goal for Getafe, Nino com­pleted his hat-trick to whisk Tener­ife back into a lead they would not relinquish.

Ale­jan­dro Alfaro and Nino com­bined yet another time, with Alfaro per­fect­ing a through ball that sliced through the Getafe defen­sive line.  Nino still had work to do, as Jordi Cod­ina rushed off his line to attempt to clear the ball away from Nino out­side of his area.  His third goal exhib­ited his calm com­po­sure, drib­bling to his left to avoid a slid­ing, lung­ing Cod­ina and slot­ting the ball into the unguarded goal.

Three goals.  Three dif­fer­ent goals.  One out­come: three points for a thank­ful Tenerife.

Tener­ife would find out later that Málaga and Real Val­ladolid would draw 0–0, and Xerez could only draw 2–2 at home against Rac­ing de San­tander, so the Nino hat-trick meant more than an iso­lated three points.  Tener­ife is now only one point behind Málaga for the magic 17th posi­tion, and 16th is not too far away with Real Zaragoza only two points ahead of El Tete with five games remaining.

In a place where two well-known British names, Gill Hornby and a cer­tain Barcelona striker from the 1980s, were forced to stay in Tener­ife a lit­tle longer due to the Ice­landic vol­canic ash cloud, they both could have enjoyed a beau­ti­ful after­noon at the Esta­dio Heliodoro Rodríguez López to wit­ness two des­per­ate teams in one of the pre­mier matches of the sec­ond half of the season.

Riki-raca, zumba-raca, sim-bomba; ra-ra-ra, Tener­ife, Tener­ife, y nadie mas!” the fans sung through­out the match and after their team came out vic­to­ri­ous.  The first part is merely a set of rhyming words, but the lat­ter half trans­lates as, “Tener­ife, Tener­ife, and no one else.”  If Tener­ife rises above the rel­e­ga­tion zone and extends their stay in La Liga, Los Chichar­rones may alter this chant in honor of Nino, “Nino, Nino, y nadie mas!”

Fueras de Juego

- Sevilla goal­keeper Andrés Palop might be bet­ter with his head than his hands, and his hands are quite superb.  His best indi­vid­ual moment in his career occurred in the Round of 16 of the 2006-07 UEFA Cup when his last-gasp header sent the tie against Shakhtar Donetsk into extra time, which Sevilla would win 3–2.  Sevilla would go on and lift the UEFA Cup tro­phy for the sec­ond con­sec­u­tive year by defeat­ing Espanyol on penal­ties in the final.

In the early Sat­ur­day kick­off, Sevilla led Sport­ing Gijón 2–0 when Sport­ing cen­tral defender Gré­gory Arno­lin headed the ball on tar­get from a cor­ner.  The header came so quickly from a short dis­tance that Palop could not get his hands up in time to parry it away.  Instead, he decided on the next best option: counter Grégory’s header with a header of his own.  It was just as effec­tive as if he used his hands to slap it away, and Sevilla would even­tu­ally add a third to win 3–0.  In dire sit­u­a­tions, Sevilla should use Andrés Palop as a cen­ter forward.

- If one would want to intro­duce peo­ple to the flair and skill of Span­ish foot­ball, do not show them a tape of the drab 0–0 draw between Deportivo La Coruña and Almería from this Sun­day after­noon.  Two teams going nowhere, and the match fit their paths.  When there were decent oppor­tu­ni­ties to score, both teams scorned them with such poor tech­nique that it was lit­er­ally laugh­able.  The fans at El Ria­zor did not share the same mirth.

- The cham­pagne for Barcelona’s La Liga title can be put back on ice for the time being, as their 0–0 draw at derby neigh­bors Espanyol, com­bined with Real Madrid’s 2–0 win over Valen­cia, means that Real has shaved Barça’s lead to a mere point.  Pep Guardiola’s 4–4-2 did not work against Espanyol, and Inter Milan boss José Mour­inho surely took some notes on how Espanyol flooded the mid­field to pre­vent Xavi’s dis­tri­b­u­tion across the final third of the pitch.  The absence of Andrés Ini­esta may loom large for the Blau­grana as they con­tinue their drive for a domes­tic and Euro­pean cup dou­ble for the sec­ond straight year.

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La Liga Jor­nada 33 Review: Tener­ife Rises to Within One Point of Rel­e­ga­tion Sal­va­tion, 5.0 out of 5 based on 1 rating

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