Showing posts with label Carling Cup. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Carling Cup. Show all posts
Tuesday, March 1, 2011
Weekend in Review
Arsenal Heartbreak... Again
Highlights
It's been nearly six years since Arsenal last won a trophy. And Sunday's heartbreaking 2-1 loss to Birmingham in the Carling Cup Final means they'll have to wait a little longer to grasp silverware.
The defeat left the Gunners in despair. But the way they lost will hurt even more, as a comedy of errors involving Laurent Koscielny and Wojciech Szczesny in the final minutes allowed for an extremely soft game-winning goal in the 88th.
The Gunners had the more chances overall of the two teams as well. But Ben Foster came up with a man of the match performance in goal, while the underdogs also must be credited for turning in one of their best shifts of the season.
In typical Cup Final fashion, the match was played at a high pace throughout. And Birmingham should have had a penalty just three minutes in when Szczesny took out the legs of Lee Bowyer in the box for what was clear cut penalty kick. But the midfielder had been incorrectly ruled offsides and Arsenal escaped.
Although Birmingham started off on the front foot, it was Arsenal who took control during an exciting opening 20 minutes.
Andrei Arshavin had the first opportunity for the favorites, spinning around a defender and firing a left-footed blast directly at Foster, who did well to save.
Johan Djourou should have done better with two headed chances from consecutive corners in the 10th minute. But he missed both attempts badly.
Samir Nasri did well to juke his defender and set up on his right foot in the box in the 14th. But he blasted his attempt over the near post from a difficult angle.
The Blues were right in the match, looking dangerous on the counterattack and set pieces. They took the lead via the latter in the 28th minute. A nice corner found the head of Roger Johnson at the top of the box, who flicked towards goal as the Arsenal defense scrambled to get into position. Nikola Zigic reacted quickest, sneaking in between a host of defenders, and heading past the onrushing Szczesny from close range.
Arsenal came back immediately afterward and nearly equalized on a header from Robin Van Persie.
Birmingham had Arsene Wenger's side on the ropes thereafter. The Gunners needed several last ditch clearances on dangerous crosses as the presence of 6-7 Zigic was clearly giving the back four issues. He nearly netted his second in the 34th, finding a quick opening in the box only to see his shot pushed away by Szczesny.
With their backs against the wall, Arsenal managed to get back into the match, and netted the equalizer through Van Persie in the 39th. It all started when Jack Wilshere's long range effort slammed off the crossbar and back into play. But the Gunners gave BFC no time to exhale, as Arshavin ended up with the ball and turned Liam Ridgewell before crossing brilliantly onto the right foot of the Dutchman, who buried his full volley attempt home.
The equalizer was not all good news for Arsenal. Van Persie's right knee slammed into Martin Jiranek during the goal. The injury would force him off the pitch in the 70th minute for Nicklas Bendtner.
The two teams went to the half having both showed their best football over the first 45. And there was plenty more great play to come.
Tomas Rosicky came close in the 47th on a low volley from a Sagna cross.
Birmingham came within a whisker of their second goal in the 58th when Keith Fahey fired past Szczesny and off the post.
Both sides slowed down over the next ten minutes. Birmingham occasionally looked dangerous on the counterattack but were typically stifled by some valiant Arsenal defending. Meanwhile, the Gunners were controlling the ball but not creating much of anything.
Arsenal started to come to life in the 74th and 75th minutes when Ben Foster thwarted efforts from Samir Nasri and Bendtner.
The Gunners continued to look the most likely to score. In the 78th, Bendtner created space in the box, but his right footed blast was partially blocked and saved by Foster.
One minute later, substitute Marouane Chamakh got free and played the ball across the face of goal just past the outstretched Rosicky and Bendtner.
Nasri was again involved in the Arsenal onslaught, but Foster did well to parry his curling his from 22-yards in the 80th.
And then, from out of nowhere, the Gunners found themselves behind with virtually no time left. A miscommunication between Laurent Koscielny and Szczesny saw the Pole spill the ball in the box. It fell to Obafemi Martins, who could hardly believe his luck as he passed the ball into the wide open goal for the winner.
What a Final!
First and foremost, you have to credit to Birmingham. Although much of the talk from the match has surrounded Arsenal's most recent implosion, one must realize that Alex McCleish's team were game from the opening whistle, creating chances and doing well to exploit their size advantage via Zigic. They put the Arsenal back line under pressure and made things increasingly difficult for them. In all honesty, they were unfortunate to be down at the half as Arsenal's equalizer had certainly come against the run of play.
Zigic appears to be coming into his own after a rocky start in England. He has the size to give defenders hell, as you can never forget where he is. Ideally, that would open up space for others as well, but his addition had yielded mixed results this year. That's all changed a bit recently, as the Serbian has scored four goals in five matches. Surely it's no coincidence that the results have taken a turn for the better during that time. The Blues have lost just once over the period, moved closer safety in the EPL, and now have some silverware to add to their trophy case.
You've also got to heap the praise upon goalkeeper Ben Foster. The Manchester United outcast was viewed as damaged goods by some. But McLeish was right to give the promising youngster a chance and it's paid massive dividends. If not for his heroics, the Martins goal doesn't even matter.
As for Arsenal, this defeat was of the devastating variety. Tears were streaming from the eyes of young Wilshere, whilst several players fell to ground in agony after the final whistle. The reaction was steep for a team still heavily involved in three other competitions. But finally winning a trophy would have been a huge boost to the Gunners' psyche, and would have signaled to everyone that all the promise of Wenger's side is finally starting to yield great results. Instead they have yet another dissapointing defeat to think about, and that will surely get everyone asking questions about their mental strength for the umpteenth time.
How the Gunners respond from this is absolutely crucial. There is still plenty of season left and there are some massive fixtures right around the corner. They face an FA Cup replay with Leyton Orient tomorrow, and then head back to the league on Saturday before the crucial second leg against Barcelona at the Camp Nou next week.
To Arsenal's credit, they have responded well from tough results this season, but surely this defeat was the toughest of the season to swallow, and we've seen them fall apart after similar misfortunes in years past.
United Roll
Wigan entered Saturday's matchup having lost 14 in a row to league leading Manchester United. It's 15 straight defeats now after a convincing 4-0 trouncing extended United's lead back to four points over Arsenal, who had previously closed the gap to a single point after a win in mid-week.
The match surely would have been different had the Latics finished their chances in the first half. Victor Moses broke through in the 13th down the left side, but saw his near-post effort saved by the shoulder of a charging Edwin van der Sar.
United showed the finishing touch that the hosts could not in the 17th. A nice one-two between Rooney and Nani saw the winger in down the left side, and he rolled a beautiful ball across the box for Javier Hernandez, who easily slotted home for the lead.
Wigan should have equalized just moments later. A nice flick from Hugo Rodollega left James McCarthy all alone at the far post, but again van der Sar came up big and saved the strike from short range.
Holding a 1-0 lead, the visitors began to take over. Nani nearly gave them a spectacular two goal lead when his lazer of a strike slammed off the crossbar and bounced out in the 29th minute.
The second half was a simply brilliant performance from Sir Alex Ferguson's side.
The visitors were fortunate not be two goals down early on after United missed a host of chances.
The first opportunity came through Nani, who cut back onto his left foot in the box, but should have done better and missed wide.
United kept pressing, and they nailed the clincher in the 74th. Rooney did well to play Hernandez through behind the leaky Wigan defense, and "Chicharito" did well to control and settle himself for the finish.
United poured it on afterwards. Darron Gibson's long ball hit Dimitar Berbatov with one defender to beat, and he passed across the box to Rooney for an easy tap-in to make it 3-0.
Fabio scored the fourth in the 87th, taking down a long ball from close range before driving home the score.
It was another impressive victory for the Red Devils, who appear to be heading into their best form of the season as we speak. Things may well have been different had McCarthy or Moses been more clinical in the first half, but United settled in nicely after the first goal and took complete control of the match.
The first half may have been a little dicey, but Man U got exactly what they wanted after the break. Ferfuson's side controlled possession and pressed on until the pressure was simply too much to handle for Wigan.
United fans also have to be thrilled to see Wayne Rooney coming on strong. The frontman was heavily involved in three of the four goals. You could see the Wigan defense was beginning to scramble when he had possession in the second half, unsure of whether he was going to run at the back four and take a defender on, or distribute to United's more dangerous offensive players (i.e. Nani, Berbatov, Hernandez). When Rooney is rolling like that, he's as good as anyone in the world, and United will hope the performance at the DW is one of many to come over the rest of the year.
Madman Mancini
The bizarre season at Eastlands continued on Sunday, as Man City turned in a lackluster 1-1 draw against Fulham.
Mario Balotelli opened up the scoring for City in the 26th, notching a fantastic long shot that came against the run of play.
The Whites came out of the break strong and quickly equalized through Damien Duff.
The home side looked poor as they tried to take the lead back, creating very little and playing at a slow and listless pace. The poor result saw City get booed off the pitch by the home fans. Considering the draw came at home against a team that has a dreadful away record, they probably deserved it.
City just a frustrating team to watch at this point. All of that quality is yet to translate into a truly great run of form.
I have to wonder whether the tactics of Roberto Mancini match the personnel within the squad. We're talking about a team that has spent big bucks on the likes of Carlos Tevez, David Silva, Balottelli, Edin Dzeko and James Milner, yet hired a manager that wants his teams to defend first and foremost.
If you ask me, Mancini is not a bad manager. In fact, I'd say he's a borderline excellent tactician and his success in Italy speaks volumes. But this club is not a good fit for him. Yesterday, he strangely substituted Patrick Viera for Dzeko 15 minutes into the half, shoring up the center of midfield and defense in a deadlocked match where his team needed the three points. Did Mancini really think a 1-1 draw against average Fulham was an acceptable result?
In the end, City will find themselves in yet another dogfight for a Champions League spot. In my opinion, Mancini should be shown the door even if they do qualify. Not so much because they have greatly underachived this season, but because they need an increasingly attacking minded manager who gives Sheik Mansour's lucrative signings more freedom on the pitch.
Germany and Spain Wrapped Up?
What do Borussia Dortmund and Barcelona have in common? Well, both look to have already wrapped up silverware in their domestic leagues after massive results over the weekend.
Young Dortmund has been a bit sloppy recently, as their double-digit point lead in the league may have left them overconfident. But they reminded everyone how they jumped out to that lead in the first place with a master class performance against defending champions Bayern Munich. The 3-1 victory upped the gap to 16 points over Bayern, and 12 over second place Bayer Leverkusen, who drew 2-2 on Sunday.
If you haven't watched Dortmund yet, you're missing out. They have a fantastic young lineup with rising stars such as Nuri Sahin, Kevin Grosskreutz and more Shinji Kagawa.
Sahin is my favorite of the bunch. He's a versatile center midfielder that does all the dirty work. But he's also a major threat going forward with a dynamite long range shot (just look at this cracker he scored against Bayern), coupled with a deft touch and great vision/clever distribution. Trust me, this guy is going to be doing big things in the years to come, and I wouldn't be surprised at all to see one of the big boys from England make a move for the young Turk.
In La Liga, Barcelona cruised to another "routine" 3-0 win in Spain. Meantime, Real Madrid were poor in a scoreless draw with Deportivo La CORUNA. They trail the Catalan Giants by seven points. In a league where dropped points are few and far between for the top two clubs, one must think that Barca are very close to wrapping up this race for good.
Wednesday, January 12, 2011
Recaps
Recaps: Ipswich Shocks Arsenal, Liverpool Nightmare Continues
Carling Cup Semifinal First Leg: Ipswich 1-0 Arsenal
Ipswich Town pulled off one of the shocks of the season, as the club in crisis defeated the EPL big boys just days after receiving a 7-0 drubbing from Chelsea and firing their manager.
A well-taken goal on the break from Tamas Priskin won it for the hosts in the 78th minute, sending a capacity crowd at Portman Road into delirium. The result was well deserved for the underdogs, who outplayed a close to full strength Arsenal Squad and looked the more likely of the two sides to score throughout much of the match.
The Carling Cup was once a competition where Arsene Wenger has chosen to feature his young players. That has not been the case this year, as he and AFC are hungrier than ever to win their first trophy since '05. That showed with the starting lineup, which featured the top center back pairing of Djourou and Koscielny, Fabregas and Wilshere in the midfield, while Arshavin and Walcott got the starts on the wings and Bendtner remained in the lineup up front after starting on the weekend. Denilson slid into defensive midfield to replace Alex Song, while Kieran Gibbs subbed in for Gael Clichy at left back and Eboue started on the right to replace the suspended Bacary Sagna.
With a fine lineup at his disposal, the Gunners got off to a flying start before faltering progressively over the first 45 minutes. Some fine passing allowed them to penetrate the Ipswich box several times over the first few minutes, but they were unable to get on the end of anything.
Then the Blues fought back, keeping the visitors out of their final third and looking more and more dangerous on the attack. But they struggled to find the quality to create a real chance, and were forced to hold their collective breaths when Theo Walcott had two opportunities in the 33rd and 34th minutes. He opted to pass across the box to Fabgreas on the first chance, but the pass was just in front of the captain. Then he took one nicely out of the air before his left footed shot was easily stopped by Fulop.
Ipswich looked the more likely to score in the final ten minutes of the half, and the Gunners looked rattled. Connor Wickham's cross sailed just over the head of David Norris late on in the first half, and any contact from the skipper probably would have done the job.
Arsenal tried to restore their grip on the game to begin the second half. Fabregas opened up the second 45 minutes strongly after a dreadful first half. His ball over the top found Arshavin behind the defense. However, the Russian's shot from a few steps inside the box was at a tough angle, and his left-footed strike sailed well over.
But the night was to belong to Ipswich. And they quickly reasserted themselves. The Blues had two crosses cleared away in the 52nd minute, and Djourou managed to block a shot from Connor Wickham soon after.
Wickham nearly scored a surprising opener for the hosts, creating space for hhimself from 25 yards before curling his shot just wide of the far post.
Fabregas' nightmare evening continued, as an awful giveaway gave Mark Kennedy the ball at midfield, and his subsequent chip would have beaten Szczesny but it lacked enough power, as the 20-year old was able to backtrack and make a comfortable save.
The Spaniard was at fault once again in the 59th when a lovely chip from Bendtner found him alone inside the box, but he tried to volley the ball across the goal with defenders bearing down on him when he perhaps could have settled and shot.
Priskin had a golden opportunity in the 62nd. Jaime Peters' long ball out of the back split the Arsenal center backs. But Priskin failed to control the bouncing ball, and Djourou was able to recover and clear for a corner from just outside the 6-yard box.
A poor clearance left Wickham open from distance moments later, but he scuffed his shot wide.
Fulop would make two crucial saves on Walcott over the final 20 minutes. First a nice one-two between the winger and Fabregas put him in behind the defense on the right, but Fulop quickly cut off the angle and then saved after Walcott attempted to chip him.
Fabregas missed the Gunners' biggest chance of the match in the 77th. Substitute Alex Song played Gibbs down the left side, and the youngster's cross just missed the head of an onrushing Chamakh before falling right to Fabregas inside the 6-yard box with the goal at his mercy. But he reacted slowly, and the ball bounced off his knee and over the goal.
Ipswich would make Walcott and Fabregas pay for their miscues soon after, taking a shock 1-0 lead in the 78th.
An awkward turnover from Denilson fell to Colin Healy, who quickly found Priskin behind the defense. This time the Hungarian took his chance brilliantly, taking several touches and holding off Djourou before sliding the ball low past Szczesny and into the far corner.
Arsenal looked dangerous in the final ten minutes. However, they failed to break through against a heroic Ipswich Defense.
But there were chances.
First a fine touch inside the 18 from Chamakh set up a shot on his left foot and Fulop spilled the strike momentarily before pouncing just in time.
Walcott was played through and had a similar one-on-one to his earlier attempt from the right side of the box, but Fulop once again saved his try to chip.
Ipswich had the final chance of the match when a fantastic punt from Fulop landed on the feet of Carlos Edwards down the right wing. He advanced into the box but saw his shot saved from an acute angle.
EPL: Blackpool 2-1 Liverpool
Conditions continued to worsen for Liverpool, as they suffered their tenth loss of the season, and fourth time in five games.
It all started so promisingly in Kenny Dalglish's first Premiership match in charge. Fernando Torres opened up the scoring in just the third minute, blasting a shot top shelf at a difficult angle from the right side of the box.
But the home side equalized nine minutes later when Gary Taylor-Fletcher got behind the Liverpool defense down the middle, and slotted past Pepe Reina.
Blackpool won it in the 69th. After Liverpool cleared their lines from a corner, a long ball into the box found the ball of Ian Evatt, who headed across goal to a wide open D.J. Campbell, who finished well from close-range.
The win saw the Tangerines surpass Liverpool in the table, upping their point total to 28, which is good for ninth place. Meanwhile, the Reds' nightmare season continues, they now sit in 13th place, just four points above the relegation zone.
Carling Cup Semifinal First Leg: Ipswich 1-0 Arsenal
Ipswich Town pulled off one of the shocks of the season, as the club in crisis defeated the EPL big boys just days after receiving a 7-0 drubbing from Chelsea and firing their manager.
A well-taken goal on the break from Tamas Priskin won it for the hosts in the 78th minute, sending a capacity crowd at Portman Road into delirium. The result was well deserved for the underdogs, who outplayed a close to full strength Arsenal Squad and looked the more likely of the two sides to score throughout much of the match.
The Carling Cup was once a competition where Arsene Wenger has chosen to feature his young players. That has not been the case this year, as he and AFC are hungrier than ever to win their first trophy since '05. That showed with the starting lineup, which featured the top center back pairing of Djourou and Koscielny, Fabregas and Wilshere in the midfield, while Arshavin and Walcott got the starts on the wings and Bendtner remained in the lineup up front after starting on the weekend. Denilson slid into defensive midfield to replace Alex Song, while Kieran Gibbs subbed in for Gael Clichy at left back and Eboue started on the right to replace the suspended Bacary Sagna.
With a fine lineup at his disposal, the Gunners got off to a flying start before faltering progressively over the first 45 minutes. Some fine passing allowed them to penetrate the Ipswich box several times over the first few minutes, but they were unable to get on the end of anything.
Then the Blues fought back, keeping the visitors out of their final third and looking more and more dangerous on the attack. But they struggled to find the quality to create a real chance, and were forced to hold their collective breaths when Theo Walcott had two opportunities in the 33rd and 34th minutes. He opted to pass across the box to Fabgreas on the first chance, but the pass was just in front of the captain. Then he took one nicely out of the air before his left footed shot was easily stopped by Fulop.
Ipswich looked the more likely to score in the final ten minutes of the half, and the Gunners looked rattled. Connor Wickham's cross sailed just over the head of David Norris late on in the first half, and any contact from the skipper probably would have done the job.
Arsenal tried to restore their grip on the game to begin the second half. Fabregas opened up the second 45 minutes strongly after a dreadful first half. His ball over the top found Arshavin behind the defense. However, the Russian's shot from a few steps inside the box was at a tough angle, and his left-footed strike sailed well over.
But the night was to belong to Ipswich. And they quickly reasserted themselves. The Blues had two crosses cleared away in the 52nd minute, and Djourou managed to block a shot from Connor Wickham soon after.
Wickham nearly scored a surprising opener for the hosts, creating space for hhimself from 25 yards before curling his shot just wide of the far post.
Fabregas' nightmare evening continued, as an awful giveaway gave Mark Kennedy the ball at midfield, and his subsequent chip would have beaten Szczesny but it lacked enough power, as the 20-year old was able to backtrack and make a comfortable save.
The Spaniard was at fault once again in the 59th when a lovely chip from Bendtner found him alone inside the box, but he tried to volley the ball across the goal with defenders bearing down on him when he perhaps could have settled and shot.
Priskin had a golden opportunity in the 62nd. Jaime Peters' long ball out of the back split the Arsenal center backs. But Priskin failed to control the bouncing ball, and Djourou was able to recover and clear for a corner from just outside the 6-yard box.
A poor clearance left Wickham open from distance moments later, but he scuffed his shot wide.
Fulop would make two crucial saves on Walcott over the final 20 minutes. First a nice one-two between the winger and Fabregas put him in behind the defense on the right, but Fulop quickly cut off the angle and then saved after Walcott attempted to chip him.
Fabregas missed the Gunners' biggest chance of the match in the 77th. Substitute Alex Song played Gibbs down the left side, and the youngster's cross just missed the head of an onrushing Chamakh before falling right to Fabregas inside the 6-yard box with the goal at his mercy. But he reacted slowly, and the ball bounced off his knee and over the goal.
Ipswich would make Walcott and Fabregas pay for their miscues soon after, taking a shock 1-0 lead in the 78th.
An awkward turnover from Denilson fell to Colin Healy, who quickly found Priskin behind the defense. This time the Hungarian took his chance brilliantly, taking several touches and holding off Djourou before sliding the ball low past Szczesny and into the far corner.
Arsenal looked dangerous in the final ten minutes. However, they failed to break through against a heroic Ipswich Defense.
But there were chances.
First a fine touch inside the 18 from Chamakh set up a shot on his left foot and Fulop spilled the strike momentarily before pouncing just in time.
Walcott was played through and had a similar one-on-one to his earlier attempt from the right side of the box, but Fulop once again saved his try to chip.
Ipswich had the final chance of the match when a fantastic punt from Fulop landed on the feet of Carlos Edwards down the right wing. He advanced into the box but saw his shot saved from an acute angle.
EPL: Blackpool 2-1 Liverpool
Conditions continued to worsen for Liverpool, as they suffered their tenth loss of the season, and fourth time in five games.
It all started so promisingly in Kenny Dalglish's first Premiership match in charge. Fernando Torres opened up the scoring in just the third minute, blasting a shot top shelf at a difficult angle from the right side of the box.
But the home side equalized nine minutes later when Gary Taylor-Fletcher got behind the Liverpool defense down the middle, and slotted past Pepe Reina.
Blackpool won it in the 69th. After Liverpool cleared their lines from a corner, a long ball into the box found the ball of Ian Evatt, who headed across goal to a wide open D.J. Campbell, who finished well from close-range.
The win saw the Tangerines surpass Liverpool in the table, upping their point total to 28, which is good for ninth place. Meanwhile, the Reds' nightmare season continues, they now sit in 13th place, just four points above the relegation zone.
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