Showing posts with label Real. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Real. Show all posts

Wednesday, February 23, 2011

Benzema gives Real edge in Champions League

Karim Benzema scored against his former club Lyon to earn Real Madrid a 1-1 draw here on Tuesday, while Chelsea made an impressive 2-0 win over FC Copenhagen to hold a strong position to reach the Champions League quarterfinals.

Benzema put the visitors 1-0 up moments after coming on as a second-half substitute at a damp and chilly Stade Gerland, only for Bafetimbi Gomis to equalize seven minutes from time.

Gomis's late volley extended Lyon's remarkable unbeaten record against Real to seven matches, but Benzema's away goal makes Jose Mourinho's side slight favorites to progress ahead of the second leg in Madrid on March 16.

"I feel like I watched a real Champions League match: hard and well contested with very few clear chances due to the defensive rigor on both sides," said Real coach Mourinho.

"In the second half we managed to find spaces and, to begin with, we were closer to a second goal than Lyon were to an equalizer.

"But it sets things up well for the second leg, where we will hope to qualify in front of our supporters."

Lyon eliminated Real at the same stage of last season's competition and the nine-time European champions are bidding to end an unwelcome run that has seen them fall in the round of 16 for the last six seasons in a row.

Lyon, meanwhile, are seeking to build on their first ever semi-final appearance last year and coach Claude Puel admitted he was disappointed that Real had managed to breach his side's defence.

"At home, in the first leg, we would have preferred them not to score," he said. "It's a bit of a shame, especially because we played a great first half."

Having beaten Real in their three previous encounters on home turf, Lyon began the game in enterprising style, their five-man midfield smothering the visitors' attempts to play the ball through the middle.

Michel Bastos stabbed a shot over the Real crossbar from a tight angle on the right, Cris hooked wide from just inside the penalty area and Cesar Delgado had a penalty appeal turned down after an untidy foul by Sergio Ramos.

Angel di Maria belatedly called Lyon goalkeeper Hugo Lloris into action with a weak low shot before the France number one was given slightly more to do by a stinging Cristiano Ronaldo free-kick.

It was not long before the hosts were back on the attack, however, and Gomis was guilty of a terrible miss in the 34th minute when he side-footed over an open goal after Iker Casillas spilled a cross from Bastos.

Lyon's re-emergence after half-time drew a thunderous roar from the home fans, but a reminder of Real's attacking threat was quick to arrive as the visitors struck the woodwork twice in a matter of minutes.

Ronaldo hit the far post with a dipping free-kick from a seemingly prohibitive angle on the left-hand side, before Ramos sent a header crashing against the crossbar from Mesut Ozil's in-swinging corner.

Ronaldo's free-kick will have a more lasting impact on the tie, however, as it was awarded for a foul by Bastos on Di Maria that earned the Brazilian a yellow card that rules him out of the return leg.

Another Ronaldo free-kick sparked controversy shortly beyond the hour, with the Portuguese adamant the ball had struck the arm of Yoann Gourcuff in the Lyon wall.

Benzema, who left Lyon for the Bernabeu in 2009, received a rapturous reception when he entered the fray but he silenced the crowd after barely a minute.

Receiving a pass from Ronaldo, he drove across the area in a horizontal line before keeping his cool to beat Lloris with a low shot that Cris vainly sought to keep out with a desperate goal-line lunge.

Lyon's proud unbeaten record against Real looked destined to come to an end until the 83rd minute, when Gomis atoned for his earlier miss by seizing upon a flick-on from a free-kick to volley into the bottom-left corner.

Chelsea's firepower

real 2

Nicolas Anelka of Chelsea celebrates after his second goal against FC Copenhagen during their UEFA Champions League round of 16 first leg football match at Parken stadium in Copenhagen. Chelsea won 2-0

After the misery of last weekend's FA Cup exit against Everton, Nicolas Anelka gave Blues boss Ancelotti some much-needed breathing space as his double-strike put Chelsea within touching distance of the Champions League quarterfinals.

Ancelotti opted to leave Didier Drogba on the bench as he played a 4-4-2 formation with Anelka and Torres spearheading the attack.

Anelka showed his class as he netted two clinical finishes to take his tally in Europe this season to seven goals in six games, while Torres went close to breaking his duck following his blockbuster move from Liverpool.

Anelka opened the scoring in the 17th minute when he pounced on a poor pass by former Chelsea winger Jesper Gronkjaer and drove home a fierce strike from the edge of the area.

The former Arsenal forward struck again in the 54th minute as he drilled Frank Lampard's pass into the bottom corner.

Drogba has been out of form lately but he remains a formidable option to have on the bench and Ancelotti insists the trio won't complain about being rotated to keep them fresh for an assault on the Champions League.

Asked if they were the best in Europe, Ancelotti said: "Yes, I think so. We want to maintain their fitness, but rotation could do them good with the Premier League and the Champions League.

"They are accepting my decisions without problems, and this is important. To have them available at the moment, it's important at this time of year.

"We have fantastic strikers. I have to make a decision about the games, to put them in or not.


"Didier played for two hours against Everton. Torres and Anelka were fresh and, together, they played well."

Related Articles

Monday, February 21, 2011

Real look to Mourinho magic to end Lyon jinx

Jose Mourinho ended Chelsea's half a century wait for an English title, he brought European Cup glory back to Inter Milan after 45 years and now he battles Olympique Lyon's mesmeric hold over mighty Real Madrid.

If there was ever a man to conquer a hoodoo it is the Portuguese coach but he has more than one jinx to deal with in Tuesday's Champions League last-16 first leg in France.

Lyon have beaten Real at home three times in a row in the competition including last year where they condemned the Spaniards to their sixth successive last 16 elimination.

Overcoming Claude Puel's team and the mental block of quarterfinal progress will be no mean feat but Mourinho, as ever, oozes the confidence that prompted the nine-times winners to appoint him last May.

"No one keeps me awake, neither Lyon nor anyone else," the outspoken Mourinho told reporters after Saturday's comfortable 2-0 La Liga win at home to Levante where he rested several players.

"The night I don't sleep well is after the match. Ever since we drew Lyon we have been following them. (Real consultant Zinedine) Zidane knows them and has been giving me information."

On a personal note, Mourinho is bidding to become the first coach to win the Champions League with three different clubs after stunning the European game with Porto's 2004 triumph and then taking just two seasons to mould a winning side at Inter.

May's victory in the final over Bayern Munich is still fresh in his memory but with the brilliance of Cristiano Ronaldo and pumped-up striker Karim Benzema returning to face his former team, Mourinho's prospects look as good as with Inter last year.

 mourinho 2

Bicycle kick

Lyon will not just have recent form against Real on their side at the Stade de Gerland.

Their domestic performances have shown a marked improvement of late with a 4-1 derby win at St Etienne and Friday's 4-0 home thumping of AS Nancy boding well.

"You can see that pressure makes us give the best of ourselves," Puel told reporters.

France playmaker Yoann Gourcuff, bought from Girondins Bordeaux in August as a marquee signing, has finally found his verve after a slow start and Jimmy Briand's bicycle kick goal against Nancy was on a par with Wayne Rooney's recent effort.

The only worries for Lyon are goalkeeper Hugo Lloris's bad cold, although he is expected to return against Real, and striker Lisandro Lopez's hamstring problem which is likely to keep the Argentine out of the game.

"Lisandro is slightly injured, his participation against Real is in doubt." added Puel, who has had a series of run-ins with the forward.

Probable teams:

Olympique Lyon: 1-Hugo Lloris; 13-Anthony Reveillere, 3-Cris, 5-Dejan Lovren, 20-Aly Cissokho; 6-Kim Kallstrom, 28-Jeremy Toulalan, 29-Yoann Gourcuff; 11-Michel Bastos, 18-Bafetimbi Gomis, 7-Jimmy Briand

Real Madrid: 1-Iker Casillas; 17-Alvaro Arbeloa, 2-Ricardo Carvalho, 3-Pepe, 4-Sergio Ramos; 14-Xabi Alonso, 24-Sami Khedira; 7-Cristiano Ronaldo, 23-Mesut Ozil, 22-Angel Di Maria; 9-Karim Benzema

Referee: Wolfgang Stark (Germany)

Related Articles

Monday, February 14, 2011

Ten-man Real beat Espanyol to trim Barca's lead

Real Madrid recovered from the second-minute dismissal of goalkeeper Iker Casillas to secure a battling 1-0 win at Espanyol on Sunday and cut Barcelona's lead at the top of La Liga to five points.

Barca's record 16-match winning run ended on Saturday when they had to fight back from a goal down to rescue a 1-1 draw at Sporting Gijon and Real took full advantage with a gritty display at a raucous Cornella-El Prat stadium.

Casillas, Spain's World Cup-winning captain, was shown a straight red after bringing down Jose Callejon just outside the area and Real coach Jose Mourinho immediately brought on reserve keeper Antonio Adan to replace Argentina winger Angel Di Maria.

The dismissal lifted the home fans but they were silenced on 24 minutes when Real defender Marcelo cut in from the left wing and squeezed a shot past Carlos Kameni from a tight angle.

January loan signing Emmanuel Adebayor almost snatched a second in the 40th minute but the Togo international's scooped shot bounced on top of the crossbar and out for a goal kick.

Adebayor had chances to make the game safe late in the second half but Kameni pulled off two superb saves, while at the other end Joan Verdu nearly surprised Adan with a deft chip.

Mourinho said Real had done well to beat such strong opponents with a man fewer.

"I am not going to change my tune just because we are two points closer," the Portuguese told a news conference.

"I would like to have a five-point lead over the team in second place."

 real 2

Real Madrid's Marcelo (2nd R) celebrates a goal against Espanyol during their Spanish First Division match at Cornella-El Prat stadium, near Barcelona February 13, 2011

Trezeguet winner

In the earlier kickoff, Villarreal surrendered their grip on third place when they lost 1-0 at Deportivo Coruna.

Defender Alberto Lopo grabbed the only goal in the 60th minute at the Riazor when he popped up unmarked to steer home an Antonio Tomas free kick.

Villarreal's second defeat in a row following last weekend's 1-0 reverse at home to Levante left them in fourth, two points behind Valencia who won 2-1 at Atletico Madrid on Saturday.

Barca have 62 points from 23 matches, with Real on 57. Valencia are 10 points adrift on 47 and Villarreal have 45.

Fifth-placed Athletic Bilbao, who travel to Real Mallorca on Monday, are seven points behind Villarrreal, while Espanyol are sixth, a point behind the Basque club.

In Sunday's other matches, former France striker David Trezeguet struck the winner as promoted Hercules came from a goal down to beat visiting Real Zaragoza 2-1.

Malaga scored two late goals to snatch a 2-2 draw against visiting Getafe, although the Andalusian club, one of the biggest spenders in the January transfer window, remained bottom of the standings.

Promoted Real Sociedad moved up to ninth above Atletico thanks to a 1-0 home win over Osasuna, who had Damia Abella sent off late on for a second yellow card.

Levante, who also came up from the second division at the end of last season, beat Almeria 1-0 to climb to 15th.

Related Articles

Monday, January 24, 2011

Benzema goal leads Real to win over Mallorca

Misfit striker Karim Benzema reminded Jose Mourinho of his talents Sunday, scoring the 60th-minute goal in Real Madrid's 1-0 win over Real Mallorca which cut Barcelona's lead back to four points.

Mourinho said Benzema, a EUR 35-million (US$47.6 million) signing from Lyon, needed to step up his game and the 23-year-old responded as Real made it a perfect 10 home wins.

"He (Benzema) has an introverted character but he has opened up and has the whole support of the dressing room," said Real captain Iker Casillas. "He is young and has a lot of talent.

"It is a difficult January with lots of games and, apart from the Almeria game (1-1), we are doing well and getting good results."

Barcelona had piled on the pressure with a 3-0 home win over Racing Santander on Saturday to go seven points clear and Madrid looked tense early on at their Santiago Bernabeu home.

Mallorca, who drew 0-0 with Real in Mourinho's first league game in charge, had scored a meagre eight goals on the road but should have taken the lead on 13 minutes.

A quick counter-attack saw Real caught out and Emilio Nsue's shot had Casillas beaten but the effort rebounded off the left hand post.

Casillas was furious at his defence and had some heated words with Brazilian left back Marcelo.

Marcelo almost opened the scoring himself with Real's first attack, but his shot was deflected for a corner.

It was a poor first half showing from Real and an unhappy Mourinho responded with a double substitution with Xabi Alonso and Mesut Ozil coming on for Fernando Gago and Kaka.

Cameroon striker Pierre Webo forced a diving save from Casillas minutes after the break which spurred the below-par hosts into action.

Madrid pressed and on the hour mark the goal came.

Benzema, at the centre of a midweek row between Mourinho and Real general manager Jorge Valdano over the French striker's under-employment, cut inside on to his left foot before drilling in for only his second league goal of the season.

Mourinho has been trying to sign a striker in the transfer window with former Real star Ruud van Nistelrooy, currently at German club Hamburg, the main target.

Benzema was desperate to convince the Portuguese coach of his ability and he should have scored again before Madrid almost paid the price for his misses in the dying seconds when Webo was denied by Casillas.

Villarreal moved back into third place with a 2-1 comeback win at home to Real Sociedad.

Italian international Giuseppe Rossi scored both goals in the 40th and 47th minutes to take his league tally to 11 as Villarreal made it 10 wins from 11 at home to go third, two points above Valencia.

It was the perfect tonic for Villarreal who were knocked out of the Kings Cup in midweek by holders Sevilla.

Almeria warmed up for Wednesday's Kings Cup semi-final against Barcelona with a morale-boosting 3-2 home win over Osasuna to move off the bottom.

A brace from Argentine Jose Ulloa, in the 10th and 54th minutes, helped Almeria to their first home league win of the season as they moved up to 18th with Levante replacing them at the foot of the table.

Almeria, one point from safety, now turn their attention to tackling Barcelona, who thrashed them 8-0 in the league, in the first leg of their cup clash at Camp Nou.

Espanyol produced a sterling second half comeback to down rivals Getafe 3-1 and move two points off the top four.

Venezuelan striker Miku Flores put Getafe ahead on 13 minutes but Espanyol hit back in the second half scoring three goals in 11 minutes to turn the game on its head.

Atletico Madrid fell nine points off the Champions League places with a 1-0 loss at Sporting Gijon.

David Barral scored the winning goal to heap more misery on Atletico who suffered a painful Kings Cup quarter-final loss to city rivals Real Madrid on Thursday.

Related Articles

Friday, January 14, 2011

Real fight back in stormy Spanish Cup derby

Real Madrid fought back from a goal down to defeat city rivals Atletico 3-1 in the first leg of the Spanish Cup quarter-finals Thursday.

Atletico were ahead after just seven minutes at the Santiago Bernabeu when Uruguayan striker Diego Forlan was on target following a bright burst from Sergio Aguero which was ended by goalkeeper Iker Casillas's clumsy challenge.

But Sergio Ramos powered in a header from an Angel Di Maria corner in the 14th minute to bring the home side level before Cristiano Ronaldo and Mesut Ozil added second half strikes to give Real breathing space ahead of the second leg next week.

Atletico's young goalkeeper David De Gea pulled off a string of fine first-half saves to keep his side in the contest, particularly alert to a header from Portuguese international centre-half Ricardo Carvalho.

But he was powerless to keep out Real after the break.

Ronaldo gave his side the lead in the 61st minute when he stretched to steer in a cross from German star Ozil past De Gea.

Ozil then grabbed the third in stoppage time after a defensive error allowed him to chip the ball home from close range.

There was a bad-tempered end to the match, however, when Aguero and Ramos clashed and as their row continued, missiles were thrown onto the pitch.

In the night's other game, Almeria edged Deportivo La Coruna 1-0 thanks to a first-half own goal from on-loan Norwegian defender Knut Olav Rindaroy.

On Wednesday, Lionel Messi celebrated his second successive World Player of the Year award by hitting a hat-trick in Barcelona's 5-0 rout of Real Betis. Pedro and Seydou Keita were Barcelona's other scorers.

Sevilla came back from 3-1 down to draw 3-3 at Villarreal in Wednesday's other last-eight, first-leg tie.

Related Articles

Wednesday, October 20, 2010

Real win aristocratic duel, slick Arsenal cruise

Cristiano Ronaldo delivered the knockout blow for Real Madrid in their aristocratic battle with AC Milan on Tuesday, as Arsenal, Chelsea and Bayern Munich maintained their own perfect Champions League starts.

While Arsenal provided a breathtaking collective display in a 5-1 win over Shakhtar Donetsk, nine-times European champions Real had the individual brilliance of the world's most expensive player to thank for their 2-0 win at the Bernabeu.

Ronaldo poked a free-kick straight through the wall and set up Mesut Ozil to score a heavily deflected second less than a minute later as Real saw off the seven-times winners with a devastating one-two combination.

Real and Milan make the record of Bayern Munich, the four-times winners, look relatively modest and there was a lot less style about their 3-2 home win over CFR Cluj in group E, which saw them come from behind to take the lead with two own-goals before Mario Gomez gave them breathing space.

Arsenal, who beat Braga 6-0 in their opening fixture in group H, rarely struggle for panache at their own stadium and they were altogether too much for Shakhtar in London.

Alex Song, Samir Nasri, Cesc Fabregas, Jack Wilshere and Marouane Chamakh picked off the goals, with former Arsenal player Eduardo da Silva getting a late consolation for the visitors and a heartwarming ovation for himself.

There was another goal-scoring return of a sort as Chelsea won 2-0 at Spartak Moscow in group F.

Yuri Zhirkov, who spent five seasons with Spartak's bitter Moscow rivals CSKA, set Chelsea on their way with his first goal for the club before Nicolas Anelka doubled the lead.

Beneath the perfect quartet, Ajax Amsterdam maintained their hopes in Real Madrid's group by winning 2-1 at home to Auxerre, a result that took them level with Milan on four points.

Goals from Brazilian strikers Lima and Matheus gave Braga their first points with a 2-0 win over Partizan Belgrade that leaves the Serbs bottom of group H.

Basel sprang a surprise in group E by winning 3-1 away to AS Roma after two defeats, while Olympique Marseille kept their group F hopes alive as they labored to a 1-0 home win against Slovakians Zilina.

Problem solved

The only question mark over Jose Mourinho's Real Madrid early in the season was a struggle to turn their dominance into goals but that problem is now well behind them.

The Spanish league leaders followed up a 4-1 win over Malaga at the weekend with another performance of energy and guile, capped by goals in the 13th and 14th minutes.

"We needed to impose a strong rhythm from the start, playing with the concentration this type of game deserves, and we were able to do that," Ronaldo told reporters.

While Real have scored five goals in their three wins in Europe, Arsenal have knocked in a whopping 14 and they were irresistible in taking Shakhtar apart on Tuesday.

"We were sharp and played technically at a good level," said manager Arsene Wenger, whose side have Manchester United's group stage record 20 goals in their sights. "I think our goals were down to them becoming fatigued from running after the ball."

Chelsea, who like Arsenal and Tottenham Hotspur are dreaming of a place in a "home" final in London's Wembley Stadium, were efficient rather than brilliant at the Luzhniki Stadium, scene of their painful defeat by Manchester United in the 2008 final.

"I don't think the players talked about the last defeat at this stadium,” coach Carlo Ancelotti told a news conference. "It was not an easy game for us. We scored two great goals."

Related Articles

Friday, October 1, 2010

Real Madrid made to wait for victory at Auxerre

A late strike from substitute Angel di Maria earned Jose Mourinho's Real Madrid a narrow 1-0 win over Auxerre in the Champions League group phase match Tuesday.

The visitors dominated the game in terms of possession and territory but looked destined for their third goalless draw of the season until di Maria struck with nine minutes to play.

The Argentine winger, a second-half replacement for Lassana Diarra, stole in front of Benoit Pedretti to cushion a right-wing cross on his chest and then angle a left-footed half-volley into the bottom-right corner.

Up to that point Auxerre had defended with composure and they almost took the lead moments before di Maria's intervention, only for Real centre-back Pepe's header to strike his own post and bounce back into play.

"There were matches before where we created about 15 chances but didn't score, like at Mallorca or at Levante," said Mourinho, whose team were held to a goalless draw at Levante on Saturday.

"Everyone said that we didn't deserve to win as we didn't score. Tonight, if everyone's being pragmatic, we scored so the victory is deserved."

Auxerre's players felt Sergio Ramos had handled the ball in the build-up to the goal and coach Jean Fernandez said his players had switched off at the wrong moment.

"There's a bit of frustration with the goal but I think the hand-ball was involuntary," said the Auxerre manager.

"Some referees would have whistled but it wasn't the case. We stopped playing for a brief moment and that allowed di Maria to get into that position and score."

Having won 2-0 at Ajax in their opening fixture, Real top Group G with six points, but the three points long looked far from a formality on an awkward night for the nine-time European champions at a packed Stade Abbe-Deschamps.

Fernandez's men secured a surprise third-place finish in Ligue 1 last season and their well-established counter-attacking formula proved a tough nut to crack for their illustrious opponents.

Having bossed the first period, Real found clear chances more difficult to come by in the second and Mourinho cut an increasingly animated figure on the touchline as the minutes ticked by.

Cristiano Ronaldo went close twice in the space of a minute, seeing a trademark free-kick punched away by Olivier Sorin and heading over from the following crossbar, but he largely endured a frustrating evening.

It had taken Auxerre less than four minutes to get the home fans on their feet.

In attempting to clear a Delvin Ndinga through-ball, Real goalkeeper Iker Casillas succeeded only in smacking it against Dennis Oliech but the Kenyan could not get to the ball before it crossed the line for a goal-kick.

Oliech failed to connect with a Steeven Langil cross moments later, but thereafter the hosts set up semi-permanent residence in the Auxerre half.

Ronaldo shot straight at Sorin, Diarra twice fired off-target and Gonzalo Higuain had an effort kicked off the line by Kamel Chafni after a neat turn following a corner.

Sorin also did well to push away a volley from Marcelo after the Brazilian left-back hared onto a lofted Xabi Alonso pass.

Amid that flurry of chances, Ndinga headed inches wide of Casillas's goal from a Pedretti free-kick and both Pedretti and Dariusz Dudka tested the Spanish international in the minutes approaching the interval.

The first clear chance of the second half also fell Auxerre's way, but half-time substitute Ireneusz Jelen dragged his shot wide after being set free by a well weighted pass from Pedretti.

Related Articles

Tuesday, September 28, 2010

Real Madrid find money can't buy you love or goals

MADRID - Jose Mourinho lamented Real Madrid's failure to put the ball in the net as his side were held to a humbling 0-0 draw at Levante in La Liga on Saturday.

The nine-times European champions dominated the match but, as has happened in recent games, they lacked fluidity in their play and appeared anxious when chances fell to the likes of Gonzalo Higuain, Angel Di Maria or Cristiano Ronaldo.

"We've had eight clear opportunities but we haven't scored," their newly-installed coach Mourinho, who has been on the back foot after Real's dour recent performances, told reporters.

"The only game where we created fewer was in San Sebastian (against Real Sociedad) and we scored twice.

An opening day draw was followed by three consecutive victories with only one goal conceded, but the Bernabeu faithful expect more and they grumbled and whistled at their side during the laboured 3-0 win over Espanyol in midweek.

"We've only conceded once in six matches. We've controlled all the games, haven't had tactical problems and have been defensively solid. We always want to win but if you don't score you don't win," added Mourinho defending their mixed start.

The match pitched the world's richest club by income against a side who only came out of financial administration on Thursday, two years after seeking protection from creditors.

Real spent about 80 million euros ($106.8 million) on players like Argentina's Di Maria and Germany's Mesut Ozil in the close season, on top of 250 million spent the previous year.

Levante strengthened their squad after winning promotion by landing fringe players from other La Liga sides on loan or with free transfers.

"Each side plays to their strengths. It's clear economic power and football power are different things but we were the only ones who tried to play," said Mourinho.

For Levante the result crowned a special week.

After three straight defeats, in which they conceded 10 goals, they collected their first points back in the top flight with a 1-0 win at Almeria in midweek.

They then secured their financial independence again.

"It proves money doesn't speak in football," Levante president Francisco Catalan told Spanish television.

"The board's principle aim was to take the club out of administration, and we have achieved that. Our next job is to secure our place in the top flight."

Related Articles

Wednesday, September 22, 2010

Ronaldo inspires Real to 3-0 win over Espanyol

Cristiano Ronaldo scored a penalty and created a goal for Gonzalo Higuain to inspire Real Madrid to a lethargic but ultimately comfortable 3-0 La Liga win over Espanyol on Tuesday.

It was the Portuguese forward's first goal of the season and a third consecutive league victory for Real that lifted them to the top of the table ahead of Wednesday's matches.

Both teams had a player sent off with around half an hour remaining and Espanyol were reduced to nine late on.

Real coach Jose Mourinho criticised the poor state of the pitch after the game and also complained about the packed calendar, Tuesday's match coming after his players were in action in the Champions League on Wednesday and in La Liga on Saturday.

"All things considered I am coming away satisfied because it's not easy playing on a potato field, it's not easy playing every two days and it's not easy playing an opponent who has nothing to lose," the Portuguese said at a news conference.

"Putting all those factors together and despite the fact that my team did not play a good match I am satisfied," he added. "We have to improve but above all we need to rest."

Solid start

The visitors began brightly on a pleasantly warm night at the Bernabeu and an unmarked Jose Callejon volleyed just wide of Iker Casillas's goal in the sixth minute.

Real responded immediately when Mesut Ozil sent Angel Di Maria clear and the Argentina winger's curled strike was palmed narrowly over the crossbar by goalkeeper Carlos Kameni.

Espanyol's solid start was spoiled just before the half hour when Luis Garcia handled a Ronaldo free kick in the wall and the referee pointed to the spot.

The Portuguese scored with his first attempt but was ordered to retake for what appeared to be encroachment into the area.

Espanyol made an energetic bid for an equaliser in the early stages of the second period and the impressive Joan Verdu forced a sharp save from Casillas in the 53rd.

Real central defender Pepe then picked up two yellow cards in quick succession and Ernesto Galan was shown a straight red shortly after when he chopped down Ronaldo.

The game opened up and both teams had chances before Ronaldo released Higuain with a fine through ball and he beat Kameni with a powerful low shot.

France striker Karim Benzema replaced Higuain and made it 3-0 with almost his first touch, hooking the ball into the net from inside the area.

Espanyol defender Juan Forlin was dismissed late on after picking up a second yellow, apparently for dissent.

No adjectives

Espanyol coach Mauricio Pochettino was clearly furious with the referee after the match but just about managed to restrain himself at his post-match news conference.

"I am not going to give an opinion about the referee, I won't label him with any adjectives," he said. "The evidence and the television footage is there for all to see. All of Europe and the whole world saw what happened. On days like this you don't feel like talking about football. It's useless."

In the earlier kickoffs, David Lopez put Athletic Bilbao ahead against visiting Real Mallorca just before halftime, Mikel San Jose netted a 62nd-minute penalty and Inigo Perez scored in added time to give the Basque club a 3-0 win.

Osasuna clinched their first victory of the season, coming from behind to beat promoted Real Sociedad 3-1 thanks to goals from Walter Pandiani, Javier Camunas and Carlos Aranda after Raul Tamudo had given Sociedad the lead in the 16th minute.

Champions Barcelona will be without Lionel Messi when they host Sporting Gijon on Wednesday (1800 GMT) while Valencia can climb back to the top with a win at home to Atletico Madrid.

Related Articles

Monday, September 20, 2010

Ronaldo responds to boo boys with Real winner

MADRID - Cristiano Ronaldo scored with a deflected freekick to earn Real Madrid a battling 2-1 victory at promoted Real Sociedad in La Liga on Saturday.

The world's most expensive player has endured a frustrating start to the season, being booed and whistled by home and away fans, with his anxiety to score a goal clear for all to see.

His wayward shots, exaggerated complaints to the referee and occasional wild challenge had fans at the Anoeta howling until he struck a fierce freekick which ballooned off the wall and past a stranded Claudio Bravo after 75 minutes.

"Cristiano is Cristiano, we are not going to change him," Real director general Jorge Valdano told Spanish television.

"He has a personality that enables him to be one of the best players in the world, we accept it and understand it as one of his strengths."

Argentina winger Angel Di Maria had put the visitors in front at the start of the second half only for Raul Tamudo to level soon after.

Real moved on to seven points from three games, four ahead of champions Barcelona, who travel to play early La Liga pace-setters Atletico Madrid on Sunday.

Despite dominating possession it was the hosts who created the clearer chances until Di Maria scored a great solo effort in the 51st minute, curling a shot into the top corner.

The lead only lasted 11 minutes, Tamudo arriving unmarked at the far post to bundle in a freekick and Real needed Ronaldo's strike, which deflected off Pepe's back in the wall, to restore the lead.

Furious reaction

Real Sociedad refused to lie down and near the end an error from Sergio Ramos led to Iker Casillas having to save on his line, prompting a furious reaction from his coach Jose Mourinho who jumped from his seat and hurled a plastic bottle into the dugout in disgust.

"They were stronger in the first half, we were in the second. I think a draw would have been the fairest result," Mourinho told reporters.

Earlier, financially-troubled Real Mallorca recorded their first win of the campaign beating Osasuna 2-0 at home.

Gonzalo Castro set them on their way from the penalty spot after 25 minutes and Jonathan de Guzman ran the length of the pitch to secure the result in time added on.

The islanders finished fifth last season to qualify for the Europa League but were barred from entering the competition by UEFA after going into voluntary administration.

Athletic Bilbao fought back from two down to draw 2-2 at Sporting Gijon with goals from Carlos Gurpegi and Spain striker Fernando Llorente, while Espanyol overcame Almeria 1-0.

Related Articles

Tuesday, September 14, 2010

Real Madrid look to sparkle against Ajax

real
Real Madrid's coach Jose Mourinho gestures during their Spanish first division match against Osasuna at the Santiago Bernabeu stadium in Madrid, September 11, 2010
Photo: Reuters

Real Madrid are under pressure to entertain their demanding fans at home to Ajax Amsterdam in the Champions League on Wednesday after impatient whistling greeted Saturday's uninspiring 1-0 La Liga win over Osasuna.

The frustration of the Real faithful, still waiting to see the fruits of US$448 million of investment, was plain when the players and new coach Jose Mourinho trooped off after a goalless first half.

Captain Iker Casillas asked for patience and forward Cristiano Ronaldo said it was not always possible to put on a show.

"I don't think all the fans were whistling, it was only a minority," the Portuguese international, who cost Real a record $120.6 million last year, told a news conference on Monday.

"It would be better if people helped motivate us, but everyone is entitled to express themselves how they want," he added.

"We can't always play brilliantly to entertain the fans and sometimes you have to try to lift the players.

"All of us in the stadium want the best for Real Madrid and together was can make a team that is more feared at home."

Poor run

Real's unprecedented spending spree is chiefly aimed at ending a poor Champions League run over the past six seasons, during which the nine-time winners have failed to progress beyond the last 16.

President Florentino Perez told Real's general assembly on Sunday he would not rest until a 10th European title had been secured.

Perez described Mourinho, who led Inter Milan to three major trophies last season including the Champions League, as "a born winner."

"We have not spared any effort to put Real Madrid back in its rightful place and in the best shape to achieve a great goal, the real challenge of winning a 10th Champions League," Perez said.

Ajax will have other ideas on their first appearance in Europe's elite club competition since 2005-06, although the four-times winners will miss their captain, the prolific Uruguay striker Luis Suarez who is suspended.

Suarez netted 35 goals in the Dutch championship last season and said it hurt not being able to play in the opening Group G clash.

"I'll save my goals for the return match in Amsterdam," he said in an interview published in Spanish sports daily Marca.

The inexperience of some of the Ajax players may count against them, he cautioned.

"Ajax is an attacking team but one that can also play deep if the match requires it," Suarea said. "If we go to the Bernabeu with a suicidal plan we could lose easily."

Serie A side AC Milan, the seven-times winners, and French club Auxerre complete Group G.

Probable teams:

Real Madrid: 1-Iker Casillas; 4-Sergio Ramos, 2-Ricardo Carvalho, 3-Pepe, 12-Marcelo; 14-Xabi Alonso, 24-Sami Khedira; 9-Karim Benzema, 23-Mesut Ozil, 7-Cristiano Ronaldo; 20-Gonzalo Higuain.

Ajax: 1-Maarten Stekelenburg; 2-Gregory van der Wiel, 3-Toby Alderweireld, 23-Oleguer, 5-Vurnon Anita; 20-Demy de Zeeuw, 10-Siem de Jong, 6-Eyong Enoh; 7-Miralem Sulejmani, 9-Mounir El Hamdaoui, 11-Urby Emanuelson.

Referee: Damir Skomina (Slovenia)

Related Articles

Thursday, September 9, 2010

Barca, Real and Chelsea eye Inter's crown

C1
Chelsea's Nicolas Anelka (L) challenges Stoke City's Danny Collins during their English Premier League soccer match at Stamford Bridge in London August 28, 2010
Photo: Reuters

European champions Inter Milan will rewrite the record books and claim a place among the greats if they retain the Champions League trophy this season.

Huge obstacles stand in their way, of course, from Spain's Barcelona and Real Madrid, England's Chelsea, Manchester United and Arsenal, last season's runners-up Bayern Munich and their arch-rivals AC Milan.

Europe's leading bookmakers have almost all ignored Inter's claims and installed Barcelona as favorites to repeat their 2009 success with Real Madrid and Chelsea also heavily backed.

But Inter's new manager Rafa Benitez won the competition in 2005 with Liverpool and would like nothing better than to restore his reputation as one of Europe's shrewdest coaches.

If Benitez leads them to victory at Wembley Stadium on May 28, they would emulate their own back-to-back successes of 1964 and 1965 and take huge delight in becoming the first club to do so since AC Milan triumphed in 1989 and 1990.

But no side has remained European champions after changing a winning manager since Bayern Munich lifted the trophy under Udo Lattek in 1974 and Dettmar Cramer in 1975.

That is the challenge facing Benitez who replaced Jose Mourinho when the Portuguese decamped to Real Madrid after securing last season's triumph over Bayern to make Inter European champions for the first time for 45 years.

Mourinho may have got up the noses of the Italian soccer establishment but he gave Inter a winning mentality in Europe after decades of under-achievement in the world's premier club competition.

Different style

Inter have decided to stick with the same ageing squad, minus striker Mario Balotelli, leaving fans worried the lack of investment will harm their chances.

Inter face Tottenham Hotspur and Twente Enschede as well as Werder Bremen in the group stage but will need to improve their early season form which has been patchy.

Among those threatening Inter's ambitions are Barcelona, eager to make up for last season's semifinal loss to the Italians, and a rejuvenated Real Madrid under Mourinho.

The canny Mourinho's arrival at the Bernabeu has raised hopes the club can end a lengthy drought in Europe's elite club competition.

The nine-times continental champions have failed to make the quarterfinals for the past six seasons, a galling statistic for big-spending president Florentino Perez.

The construction magnate returned to the club before the 2009-10 campaign pledging to restore former glories but even an outlay of US$319 million on players including Cristiano Ronaldo and Kaka failed to yield a trophy.

Real have spent wisely, bringing in Germany midfielders Sami Khedira and Mesut Ozil, Argentina winger Angel Di Maria and teenage midfielder Sergio Canales.

But Pep Guardiola's Barca side have added prolific Spain striker David Villa, combative Argentina midfielder Javier Mascherano and versatile Brazilian defender Adriano Correia.

Effective team

Mourinho, a former assistant coach at the Nou Camp, got the better of Guardiola last season but it will be hard to mould the Real squad into an effective team in his first campaign.

If he does he will become the first man to lift the European Cup with three different clubs following his initial triumph with Porto in 2004.

Real are also in a tricky group, pitted against old rivals AC Milan, Ajax Amsterdam and Auxerre of France.

Barca, by contrast, are the finished article, boasting eight Spain internationals, including World Cup winners Villa, Xavi and Andres Iniesta, and should progress comfortably from a group with Rubin Kazan, Panathinaikos and FC Copenhagen.

Exciting arrival

Chelsea, who played outstanding football to claim the English double last season, have won their first three league games with a 14-0 goal tally and have recruited exciting midfielder Ramires from Benfica and Israel's Yossi Benayoun.

Manchester United can never be ruled out especially if Wayne Rooney puts his off-field problems out of his mind and reproduces the scoring form he showed for most of last season.

Arsenal have failed to win a trophy for five seasons but usually do well in Europe.

Manager Arsene Wenger's best piece of transfer business was keeping Cesc Fabregas at the Emirates, boosting the chances of a London side lifting the European Cup for the first time.

With three London teams competing, the first time one city has provided three sides in the competition, and the final taking place in their home city, there is even more incentive than usual for them to go all the way.

Related Articles

Thursday, September 2, 2010

Spurs seal Van der Vaart transfer

Vandervatt
Spurs seal Van der Vaart transfer
Photo: AFP

English Premier League club Tottenham were allowed to sign Rafael van der Vaart from Real Madrid on Wednesday after their last-ditch move for the Dutch playmaker on deadline day.

Spurs boss Harry Redknapp moved for van der Vaart just two hours before the transfer window closed late on Tuesday, causing a frantic scramble to file the paperwork in time, and the north London outfit were left to wait overnight to discover if the Premier League would ratify the deal.

Redknapp was finally able to plan a team that includes van der Vaart on Wednesday after the Premier League rubber-stamped the most impressive deadline day coup by an English club.

"We are delighted to announce that we have reached agreement with Real Madrid for the transfer of Rafael van der Vaart," a statement on Tottenham's website confirmed.

Real confirmed the deal.

"Real Madrid and Tottenham Hotspurs have reached a deal to transfer the player Rafael Van der Vaart to the English club," it said in a statement on its website.

"Following the approval of the transfer by the RFEF (Spanish football federation) and the FA, the Premier League has confirmed the player's signing."

Van der Vaart has won 83 caps for Holland, scoring 16 goals, and has played in two European Championships and two World Cups, including this year's tournament in South Africa where he featured five times in his side's run to the final.

The 27-year-old was available at a cut-price rate after new Real Madrid manager Jose Mourinho decided to cash in on a player who would have struggled to win a first-team place ahead of the likes of Kaka, Mesut Ozil and Cristiano Ronaldo.

Redknapp believes he has landed a bargain and, speaking before the move was completed, he said: "He is available now for about eight million. He is a quality player. He is a Dutch international and a great footballer.

"For that sort of money, he is a top player and he will improve us for sure. It's a last minute job."

On the attributes van der Vaart will bring to Tottenham, Redknapp said: "He is a great passer of the ball, he is a top footballer. He will join in here and play the way we like to play, he would be a big plus for us."

Real signed van der Vaart from Bundesliga side Hamburg on a five-year contract in 2008 in a deal reportedly worth 13 million euros (US$16.6 million).

Related Articles

Wednesday, September 1, 2010

Too soon to make comparisons to Barca, says Ramos

ramos
Sergio Ramos will not compare Real to Barcelona
Photo: AFP

Real Madrid's World Cup winning right back Sergio Ramos said on Tuesday it was too soon to compare his side to their arch-rivals Barcelona with the Catalan team holding a two-point advantage after just one match.

Real were held to a goalless draw at Real Mallorca on Sunday in their first La Liga match with Jose Mourinho as coach while defending Spanish champions Barcelona beat Racing Santander 3-0.

"Of course we would have liked to have started the season collecting three points," Ramos told reporters as the Spain squad gathered in Madrid to begin preparing for their Euro 2012 qualifier on Friday against Liechtenstein.

"We must continue improving. It is too soon to compare us to anyone and to debate who is ahead and who is behind," the 24-year-old added.

The arrival of Mourinho, one of the world’s most successful and expensive coaches, at the Spanish giants in May has fueled the already intense interest in the annual La Liga horse race between Real and Barcelona.

The Portuguese coach admitted he was disappointed to begin his Real career with a 0-0 draw and blamed poor finishing as the reason for his team's failure.

"It is important to defend well and score when you are not at your best and we are far from our best. We didn't play well but we did enough to win," he said after the match.

"We had five or six chances but didn't take any of them and I am disappointed about that. We were solid defensively and if we had scored we would have taken the three points."

Related Articles