Tag: bitter loss

  • Ange’s ‘strange’ gamble pays off in comeback win; Arsenal’s title dream fades: PL Wrap

    Ange’s ‘strange’ gamble pays off in comeback win; Arsenal’s title dream fades: PL Wrap

    On the day Spurs’ fiercest rivals’ title challenge took a significant hit, Ange Postecoglou showed his pragmatic hand to guide Tottenham to a big comeback win.

    Mikel Arteta’s Arsenal were victims of their own ill-discipline once again, although William Saliba wasn’t the only player to see red in a wild night of Premier League football.

    Read about all that and more in our wrap of the overnight Premier League action!

    Auckland FC start A League with win | 01:25

    ANGE’S ‘EYE-RAISING’ SPURS GAMBLE PAYS OFF

    Throughout this Tottenham career, Ange Postecoglou has come under fire often. At times the Australian has been perceived as lacking pragmatism, and the ‘Plan B’ so loved by English football.

    Translation: Instead of taking the safe option, Ange goes for the jugular. He’d rather win 5-4 than 1-0.

    And yet with his side level with West Ham at half-time Ange did something many thought unthinkable. He made a pragmatic substitution.

    Off went attacking midfielder James Maddison, at times the creative jewel in Postecoglou’s Spurs crown. On came Pape Matar Sarr, a more conservative and traditional central midfielder.

    Speaking on Optus Sports’ Matchday Live, Premier League legend Emannuel Petit described the move as “strange because he’s (Maddison) a really good player.”

    “So I was quite surprised. It’s quite strange from the manager.”

    Maddison hadn’t been poor by any stretch of the imagination. He’d created Dejan Kulusevski’s equaliser and had five key passes in the opening 45 minutes, but as Ange noted post-game he needed different profiles in midfield.

    “I just felt West Ham ask you certain questions in midfield areas and I just felt Pape’s running power would help us in the second half,” he explained.

    “They obviously worked hard in the first half and I thought he could give us some real energy.

    “I thought he did really well and he gave us a platform to be really threatening every time we went forward and clinical in our football.”

    Former Brighton striker Glenn Murray described it as an “eye-raiser” but conceded the decision ultimately worked.

    “Hindsight proves it was the right decision,” Murray said.

    As Murray noted, Ange’s gamble paid off. Spurs scored three times in eight minutes to win and climb to seventh on the ladder. Sarr too was strong, dispossessing Jarrod Bowen as he moved towards Tottenham’s goal and finding Heung-Min Son with a beautiful assist for his 60th minute goal.

    Spurs could’ve scored more too. Son hit the post in the 61st minute while the free-flowing attack continued throughout the second half, forcing West Ham keeper Alphonse Areola into three saves.

    “When they are good they are nearly irresistible, Tottenham,” Connor McNamara said on commentary.

    Former Spurs manager Tim Sherwood heralded the character Spurs showed during the win.

    “To go behind and then come out with that character in the second half, after what happened at Brighton before the international break, I think not only the ability of his side, but the character of his side, really shone through,” he said.

    Writing in The Guardian, Jacob Steinberg described Tottenham as ‘exhilarating,’ while noting ‘Ange Postecoglou was there to see another defensive implosion, but this time he would not be the coach who will have to deal with the fallout.’

    Indeed the post-mortem will centralise on West Ham and new manager Julen Lopetegui, who has failed to inspire the tactical shifts expected of him in pre-season. Their second half capitulation means they sit 15th.

    For Postecoglou though the win alleviates some of the pressure on his shoulders following Spurs’ bitter loss to Brighton in their last Premier League outing.

    That game that overshadowed a five game winning streak and inspired further doubts about Postecoglou’s Premier League suitability.

    For now at least those pressures are alleviated.

    James Maddison’s half-time substitution was a turning point in Spurs’ 4-1 comeback win over West Ham.Source: AFP

    ARSENAL’S CHARGE TAKES SIGNIFICANT HIT

    At the end of the season if Arsenal fail to break their Premier League title drought, Mikel Arteta will reflect on this loss as the moment the title slipped through his side’s fingers.

    Arsenal were unbeaten heading into the weekend, with their defence the envy of the Premier League and their attacking improving weekly.

    Bournemouth are a good side, coached well by Andoni Iraola, but their start to the season had been indifferent.

    Few would have predicted the game to unfold as it did.

    Arteta, and Arsenal fans, will argue William Saliba’s controversial 30th minute red card, awarded after the Frenchman brought down Bournemouth striker Evanilson just beyond the halfway line.

    There was no Arsenal defender between the Brazilian and goal, a factor that ultimately led VAR Jarred Gillett to instruct referee Rob Jones, who initially awarded a yellow card, to send the Arsenal defender off.

    For the third time this season Arsenal would need to see out a game with a man down.

    Raheem Sterling initially shifted to right back, with Ben White moving into the heart of defence in Saliba’s place. However, Antoine Semenyo breezed by the pair twice, prompting Arteta to introduce Jakub Kiwior and return White to right back.

    Arsenal, who were without Martin Odegaard and Bukayo Saka, their two most important creators, held Bournemouth scoreless until the 70th minute, when a lovely corner move resulted in Ryan Christie’s strike breaking the deadlock.

    The Premier League’s set-piece masters were breached by a set-piece.

    Seven minutes later Evanilson was again involved. Fouled by David Raya in the box the Brazilian won a penalty, converted by Justin Kluivert to secure a big win for Bournemouth, a monumental loss for Arsenal.

    William Saliba was initially shown a yellow card against Bournemouth. VAR intervened and changed it to a red card, leaving Arsenal to play with 10 men for much of the match.Source: Getty Images

    The Gunners were not without their chances. Gabriel Martinelli had a great chance to score moments before Bournemouth’s opener, but missed the target, while Mikel Merino pushed a shot wide earlier in the game.

    Speaking post-game, Arteta described the task set for Arsenal following Saliba’s send off as “impossible.”

    “We are very disappointed with the result and gutted because we had to play in that context again,” he said.

    Discussing Saliba’s red card, the Spaniard conceded he’s not expecting it to be overturned during the week.

    “It was a decision made on the pitch. The decision was changed. I don’t think it will change twice. The decision has been made,” he said.

    Auckland FC start A League with win | 01:25

    ETH SAFE FOR ANOTHER DAY

    Boos rang around Old Trafford at halftime, though perhaps not the kind of boos some may have expected after the last fortnight at Manchester United.

    Brentford’s Ethan Pinnock had just scored an injury time header from a corner to lift his side into the lead at the interval.

    The strike didn’t come without controversy after United’s Dutch central defender Matthijs De Ligt was forced to leave the pitch and have some blood cleaned from his face.

    Instead of waiting for De Ligt to return, referee Sam Barrott allowed play to continue, ultimately resulting in Brentford’s opener.

    United’s bench erupted after the ball rifled into the back of the net. Erik Ten Hag, arguably the manager under the most pressure in world football, was booked for his protests of the decision to allow play to continue while De Ligt was sidelined.

    Given the storm surrounding the future of the Dutchman’s managerial tenure, Ten Hag’s frustration was justified. In a must-win game his side entered the interval behind against a difficult to break down Brentford side.

    Writing in The Athletic, Mark Critchley said Pinnock’s goal ‘felt like the end. The chances of a second half fightback appeared remote.’

    At the break United, who were without six first team players, were yet to create a big chance. By full-time they’d created three, scoring two, to record a big win both in the context of their season and their manager’s future.

    Alejandro Garnacho got the ball rolling in the 47th minute, meeting a sublime Marcus Rashford cross to score his first goal of the season, before a delightful Bruno Fernandes flick set Rasmus Hojlund up in the 62nd minute.

    Even more impressive was the way United managed their lead in the dying stages of the contest, something Critchley noted.

    ‘Not only did (United) turn this game on its head, but once in front, they managed the final stages relatively well – something which has not often been said of this side in the past,’ he wrote.

    Post-game Ten Hag insisted the victory “showed we are together.”

    “We showed determination and scored two beautiful goals.”

    Erik Ten Hag wasn’t happy with the decision to allow play to continue while Matthijs De Ligt was off the field receiving treatment.Source: AFP

    Goals have been a major problem to United in what has been their worst-ever start to a Premier League season. Prior to their Brentford win they’d scored just five. That figure is now seven, two less than 19th placed Wolves.

    Ten Hag will be hoping goals to Garnacho and Hojlund, as well as Rashford’s creative output, will kick his side into attacking gear as they look to kick their season into life.

    “This team has the capacity to score very good goals,” he stated post-game.

    “Today the two goals we scored were high quality and when you score and win you add confidence.

    “At the start of the season we had some good performances but didn’t score enough, then everyone is negative.

    “This result can help us, but it is only one win and we must build on it.”

    LATE DRAMA SEALS FOXES COMEBACK

    After half an hour Southampton were 2-0 up against Leicester, courtesy of goals to Cameron Archer and Joe Aribo, and seemingly on their way to a first win of the season.

    Their lead remained after an hour, before Facundo Buoanotte’s fortunate strike found the back of the net, giving Leicester a way back into the game.

    10 minutes later they were level, courtesy of a Jamie Vardy penalty that came after the striker’s shirt was pulled by Saints winger Ryan Fraser as he attempted to sweep the ball into the back of the net from close range.

    Jordan Ayew’s late strike sealed Leicester’s comeback win over Southampton.Source: Getty Images

    Fraser was sent off, the fifth player to see the red in the Premier League overnight, and Vardy converted the penalty, drawing the Foxes level with plenty of time to play.

    Despite their man advantage, Leicester’s winner came with essentially the final kick of the game after Jordan Ayew swept the ball home from a corner in the 98th minute.

    The win lifts Leicester to 14th, six points clear of the relegation zone – although both Palace and Wolves have a game in hand.

    For Southampton, losing from such a winnable position has turned the pressure up on manager Russell Martin, who has constantly been accused of playing beautiful, possession-based football without getting results.

    VILLA’S MARCH CONTINUES AS NEWCASTLE FALTER

    Aston Villa’s towards the top of the Premier League table continued against Fulham overnight.

    Unai Emery’s side fell behind to an early Raul Jimenez strike but scored three times before full-time to seal a crucial three points.

    Morgan Rogers and Ollie Watkins both scored, continuing their fine seasons, before an Issa Diop own goal sealed the win after 70 minutes. Emi Martinez saved an Andreas Pereira penalty with the scores locked at 1-1.

    Fulham lost central defender Joachim Andersen to a red card six minutes before Diop found the back of his own net.

    The win leaves Villa fourth on 17 points, two clear of fifth-placed Brighton, who narrowly beat Newcastle overnight.

    Danny Welbeck’s fifth goal of the season proved the difference between the two sides

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  • Underdogs cause massive upset against Belgium; France saved by own goal — Euro Wrap

    Underdogs cause massive upset against Belgium; France saved by own goal — Euro Wrap

    Slovakia caused the first upset at Euro 2024 as Ivan Schranz fired the underdogs to a 1-0 win against Belgium on Tuesday morning AEST.

    Francesco Calzona’s side are 45 spots below third-placed Belgium in FIFA’s world rankings, but they made a mockery of the supposed quality gap between the teams with a courageous performance in Frankfurt.

    “We played against a great opponent. We gave it our heart. We didn’t win it by being better, but by being happier,” Slovakia defender David Hancko said.

    “That makes the victory all the more gratifying. It’s amazing that we were able to do that.”

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    Slovakia coach Calzona, who also served as Napoli’s interim boss in the second half of last season, had admitted he would have been “delighted” with a draw.

    The Italian got more than he could have dreamed of as Schranz left Belgium reeling after ending his nine-game international goal drought.

    Romelu Lukaku missed a host of chances for Belgium and had two possible equalisers disallowed by VAR.

    Slovakia’s unexpected victory blew Group E wide open, just hours after Romania beat Ukraine 3-0 in Monday’s other match in that pool.

    It was a bitter loss for Belgium, who are already in danger of once again failing to fulfil their potential at a major tournament.

    Belgium’s golden generation has lost much of its lustre since they crashed out of the 2022 World Cup in the group stage.

    The Red Devils fell at the quarter-finals in the last two editions of the European Championship, making a third-place finish at the 2018 World Cup the highwater mark of a talented but underachieving team once hailed as a potential dynasty.

    Domenico Tedesco was appointed to replace Roberto Martinez in February 2023 and led Belgium on a 14-match unbeaten run heading into the Euros.

    “I knew that eventually we would lose a game. Unfortunately it was today,” Tedesco said.

    “The only thing that we didn’t do well was missing chances. We had plenty. It’s part of the game. Of course the players were disappointed.”

    Slovakia’s Ivan Schranz celebrates with teammates. Photo by THOMAS KIENZLE / AFPSource: AFP

    Before what was billed as a last hurrah for Belgium’s veteran stars, Kevin De Bruyne had insisted they were ready to do “something good” in Germany.

    But instead they reverted to type with a spluttering display that puts them under intense pressure to beat Romania in their second group game on Saturday.

    Playing in a Belgian record 11th game at major tournaments, Lukaku should have bagged his 86th goal for his country in the second minute.

    Jeremy Doku turned adroitly on the halfway line and accelerated menacingly into the Slovakia penalty area, where his cross was poked toward Lukaku by De Bruyne.

    Lukaku looked certain to score but his close-range effort was straight at Slovakia keeper Martin Dubravka.

    Lukaku threatened again moments later, only to let Doku’s pass run away from him.

    Slovakia punished Lukaku’s profligacy in the seventh minute. Doku’s wayward clearing pass allowed Robert Bozenik to cleverly backheel the ball to Juraj Kucka.

    Koen Casteels saved Kucka’s strike but could do nothing about the rebound as Schranz fired home from an acute angle.

    Lukaku endured a nightmare evening. He again took a woefully heavy touch to waste a good chance from Yannick Carrasco’s raking pass.

    Belgium’s angst increased in the 56th minute when Lukaku was denied by Dubravka’s near-post save.

    From the resulting corner, Amadou Onana looped a header over Dubravka and Lukaku slid in to score from a yard out, only for his celebrations to be curtailed as VAR ruled he was off-side.

    Belgium laid siege to the Slovakia goal but Dubravka saved well from Leandro Trossard and Lukaku volleyed into the side-netting before Johan Bakayoko’s shot was cleared off the line by Hancko.

    In a fitting coda to a day to forget for Belgium, Lukaku blasted home in the 86th minute but the goal was disallowed for handball by Lois Openda in the build-up.

    Romelu Lukaku of Belgium. Photo by Stu Forster/Getty ImagesSource: Getty Images

    FRANCE NEED OWN GOAL TO EDGE AUSTRIA

    Maximilian Woeber’s own goal was enough to give France a winning start to their Euro 2024 campaign on Tuesday as they edged Austria 1-0 in their opening game but Kylian Mbappe came off late on with a bloodied nose.

    Woeber diverted Mbappe’s cutback into his own net seven minutes before halftime in Duesseldorf to allow the French, one of the leading contenders to win the tournament, to come through a stiff test.

    Austria have been much-improved under Ralf Rangnick and their pressing game often made life uncomfortable for the 2022 World Cup runners-up, who saw Mbappe leave the field near the end after being hurt in a collision.

    He had earlier failed to convert a glorious chance that would have allowed France to win by a wider margin.

    While Les Bleus were not at their best, they will be relieved to have emerged victorious from the game after a build-up overshadowed by talk of politics rather than football.

    Mbappe and other French players had spent much of their time before the media in recent days answering questions about upcoming elections in the country which could see the far-right National Rally become the biggest party.

    Any slip-up here would have led to suggestions their minds had not been fully focused on the competition, as France aim to become European champions for the third time, and first since 2000.

    Instead, the result leaves Didier Deschamps’ team level on three points in Group D with the Netherlands, who defeated Poland 2-1 in Hamburg on Sunday.

    France and the Netherlands meet next in Leipzig on Friday, while Austria face Poland earlier the same day in Berlin.

    Austrian midfielder Romano Schmid. Photo by PATRICIA DE MELO MOREIRA / AFPSource: AFP

    Austria had enjoyed some impressive results coming into the tournament on a seven-game unbeaten run and their team is on familiar ground during these Euros — their coach Rangnick is from Germany and eight of their starting line-up played in the German Bundesliga last season.

    The French, however, are arguably the most talented team at the tournament, led by their captain Mbappe.

    He endured a miserable time at his only previous Euros three years ago, failing to score and missing the decisive penalty in a shootout defeat by Switzerland in the last 16.

    The new Real Madrid signing will wonder how he did not score in this game, with his first big opportunity arriving inside eight minutes.

    Antoine Griezmann and Theo Hernandez combined to release Mbappe, who cut in from the left as he loves to do and shaped to curl a shot into the far corner before instead aiming for the near post.

    However, Austria goalkeeper Patrick Pentz was able to make the save. The Austrians settled into the contest and passed up a wonderful chance of their own to go ahead on 36 minutes.

    Skipper Marcel Sabitzer touched down a Michael Gregoritsch cross from the left for Christoph Baumgartner, but he was foiled by goalkeeper Mike Maignan.

    That proved crucial as France went ahead two minutes later.

    Ousmane Dembele gave the ball to Mbappe on the right, and he produced a stepover to get to the byline before his cutback was nodded into the far corner of his own net by the unfortunate Woeber.

    Mbappe was then thwarted by Pentz as he tried to go around the goalkeeper in first-half stoppage time, but that was nothing compared to the chance he squandered 10 minutes after the restart.

    Adrien Rabiot sent Mbappe away, bounding in behind the Austrian defence, but he somehow put his shot wide with just the goalkeeper to beat.

    That left the game in the balance, and Austria continued to push for a leveller, but without success.

    Their fans were less than impressed by what they perceived as time-wasting late on from Mbappe, who needed treatment after colliding with Kevin Danso in the box.

    He left the pitch with his shirt stained by blood, only to then come back on and sit down, earning himself a yellow card before being replaced by Olivier Giroud.

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