Google
 

Sunday, September 9, 2007

Malta 2-2 Turkey: Visitors lose ground

Group C
















































Malta2 - 2Turkey
41'Brian Said1 - 0
45'1 - 1Halil Altintop
76'Andre Schembri2 - 1
78'2 - 2Servet Cetin

22


Turkey lost ground in the race to qualify for Euro 2008 when they were surprisingly held to a 2-2 draw by Malta in a Group C qualifier on Saturday.

Needing a victory to narrow the gap with pacesetters Greece, Turkey twice came back from a goal down with second half strikes from Halil Altintop and Servet Cetin.

Malta took the lead five minutes before the interval when a Roderick Briffa's corner soared past a host of Turkey players and into the path of Malta defender Brian Said who drilled the ball home.

After Halil volleyed in the equaliser, following a deflection off the bar, Andre Schembri put the hosts ahead again in the 73rd minute by scrambling the ball into the net from close range.

Turkey were back on level terms three minutes later, defender Servet hitting the target with a glancing header following a corner from Hamit Altintop.

The result left Turkey trailing in third place, four points behind leaders Greece, while Malta collected their fifth point to lie sixth in the seven-team group.

Source: Soccernet.com

Read More...

Hungary 1-0 Bosnia-Herzegovina: Gera spot on

Group C






























Hungary1 - 0Bosnia - Herzegovin
39'Zoltan Gera (pen)1 - 0

10


A Zoltan Gera penalty gave Hungary a deserved 1-0 victory over a disappointing Bosnia side in their Euro 2008 Group C qualifier on Saturday.

Midfielder Gera converted from the spot in the 39th minute after striker Robert Feczesin was felled in the area.

The visitors, still in the race to qualify, looked a shadow of the team who have beaten Norway away and Turkey at home. They came closest three minutes from the end but forward Zlatan Muslimovic missed the target from close range.

Hungary created most of the chances in an end-to-end game and Gera came close to a brace in the second half when his well taken strike hit the crossbar in the 73rd minute.

Hungary visit European champions Greece, the group leaders, while Bosnia entertain Moldova in their next qualifiers on Wednesday.

Source: Soccernet.com

Read More...

Italy 0-0 France: Edgy draw

Group B























Italy0 - 0France

00


Italy drew 0-0 with France in a passionate and tough-tackling Euro 2008 qualifier on Saturday, which dropped the world champions to third in Group B.

The repetition of last year's World Cup final was full of drama despite the lack of goals, with Filippo Inzaghi clipping the bar on half an hour.

Both sides had other good chances in an intense and noisy atmosphere at a sell-out San Siro where France coach Raymond Domenech was forced to watch the game from the stands because of a UEFA touchline ban.

France top the group with Scotland second after their 3-1 win over Lithuania and Italy a point behind in third.

The first half featured some tough challenges with Claude Makelele and Gennaro Gattuso booked.

Italy captain Fabio Cannavaro had the first good chance when he shovelled the ball wide from Andrea Pirlo's corner before surprise France starter Nicolas Anelka scuffed an effort past the post from the edge of the box.

A lacklustre Alessandro Del Piero then slipped when shooting in a good position on the half hour and almost immediately Inzaghi, who started in place of injured striker Luca Toni, clipped the bar from close in.

France coach Domenech was also prevented from giving a halftime team talk because of the UEFA one-game ban, which he received for accusing Italy of bribing the referee of an Under-21 qualifier for the 2000 Olympics.

The start of the second half was just as frenetic with France keeper Mickael Landreau nervously tipping over Mauro Camoranesi's rasping drive and Buffon denying Anelka at his feet.

Thierry Henry was then booked for clipping Cannavaro's heels and the intensity of the first hour meant the remaining 30 minutes became scrappy with both sides visibly tired.

A crowd of 80,000, a record for the San Siro, made a cacophony of noise and Italy fans booed the French anthem and taunted the visitors before kick off with big screen footage of last year's World Cup win on penalties.

A recording of Luciano Pavarotti singing "Nessun Dorma" was played before kick off to huge applause. The Italian tenor died on Thursday aged 71 and his funeral took place on Saturday.

Source: Soccernet.com

Read More...

Georgia 1-1 Ukraine: Late leveller

Group B




































Georgia1 - 1Ukraine
9'0 - 1Oleg Shelayev
89'David Siradze1 - 1

11


A late goal by David Siradze earned Georgia a 1-1 draw with Ukraine in Euro 2008 qualifying on Saturday.

Siradze, who came on as a substitute on the hour, struck following an 87th-minute corner.

'We have missed a great chance, it (victory) was almost in our hands,' Ukraine coach Oleg Blokhin told a news conference.

Midfielder Oleg Shelaev had given the visitors the lead following another corner in the ninth minute.

The result left Ukraine five points adrift of joint Group B leaders Scotland, who beat Lithuania 3-1, and France, who were playing Italy later on Saturday.

Source: Soccernet.com

Read More...

Scotland 3-1 Lithuania: McFadden seals victory

Group B
















































Scotland3 - 1Lithuania
31'Kris Boyd1 - 0
61'1 - 1Tomas Danilevicius (pen)
77'Stephen McManus2 - 1
83'James McFadden3 - 1

31


Scotland remained on course for the Euro 2008 finals with a gruelling victory which tested the determination and courage of Alex McLeish's young squad to the full.

The win over Lithuania at Hampden was fraught with danger at times and probably more flattering than the home nation deserved, but three crucial qualifying points ensures the momentum continues ahead of Wednesday's meeting with France.

Goals from Kris Boyd, Stephen McManus and James McFadden earned the trio national hero status, while a dubious penalty converted by Tomas Danilevicius will no doubt prompt questions when the euphoria has subsided.

Alan Hutton and Jay McEveley both made their first starts in the full-back positions, although the decision most likely to have raised eyebrows ahead of the game was the inclusion of Gary Teale on the right of midfield. There was no place for Paul Hartley or McFadden in the starting line-up.

Lithuanian coach Algimantas Liubinskas had named six Hearts players in his squad but only two started at Hampden, Deividas Cesnauskis and Andrius Velicka, plus former Dunfermline centre-half Andrius Skerla.

That 52,000 tickets were snapped up for the visit of one of the less glamorous nations in the tournament demonstrated just how far Scottish expectations have risen from a few years ago when less than half that amount would have made the journey to the national stadium.

The action on the park was far from inspirational early on. A Lithuania free-kick could have caused problems when Scott Brown was deemed to have fouled Danilevicius a few yards outside the box.

Mindaugas Kalonas was wasteful with the set-piece but was given the opportunity to make amends when the ball pinged back into his path. However, Craig Gordon was never really troubled by an effort screwed well over the crossbar.

Velicka then indulged in gamesmanship in a bid to earn the visitors a foothold in the game by going to ground twice in the box following challenges from Davie Weir.

But the Hearts man, whose antics last season saw Falkirk's Darren Barr wrongly dismissed in a league match, failed to impress the official.

The first real incident of note from Scotland arrived with 20 minutes gone and Lithuania would surely have found themselves in arrears had it not been for the heroics of their goalkeeper Zydrunas Karcemarskas.

He pulled off a superb double save to firstly prevent Boyd's header nestling in the net, before pawing a Lee McCulloch follow-up to safety. McCulloch, though, should have made more of the opportunity.

When the breakthrough came after 31 minutes, it even caught McLeish by surprise. The Scotland manager was busily scribbling in his notepad, perhaps pondering whether to tweak his system, when Boyd claimed the opener.

Darren Fletcher - who had retained the captaincy in the absence of the suspended Barry Ferguson - delivered a tantalising free-kick from the right into the box and the Rangers striker out-muscled Skerla to connect with the header, which he bulleted past Karcemarskas.

Boyd then passed up a couple of chances to double his haul before half-time. A left-footed volley prompted a one-handed save from Karcemarskas before an enticing through-ball from Fletcher saw Boyd wastefully smash his shot off the body of the onrushing goalkeeper.

Two Hearts players, Saulius Mikoliunas and Audrius Ksanavicius, were thrown into the action after the break and the Tynecastle connection intensified when former Hearts striker Edgaras Jankauskas replaced Marius Stankevicius, who was withdrawn shortly after the restart after appearing to land awkwardly on his arm.

Mikoliunas had an almost instant, and devastating, impact on the game.

Blatantly throwing himself to the ground under pressure from Fletcher, he earned an extremely dubious penalty with 59 minutes gone, deceiving 31-year-old referee Damir Skomina.

Danilevicius stepped up to convert from 12 yards to restore parity.

McFadden then bounded off the bench, replacing Teale, with the intention of restoring Scotland's lead but it was McManus who was next to threaten.

His header was saved at the keeper's right-hand post before he resumed his defensive duties at the other end by blocking a goalbound effort from Kalonas.

McManus' near-miss proved to be a preview of what was to come from the Celtic captain. McLeish went for broke by introducing Craig Beattie and Shaun Maloney.

Aston Villa man Maloney, with his first touch, lobbed Fletcher's short corner to the back post, where McManus was waiting to rifle home with 13 minutes remaining.

Any hope of a second Lithuania comeback was snuffed out seven minutes from time when McFadden's 25-yard curling left-footed drive nestled in the back of the Lithuania net.

Paris, and World Cup runners-up France, now await Scotland's challenge.

Source: Soccernet.com

Read More...

Portugal 2-2 Poland: Last-gasp Poles

Group A















































Portugal2 - 2Poland
44'0 - 1 Mariusz Lewandowski
50'Nuno Maniche1 - 1
73'Cristiano Ronaldo2 - 1
88'2 - 2Jacek Krzynowek

22


Match Highlights:

Portugal and Poland battled to a 2-2 draw at the Estadio da Luz, with neither side playing to the best of its capabilities.

The hosts slipped to allow two goals from a visiting side that did not inspire much, while they could not make their advantage count at the other end.

Portugal's possession play failed to reap benefits in a largely entertaining encounter.

Such was the story of the first half. Indeed, Portugal's best chance came from a set piece, Cristiano Ronaldo narrowly failing to find the net as his free kick cracked off the post.

Portugal, though, had failed to find a rhythm, and their carelessness - and makeshift back line - made them pay just before half time.

Lewandowski bundled the ball past Ricardo from the edge of the box after the 'keeper had parried a vicious long-range effort.

Portugal immediately came back into it after half time, the impressive Maniche getting on the end of Nuno Gomes' pass to fire home from close range.

Minutes later and it should have been 2-1 as the Portugal of old briefly resurfaced, Nuno Gomes just tipping the ball wide as he slid into a ball across goalmouth.

Cristiano Ronaldo and substitue Quaresma combined well to make it 2-1.

After a great cross from the right, the Manchester United star Ronaldo used his strength and agility to control the ball and then loop it home from close range, despite the attention of his marker.

But then the Equipa das Quinas slid back into their first half ways, and were made to pay right at the death as Poland levelled the scores.

It was virtually Poland's first attack of the half, and came from an error by Ricardo.

The Portuguese goalkeeper flapped at a long-range drive and appeared to get the last touch before the ball crossed the line, breaking Portuguese hearts after Jacek Kryznowek's shot seemed to be cleanly dealt with.

The Wolfsburg midfielder's effort had power and direction, but still should have proved easy fodder for the new Betis goalkeeper.

It was too late for Portugal to stage another recovery, and they will reflect on what might have been as they remain two points behind Finland in Group A, sitting third on 16.

Source: Soccernet.com

Read More...

Serbia 0-0 Finland: Scrappy draw

Group A






















Serbia0 - 0Finland

00


Serbia and Finland stayed in contention for a berth at the Euro 2008 finals in Austria and Switzerland after a 0-0 draw in their Group A qualifier on Saturday.

The result left the Finns second in the group on 18 points from 10 matches, one point adrift of leaders Poland who were away to Portugal later on Saturday.

Third-placed Portugal had 15 points from eight matches before the game with Poland, while Serbia were on 15 from nine.

Serbia dominated a scrappy affair but their unfamiliar 4-5-1 formation with Danko Lazovic as the lone striker produced hardly any clear-cut chances against a firm Finnish defence.

Lazovic missed the best chance for the home side in the first half when he directed a poor close-range header at keeper Jusi Jaaskelainen with the goal at his mercy.

Jaaskelainen did well to keep out a ferocious Bosko Jankovic free kick shortly before the break and enjoyed a stroke of luck when Dejan Stankovic fired just wide of the far post.

Serbia introduced towering striker Nikola Zigic and Milan Jovanovic in the second half but faded in the closing stages and it took a last-gasp clearance from Branislav Ivanovic to stop Mikael Forssell from scoring at the other end.

Jovanovic and Antonio Rukavina came close with desperate long-range efforts in stoppage time and Serbia were jeered off the pitch by the 15,000 home crowd after the final whistle.

Source: Soccernet.com

Read More...

Alonso remains firmly in control - Monza GP


ernando Alonso dominated the 53-lap Italian Grand Prix to take his first win at the classic Monza circuit. Starting from the pole position, Alonso made a great getaway and was never seriously threatened by team-mate Lewis Hamilton who would take the chequered flag six seconds behind. Alonso’s fine victory closes the championship gap to just three points…

While Alonso did not put a foot wrong, Hamilton made life harder for himself than it had to be on his second stint as he dropped back from Alonso and found himself behind Kimi Raikkonen after his second and final stop. An audacious pass for position ten laps from home into the first chicane regained Hamilton the runner-up position.

Kimi Raikkonen started fifth in his Ferrari and immediately got the jump on fourth placed Nick Heidfeld on the run down to the first turn at the start and tucked in behind team-mate Massa. Running a one stop strategy, Raikkonen was unable to keep pace with the front runners, but his fourth place on track became third when Massa peeled off into the pits on lap ten.

It was the end of the road for Massa who went back out only to return to the pit and retire the F2007 with a gearbox issue. Raikkonen kept the pressure on and almost snatched second position from the two-stopping Hamilton were it now for a very late lunge from the rookie to regain second position.

It was a pretty typical race for Nick Heidfeld as he had the pace to pull away from those behind him in his BMW Sauber, but did not have the pace to do anything about those in front. Heidfeld finished in fourth position, half a minute behind Raikkonen.

Robert Kubica had to work harder for his position and took fifth over all just four second behind Heidfeld. A problem with the front jack in his first pit stop cost him ten seconds resulting in Kubica falling behind Nico Rosberg and Heikki Kovalainen. The BMW racer would battle back and close down a 20 second deficit to Heidfeld in the closing stages.

Nico Rosberg drove a good race again for Williams Toyota. The German racer lost out to Jenson Button early on and lost time behind the leading Honda. Once clear, Rosberg was able to pull clear to finish sixth, five seconds behind Kubica.

Heikki Kovalainen started seventh and finished in the same position in the leading Renault, losing one position in the race to Rosberg, while Jenson Button ran a very long first stint and brought the Honda home in eighth position for his second point of the season.


Mark Webber finished ninth in his Red Bull Renault. Team-mate David Coulthard had a short race as he suffered a heavy shunt on lap two that brought out the safety car for seven laps. Coulthard clipped the back of Giancarlo Fisichella’s Renault at the first chicane and heading into the next turn – Curve Grande – the RB3 speared off the track as the front wing failed. Coulthard was unhurt.

It was another disappointing race for Jarno Trulli. Starting ninth the Italian veteran lost four positions on the opening lap and was never able to regain all of that ground. Trulli finished 11th, less than a second behind Barrichello.

Rubens Barrichello finished in 12th position, losing one position in the race to Mark Webber. Giancarlo Fisichella finished a lap down in 12th position in the second Renault. Alex Wurz was next up in the second Williams ahead of Anthony Davidson who battled hard early on with Fisichella.

Ralf Schumacher finished 15th in the second Toyota ahead of Takuma Sato in his Super Aguri Honda. The Toro Rosso duo of Tonio Liuzzi and Sebastian Vettel took 17th and 18th ahead of the Spyker pair of Adrian Sutil and Sakon Yamamoto.

The teams now pack up and head to the Ardennes to prepare for the Belgian Grand Prix next weekend. In between, we have the crucial World Motor Sport Council hearing on Thursday in Paris. There is plenty to play for…

Source: f1-live.com

Read More...

England 3-0 Israel: First Wembley win













































England3 - 0Israel
20'Shaun Wright-Phillips1 - 0
49'Michael Owen2 - 0
66'Micah Richards3 - 0

30


Steve McClaren's England finally flexed their muscles as they overwhelmed Israel to breathe fresh life into their Euro 2008 qualifying campaign.

Shaun Wright-Phillips' first competitive goal for the Three Lions put them on the road to a convincing win before half-time, with Michael Owen and Micah Richards completing a one-sided triumph after the break.

Yet, it was not just the scoreline that afforded McClaren a satisfied smile at the final whistle, more the thrilling manner of victory.

Certainly all those who called for the England coach's head during a turbulent spring campaign which included a disappointing draw against these same opponents in Tel Aviv may now need to pause for thought, even if their opinions will not be changed completely until a place in next summer's Finals is assured.

It now appears a double-header with Russia, the first encounter of which takes place at Wembley on Wednesday, holds the key to a trip to Austria and Switzerland.

No side coached by Guus Hiddink can be taken lightly but in this mood, England must fancy their chances.

There were heroes all over the field. Richards again betraying his tender years with another mature performance which nudges him closer to ousting Gary Neville as McClaren's first-choice right-back.

Man of the match Wright-Phillips has emerged from the wilderness at Chelsea and is now regularly embarking on those dangerous mazy runs which persuaded Jose Mourinho to pay £21million for him. On the other flank, Joe Cole begged the question why Mourinho is ignoring him.

And then there was Emile Heskey, another media whipping boy, exiting to a standing ovation from an upbeat, enthusiastic and delighted crowd who have become so accustomed to jeering their team in recent times.

The change of atmosphere and mood - with the notable exception of a sustained negative reaction for debutant David Bentley, who snubbed England's Under-21 side this summer - are manna from heaven for McClaren, who wants to turn Wembley into a fortress and as he strode into the home dressing room to deliver his half-time verdict, he could have had only one complaint, namely, why was the game not wrapped up?

Having seen his team perform so well in the opening 45 minutes and watched his gamble in selecting Heskey pay off handsomely, it must have been slightly frustrating the interval advantage was a single goal.

Heskey was one of the obvious culprits, blazing an early opportunity over before nodding Steven Gerrard's far-post corner wide.

Yet criticism of the Wigan man would be harsh in the extreme.

Heskey may have his faults but it was obvious for all to see why McClaren wanted turned to him once Frank Lampard had been ruled out.

His sheer physical presence was enough to unnerve an Israel defence which, occupied by trying to keep his mountainous frame at bay, opened up like a paper bag for England's nippier attacking talents.

Owen would have profited had he not crashed a volley straight into the face of Israeli keeper Dudu Aouate, who also saved well from impressive full-back Richards and Ashley Cole.

At the other end, Paul Robinson was a virtual spectator, given no chance at all to prove McClaren made the correct decision to stick with him.

Yet, for all the hosts' dominance, all they had to show for their efforts was Wright-Phillips' wonderfully crafted effort.

Joe Cole was the architect, showing the tigerish quality normally associated with his captain John Terry, to win possession close to the Israel box.

He then stepped onto his favoured right foot before picking out Wright-Phillips with a superb angled ball which dropped beyond the visitors defence.

Wright-Phillips' finish was executed to perfection and though Israel were convinced the Chelsea man was offside, TV replays proved he had timed his run just right.

McClaren's half-time mantra must surely have been for his team to kill the game off quickly. If so, the response was immediate as Owen proved 18 months of injury hell have done nothing to dim his predatory powers.

Gareth Barry, another effective performer after being handed the midfield spot Owen Hargreaves' thigh injury prevented him from occupying, created the opportunity with rolled pass into Owen's feet.

Stood on the edge of the box with his back to goal, Owen still had plenty to do. Yet, with an inspired first touch, the Newcastle forward gave himself the chance to turn and smashed his 38th England goal into the top corner.

If Owen is accustomed to finding the net, the most notable goal of Richards' fledgling career prior to this evening came accompanied by a never-to-be-forgotten four-letter reaction on live TV.

The Manchester City teenager will surely get many chances to atone for that mistake judging by the way he rose to power home Gerrard's corner.

Source: Soccernet.com

Read More...

Starting line-up for Monza GP Formula 1

Starting line-up for Monza GP









































































































































1F.AlonsoMcLaren Mercedes
2L.HamiltonMcLaren Mercedes
3F.MassaFerrari
4N.HeidfeldBMW
5K.RaikkonenFerrari
6R.KubicaBMW
7H.KovalainenRenault
8N.RosbergWillams
9J.TrulliToyota
10J.ButtonHonda
11M.WebberRedbull
12R.BarrichelloHonda
13A.WurzWilliams
14A.DavidsonSuper Aguri F1
15G.FishicellaRenault
16S.vettelToro Rosso
17T.SatoSuper Aguri F1
18R.ShumacherToyota
19V.LiuzziToro Rosso
20D.CoulthardRedbull
21A.SutilSpyker F1
22S.YamamotoSpyker F1

Read More...

Alonso storms the Monza Pole

ernando Alonso had it all covered this afternoon in qualifying for the Italian Grand Prix, leading the way in all three qualifying sessions and claiming a the Pole Position from team-mate Lewis Hamilton with a best lap of 1:21.997s.

Alonso’s advantage was trimmed a little in the final 15 minute phase, but as Lewis Hamilton crossed the line with an improvement - but not a place gain - Alonso was able to back off secure in the knowledge that he had secured his second Pole Position of the season.

Hamilton trailed Alonso all session long, but did manage to reduce the gap to Alonso to just 0.037s. Behind, Ferrari were some way off the pace with Felipe Massa half a second back in third position.

Kimi Raikkonen took over the spare Ferrari following his shut in the morning practice session. With the race engine fitted to the spare car, no penalties could be applied, but he will be disappointed his first Italian Grand Prix for Ferrari from fifth position. Limited track time due to hydraulic issues combines with the crash this morning did not help his cause.

Nick Heidfeld predicted ahead of the race weekend that BMW Sauber may be able to challenge Ferrari this weekend and will therefore be delighted to qualify fourth; splitting the two F2007s. Robert Kubica starts sixth in the second F1.07.

Heikki Kovalainen starts seventh in the leading Renault and given the six-tenths gap to Kubica, may well be the first of those opting to make the 53-lap Grand Prix a one stop event. Team-mate Giancarlo Fisichella was aiming to improve on 14th position but was unlucky to find Rubens Barrichello bouncing through the gravel in the second round of qualifying. Fisichella did not improve and therefore starts his home event in a dismal 15th position.

Nico Rosberg has been strong all weekend long and starts eighth in his Williams Toyota, five positions ahead of team-mate Alex Wurz. Jarno Trulli worked hard to make it into the final top ten shoot out and did a solid job to qualify his Toyota ninth. Ralf Schumacher’s roller-coaster season continued and he starts a poor 18th in the sister TF107.

In low downforce trim, the troublesome Honda RA107 has its aero deficiencies masked somewhat and Jenson Button pushed hard to make it into the final phase of qualifying and will start the event from tenths position on the grid. Barrichello starts 12th.

Over at Red Bull Renault, it was a case of mixed fortunes as Mark Webber will line up 11th while David Coulthard starts 20th after the RB3 snapped away on entry into the first chicane. With a suspected gearbox issue it was session over for the Veteran racer.

Anthony Davidson led the way at Super Aguri Honda with the 14th fastest time ahead of Fisichella and Sebastian Vettel who was able to bully his Toro Rosso into the second qualifying session. Takuma Sato starts 17th ahead of Schumacher and Tonio Liuzzi in the second Toro Rosso.

It was a difficult session for the Spyker Ferrari team with Adrian Sutil some way off the pace in the new B-Spec car and 21st on the grid, while Sakon Yamamoto hardly helped his cause by spinning his Spyker into the barriers under braking into turn one.

So far, a relatively comfortable time for Fernando Alonso and the McLaren Mercedes team. It remains to be seen if Ferrari has anything to offer in the way of a challenge in race conditions.

Source: f1-live.com

Read More...