Showing posts with label @Atleti. Show all posts
Showing posts with label @Atleti. Show all posts

Monday, 9 May 2016

Barcelona Hit Five Past Neighbours

Getty Images
Barcelona closed in on the La Liga title by thrashing local rivals Espanyol 5-0 on Sunday as Atletico Madrid dropped out of the race after losing 2-1 at Levante and Real Madrid beat Valencia 3-2.

Barca top the standings on 88 points, Real moved into second on 87 and Atletico have 85 with one game remaining.

Barca went ahead in the eighth minute when Lionel Messi curled a 22-yard free kick into the top corner with a magnificent finish.

Luis Suarez stretched the hosts’ lead with two goals in the second half before Rafinha and Neymar completed the rout.

Atletico took the lead at Levante in the first minute through Fernando Torres, but the relegated home side fought back, equalising through Victor Casadesus before Giuseppe Rossi grabbed the winner in stoppage time.

Real were without goalkeeper Keylor Navas, defender Dani Carvajal, midfielder Luka Modric and winger Gareth Bale through injury, but went ahead thanks to a thunderous low finish from Cristiano Ronaldo in the 26th minute.

Karim Benzema scored the second before the break but Rodrigo Moreno, who was later sent off, pulled one back for Valencia after half-time.

Ronaldo added his second a few minutes later before Andre Gomes scored a sumptuous consolation goal for Valencia.


Wednesday, 27 April 2016

Atletico Madrid v Bayern Munich

Diego Simeone - Getty Images
Diego Simeone admitted his Atlético side face a challenge on Wednesday night but has warned Bayern Munich to expect a battle at the Vicente Calderón.

Madrid face Bayern after dispatching Barcelona in the quarter-finals and the Argentinian is eager to test the character of Pep Guardiola’s squad. “Bayern have many options, but in battles, the side with most soldiers does not win, but those who use their soldiers better,” said the Atlético manager.

His midfielder Saúl admitted he could not find any weaknesses in the Bayern team. “They [Bayern] are the most complete side, they have a lot of variety to their game and can attack through the middle or via the wings, and they are strong in the air,” Saúl said. “We will do what we always do; work as a team, fight to the death for every ball, treat the game as though it was a final, that’s only way we will be able to compete against a top side like Bayern. The main objective is to win the game.”

The defender Stefan Savic believes the match promises to be a clash of styles. While the Spanish side are happy to grind out results when necessary and are more ready to embrace the physical side of the game, Bayern operate a possession-based game built around Guardiola’s tactical nous.

Savic, who is in contention to replace the injured Diego Godín in central defence, said: “They have another style totally different from ours, but that’s the beauty of football – it can be played in different ways and all are worthy. We will see after the game which is best. Everyone wants to win the Champions League, but we must be calm and try to give our best. It will be a tough tie, but we are confident in ourselves.”

Savic is vying with José Giménez and Lucas Hernández for Godín’s shirt, while Yannick Carrasco is expected to start despite taking limited part in training on Monday. The Belgian is being treated carefully due to a sore ankle, with Augusto Fernández standing by.
Advertisement

Guardiola believes he must win the Champions League for his spell in Germany to be deemed a success. In his first two years, Bayern have suffered semi-final exits to La Liga opposition – losing to Real Madrid in 2013-14 and Barcelona 12 months ago, after first-leg defeats away from home each time.

“Three semis in three years is not something that every team does,” Guardiola said. “I have read in Munich that without winning the Champions League, the work would not be complete. I must accept that. But I am very fortunate to have lived and worked three years in Germany. I am a better coach, a better guy, more relaxed, I have enjoyed it a lot. We will try and reach the final, as we did against Madrid and Barcelona, and now this year against Atletico.

“We are very happy to be here, we know that all semi-finalists are difficult,” he said. “The best trophy Atlético have achieved, with Diego Simeone and his team, is that they are now equals to Barcelona and Real Madrid, just as feared when they play in Europe. I have been outside Spain for five years, but have watched on the TV, and their consistency has been really impressive. Normally only the biggest teams can play every three days, and keep winning, season after season.”


Wednesday, 20 April 2016

Many Paths on the Road to Milan

<Milano2016>
Milano 2016 - UEFA
It could be that Josep Guardiola wins the silverware in Milan in May for Bayern Munich and then moves to Manchester in the summer seeking to recover the same said Champions League trophy, for his new club Manchester City. Adding to the already secured trophies for his former employers, and boyhood club, FC Barcelona in 2009 and 2011. Should he fail to overcome the semi-final opponents and not win the trophy for his German employers this will all be anecdotal irony and Guardiola head off to will set up new objectives for the Etihad Stadium team. 

And based on recent results and the close calls with Juventus in the last sixteen, and to some degree Benfica in the quarterfinals, Bayern need to get sharper to enable Pep completes his Bavarian mission – and capture the last piece of his jigsaw for Bayern – absent since his predecessor Jupp Heynckes brought it home from Wembley in 2013.

But perhaps the draw will throw up another configuration and see Real Madrid renew their European battle with the Bavarians, who over the years, have usually proved an unsurmountable hurdle to Florentino Perez’s ambitions. In 2012 Jose Mourinho’s ambitions were ended in the Santiago Bernabeu by the Munich team following penalties, with Dortmund ending their hopes a season later. In Lisbon in the 2014 Final, Atletico Madrid were the injury time victims for a Carlo Ancelotti Madrid team who had already reeked revenge on Bayern in the semi-final. 

Last season Bayern and Madrid avoided each other with both teams falling at semi-final stage to Barcelona and Juventus respectively. A return meeting for Bayern - with Pep at the helm - in Madrid would recall bygone memories of Old Clasico epics. As well as bring Xabi Alonso back to his alma mater having left the club a few seasons ago for Germany.

For Pep though a fate worse than death might have been that feared meeting with Barcelona in the final four. However, Diego Simeone demolished that demon at the Vicente Calderon on Wednesday night and so its odds on Bayern will meet one of the Madrid teams. Back in 1974 Bayern and Atletico Madrid met in the Champions League final at the Heysel Stadium with the German team – not surprisingly - winning the first of their three European Cups that May evening. Their side a “de facto” German international team that just a few weeks later would lift the World Cup Jules Rimet trophy in Munich. Also captained by Franz Beckenbauer and featuring Munich stars Paul Breitner, Hans-Georg Schwarzenbeck, Gerd Mueller, Uli Hoeness and Sepp Maier. 

With Atletico Madrid showing more modestly perhaps, Heredia from Argentina, Miguel Reina - father of Liverpool keeper Pepe- and the legendary Spanish 2008 EURO winning coach, Luis Aragones, also in the playing ranks. It proved a long night for Atleti then in Brussels and they lost by four goals. A result which would be unlikely to be repeated under Simeone’s defensive system.

With Manuel Pellegrini the intrigue would be a return to the club which fired him after losing La Liga to Barcelona by a mere three points in 2009 – despite amassing a total of 96 points in La Liga that year and beating the previous Real Madrid record set by John Toshack. Which was then surpassed in by José Mourinho in the 2011–12 season. For City to snatch a victory, from the jaws of Perez, would no doubt please Pellegrini should it come to pass - and secure passage to that Final in Milan as a result. It would also sit nicely with his Premier League silverware secured in 2104. 

Should Pellegrini draw Simeone then it will be a nationalistic grudge between Argentina and Chile which at many levels is already tension filled enough - without the added pressure of a Champions League semi-final to play. The advantage on this occasion being that Atletico know their way to a final, having done so two seasons ago. But for Manchester it would be a new journey. Yet one they seem to be adapting to very easily it would seem thus far this season.

Zinedine Zidane like Guardiola has won a Champions League medal as a player. But has yet to add the title to his managerial resume to equal the Catalan player's achievement. The Frenchman winning his title at Hampden Park against Bayer Leverkusen in 2002 and Guardiola winning his at Wembley when Johan Cruyff was his Barcelona manager a decade earlier. Also in that Barca team was Txiki Beguiristain, Director of Football at Manchester City, and the man credited with turning Pep's head towards the Blue side of the city, rather than Old Trafford. 

For Zidane the task is probably the least complicated as his job is already on the line on a weekly basis - according to the Madrid sports dailies. Much as it was after the defeat in the Volkswagen Arena in Wolfsburg in the first leg of the Champions League quarter-final. With only a mild relief on offer when Real Madrid surprisingly won the Clasico in Camp Nou to edge closer to a chance at La Liga. Faced with that pressure Zidane will have no favoured options given his managerial career was launched prematurely with the firing of Benitez in January.

On Friday in Nyon all these possible encounters will be decided with the likelihood being that City and Bayern will meet. It’s newspaper headline waiting to happen.


OSM - All rights reserved

Tuesday, 5 April 2016

Barcelona Beat 10 man Atletico

ChampionsLeague
Suarez scores against Atleti
Luis Suárez scored two second-half goals to lead Barcelona to a 2-1 comeback victory over 10-man Atlético Madrid in the first leg of their Champions League quarter-final.

Fernando Torres opened the scoring in the 25th minute but quickly went from hero to villain for Atlético when two reckless tackles saw him sent off in the 35th minute.

Atlético resisted the defending champions’ push for an equaliser until Suárez scored an opportunistic goal in the 63rd minute.

Suárez put Barcelona ahead after 74 minutes when he played Dani Alves wide before directing the Brazil defender’s cross past goalkeeper Jan Oblak with an unstoppable header.

The win comes three days after Real Madrid ended Barcelona’s Spanish record 39-match unbeaten streak with a 2-1 win at Camp Nou.

The hosts' run of six straight wins against the Rojiblancos was in doubt when Fernando Torres netted his first UEFA Champions League goal for Atleti, but a red card for the striker soon after tilted the balance their way. Suárez tapped in an equaliser just after the hour before heading in the first-leg winner, but this quarter-final tie is far from over.

The first half was all about Torres: the good, the bad and the ugly. His goal was a peach, running through a gaping hole in the Barcelona back line and collecting Koke's lovely dinked pass before firing nervelessly between the onrushing Marc-André ter Stegen's legs.

A clumsy yellow card soon followed but that swinging arm looked graceful compared to the ungainly tackle on Sergio Busquets that earned a second booking. There were still ten minutes of the first half remaining yet Barcelona, seeking redemption after Saturday's home loss to Real Madrid, struggled to make inroads.

They had had their chances, with Neymar and Lionel Messi both passing up openings they might ordinarily have snapped up, but the home side were blunted. Luis Enrique must have spent the interval with a whetstone because as the second period got under way his players were razor-sharp.

With the tempo ratcheted up, Neymar curled an shot against the bar and Filipe Luís, Juanfran and Diego Godín all made desperate last-ditch challenges. Messi sent an acrobatic effort centimetres wide and finally Suárez found a way through, deflecting in Jordi Alba's volley.

A second duly followed, a header to complete a lovely move of one-touch football, yet Atlético restricted the damage and this tie is still in the balance.

The brains of the visiting team, midfielder Koke played superbly in a first half in which Ter Stegen's brilliant save from Antoine Griezmann kept the holders alive. But after Atleti went down to ten, the power and irresistibility of the home side took over, Andrés Iniesta their ever tireless and nerveless orchestrator. Meanwhile Suárez, as he did here against Bayer Leverkusen and Arsenal, proved that having a striker for whom the goalmouth is magnetic is the difference between winning and losing.

Most teams struggle to cope against Barcelona with 11 men, but for the second time in little more than two months Atlético played at the Camp Nou with numerical inferiority. That they threatened with nine men in January's Liga meeting, and with ten here, is testimony to their tactical nous, fitness and collective fortitude. And if their Herculean efforts earned little moments of fortune in keeping the score down, perhaps it is evidence of the old refrain that 'the harder I work the luckier I get'.

Part of the allure of this competition is that no club has successfully defended the UEFA Champions League title. 

This quarter-final is still open and what the first leg made clear is that the distance between the sides, even after so many Atlético defeats, is paper-thin. 

Barcelona v Atletico Madrid - Preview

Barcelona
Neymar, Suarez and Messi
Lionel Messi, Neymar and Luis Suárez have scored 107 goals between them this season but after Barcelona’s celebrated trio failed to find the net in the defeat by Real Madrid, Luis Enrique defended them by declaring “they aren’t machines”.

The Barcelona manager said he was not concerned about the physical state of his all-star attacking line despite their below-par display in the 2-1 home defeat on Saturday.

Although Real halted their 39-game unbeaten run, Luis Enrique said he retained full confidence in his side as they prepared to host Atlético Madrid in the first leg of an all-Spanish Champions League quarter-final on Tuesday.

Messi (37), Suárez (43) and Neymar (27) have been scoring for fun but Barcelona’s only goal against Real came from the defender Gerard Piqué.

“They aren’t machines, they are the best players in their position but they aren’t unbeatable or unsurpassable,” Luis Enrique said on Monday. “I think all my players are in perfect condition. We had forgotten what it was like to lose but when you do you remember how difficult it is to win and we all hope the defeat serves as a stimulus to win again. Looking at how we have done in the last few months, I’m optimistic.”

Piqué reaffirmed his coach’s belief in his forwards. “Our three attackers are on another level, from another world. I’m not worried about them at all, it’s impossible for us to have more faith in them, they have brutal qualities and we’re so lucky to have them at Barça,” he said.

He was also adamant Barça would bounce back but said Atlético would pose even more problems than Zinedine Zidane’s men did. “We’re not scared of them but they are having a spectacular season, they are the second best team [in La Liga] and it’s going to be even harder for us than Saturday,” Piqué said.

Diego Simeone’s side have conceded only three goals in eight Champions League games this season, the joint best record in the competition alongside Real. They also have the meanest defence in La Liga, letting in 15 goals in 31 games – 11 fewer than Barcelona.

Atlético pipped Barcelona to the La Liga title in 2014 and knocked them out of the Champions League in the same season en route to the final. They are six points behind Luis Enrique’s side in La Liga and warmed up for their trip to Barcelona by thrashing Real Betis 5-1 on Saturday.

However, Barça have beaten Atlético in all six matches under Luis Enrique. Piqué said: “We’ll see how they approach the game but it’s all down to us, we need to move the ball around quickly and for the fans to put pressure on them. If that happens we’re practically unstoppable.”

Atlético are set for the return of Diego Godin after the defender’s absence of nearly three weeks because of a muscle injury. Stefan Savic, Yannick Carrasco and José María Giménez, who had been doubtful, also made the trip to Barcelona and will be available to play.

“We are feeling strong,” the Atlético defender Juanfran Torres said. “We know that our chances rely on staying alive after the game at the Camp Nou. Then we can try to seal the deal at the Vicente Calderón.”


Friday, 1 April 2016

Barcelona Cruyff Tribute for El Clasico


Barcelona will pay further tribute to Johan Cruyff by wearing a shirt with the words ‘Gràcies Johan’ on their shirts for Saturday’s clásico against Real Madrid.

A mosaic with the same slogan will also be displayed by supporters across all four sides of Camp Nou before kick-off, while a minute’s silence and a video of Cruyff’s best moments will be played prior to the La Liga fixture.

Cruyff, a three-time world player of the year and pioneer of total football, died last week at the age of 68 having been diagnosed with lung cancer in October.

Barça lead third-placed Real by 10 points and could extend their unbeaten run to 40 games.

Atlético are currently second, nine points behind Luis Enrique’s team, and travel to the Camp Nou on Tuesday for the first leg of a Champions League quarter-final.


Sunday, 20 March 2016

Barcelona Held to Draw at Villareal

Getty Images
Barcelona drew 2-2 at Villarreal after squandering a two-goal lead on Sunday, as the defending champions settled for increasing their lead in the Spanish league to nine points.

Ivan Rakitic opened the scoring in the 20th minute and Neymar added a penalty in the 41st, after the referee had sent off the Villarreal coach, Marcelino García, for protesting.

But fourth-placed Villarreal rallied with a goal from the forward Cédric Bakambu in the 57th before the Barcelona substitute Jérémy Mathieu knocked in an own goal in the 63rd.

Barcelona’s 12-match winning streak ended a day after second-placed Atlético Madrid stumbled in a 2-1 loss at Sporting Gijon.

Barcelona extended their Spanish record unbeaten streak to 39 consecutive games in all competitions as they begin the run-in to maintaining the domestic crown with eight games left. Next weekend Luis Enrique’s side host Real Madrid, who trail the pacesetters by 13 points, before hosting Sevilla later on Sunday.

“It was a very intense game against one of the best teams in the league which always presses even more in its stadium,” Rakitic said. “We have to be happy with the result, even if it hurts after being up two goals.”

As promised, the match between two of the most attractive attacking squads produced an entertaining contest from start to finish.

Bakambu was particularly inspired. He caused the Barcelona center-back Gerard Pique, and replacement Mathieu, problems until he was substituted due to an apparent leg problem in the second half.

Less than a minute into the match, Bakambu’s pass hit his team-mate Manuel Trigueros, deflected off Barcelona’s Arda Turan, and reached the post before the goalkeeper Claudio Bravo smothered it.

Bravo saved a shot by Bakambu as the host dictated the pace until Rakitic swayed the match in Barcelona’s favor.

The Croatia midfielder fired a ball through a packed area that had fallen to him when Villarreal defender Victor Ruiz disrupted a free kick by Lionel Messi destined for Luis Suárez.

García was ejected in the 24th and spent the rest of the match from a private box apparently for protesting a handball by Piqué that went unpunished. Piqué had already been booked for a handball to stop a Villarreal counterattack.

Bakambu came within inches of reaching a cross that ran across the goalmouth, but Barcelona struck a second time after Messi threaded a pass forward to meet Neymar’s run.

The goalkeeper Sergio Asenjo brought down the Brazil striker, colliding with his left leg just before he could paw the ball away. Neymar then waited until Asenjo leaned one way before floating his spot kick into the other side of the net for his 21st league goal and 27th in all competitions this season.

But far from fading, Villarreal recovered all of their verve from the start of the match after half-time, and Bakambu finally got his goal when he slotted in a ball that Bravo had parried from a shot by Denis Suárez.

“This team never gives up,” Asenjo said. “At half-time we said ’let’s forget what has happened and play like it was 0-0’.”

Villarreal almost scored again seconds later but Javier Mascherano intercepted Bakambu’s pass for the unmarked Roberto Soldado.

Neymar almost quashed the host’s rally when he drew an excellent save from Asenjo in the 60th, but Villarreal quickly levelled the score when a corner kick hit Mathieu and fell into the net.

Both sides had their chances to claim a winning goal. Rakitic’s header was turned away by Asenjo in the 71st, while Javier Mascherano was again critical to stopping Adrián López from streaking toward Bravo’s goal in stoppage time.

A moment of silence was held before the match at El Madrigal for the victims of a bus accident in north-east Spain that left at least 13 dead.


Saturday, 19 March 2016

Atletico Defeated at Sporting Gijon


Atlético Madrid stumbled in their pursuit of Barcelona for the Spanish league title after conceding two late goals to lose at relegation-threatened Sporting Gijón 2-1.

They had looked set to maintain their title challenge after Antoine Griezmann scored from a free-kick in the first half.

The visitors’ defence resisted Sporting’s attack until a late push produced a free-kick that Antonio Sanabria blasted in, with 11 minutes to play.

Sporting’s Carlos Castro completed the turnaround with a goal in the 89th minute, with Atlético playing with 10 men after defender José Giménez went down injured after coach, Diego Simeone, had made all three of his substitutions.

Barcelona lead second-place Atlético by eight points before their visit to fourth-place Villarreal on Sunday.

“We have lost three very important points for the league,” Atlético midfielder Jorge ‘Koke’ Resurrección said. “We know they [Barcelona] face Villarreal, but there is now one game less to go.”

Barring an unlikely late-season collapse by Barcelona, Atlético’s best chance for silverware this season is now the Champions League, in which Friday’s draw pitted them against the Catalan club in the quarter-finals.

Sporting’s fightback was quite a feat for the modest team that was promoted to La Liga this season and entered the round in the relegation zone.

Atlético had conceded a league-low 12 goals in the previous 29 rounds this season, and only one of those in the past six matches.

The match at El Molinón Stadium was following that exact script until Sporting mustered their rally.

After Griezmann curled his free-kick over the wall and just inside the post, the 2014 champions were content to cede Sporting the ball and lock down their defence.

The strategy that Simeone has perfected was working just fine until the last 12 minutes. Sanabria hit the post and, moments later, the striker finally beat goalkeeper Jan Oblak with a powerful free-kick that Atlético midfielder Matías Kranevitter deflected, leaving Oblak out of position to stop.

Shortly afterwards, Giménez pulled up clutching his leg during a sprint to keep up with Sanabria on a counterattack, leaving the latter clear to draw Oblak off his line and pass to Castro with the goal open.

Castro struck the ball off the bar to the disbelief of the home fans, but his redemption came on another attack down the left flank that left him needing only to tap home a pass from Jony Rodríguez.

“We had control of the game until we were down a man when Giménez got hurt,” Koke said. “We knew that Sporting were playing for a lot, but it just wasn’t to be.”