Showing posts with label AFC Champions League. Show all posts
Showing posts with label AFC Champions League. Show all posts

Sunday, 29 November 2015

Fans Protest as Western Sydney Win


Western Sydney extended their winning streak to five games thanks to a 2-0 win over Central Coast on Sunday, both goals coming after a section of Wanderers fans staged their predicted protest by walking out of the ground.

Nearly 1,000 members of the club’s active supporter group, the Red and Black Bloc, filed out of Central Coast Stadium at the 30-minute mark in protest against Football Federation Australia for what they perceive as poor handling of stadium bans.

Following the walkout, Mitch Nicholls set up Brendon Santalab’s opener and slotted the second to lift the Wanderers to second place on the A-League table and on equal points with leaders Melbourne Victory.

The clash at Central Coast Stadium was the first the side have won at the Gosford venue since their inaugural season in 2012-13.

This encounter will perhaps be remembered more for the protest, but for those of the 10,519 crowd that remained, it was attacking football at its frenetic best. And Tony Popovic’s men were a class above.

They very nearly opened their account in a frenzied first few minutes when Nicholls miskicked a long-ranged shot wide of an open goal while Mariners custodian Paul Izzo was caught way off his line.

Seven minutes later the playmaker almost atoned, bulging the back of the net before being ruled offside. The returning Romeo Castelen kept the momentum flowing by rattling the post, the ball almost comically rebounding and sailing straight into Izzo’s outstretched arms.

Castelen was a rampant force down the right flank as the Mariners’ back line toiled, but he undermined his own efforts by missing a swag of chances. In the end it was super sub Santalab who made good in the 66th minute, on his first shot and less than 10 minutes after his introduction.

Nicholls set the goal up gorgeously with a dink down the middle for the onrushing striker, who fought off a yellow-shirted defender before making no mistake against Izzo.

The Mariners took back a little of the possession they lost in the first half and made some bold moves on the counter-attack, including one late on when Irish striker Roy O’Donovan was denied by Wanderers keeper Andrew Redmayne in extra-time.

But a bare moment passed before Nicholls cemented the result, latching onto a Joshua Sotirio through ball to fire home.

The Wanderers’ five match winning run was the best since their 10-game streak in 2012-13.

Australia’s football faithful have been vocal and angry this week following News Corp Australia’s publication of names and photos of 198 banned A-League fans, of which nearly half were Wanderers supporters.

Not all Western Sydney fans left, with numerous bays still dotted with red and black shirts. Earlier in the match, the RBB held up banners stating their stance, one of which read: “FFA: Don’t bury your heads in the sand, we’ve listed our demands!”

A depleted Mariners Yellow Army also unfurled their own banner reading: “Sitting in silence like the FFA. No fans = no football.”

The RBB’s walkout followed an identical one from Melbourne Victory’s supporter group the North Terrace, who left Etihad Stadium after half an hour of Saturday night’s 2-1 win over Adelaide United.


Saturday, 5 November 2011

Al Sadd Shock Jeonbuk in AFC Final


Qatar's Al Sadd shocked Korea Republic's Jeonbuk Motors 4-2 on penalties in a thrilling AFC Champions League final today, after they were deadlocked at 2-2 following extra time.

Former Portsmouth left-back Nadir Belhadj fired the winner into the roof of the Jeonbuk net, sparking delirium among the Al Sadd players and breaking the hearts of the near-capacity crowd at the 43,000-seat Jeonju World Cup stadium.

The home side had clawed their way back into the game with an injury-time equaliser, forcing extra time, but Kim Dong-Chan and Park Won-Jae both missed their spot-kicks amid high drama in the South Korean city.

Jeonbuk, chasing a second Champions League win after lifting the trophy in 2006, came close several times in a nerve-shredding 30 minutes of extra time, but were repeatedly denied by the underdog visitors.

The victory brought an exhilarating end to a turbulent competition for Al Sadd. Abdul Kader Keita looked to have secured their second continental title with a second-half strike, until Lee Sung-Hyun's headed equaliser in stoppage time.

Brazilian Eninho had earlier put Jeonbuk ahead with a deliciously curled free-kick on 17 minutes, but an own goal by Sim Woo-Yeon levelled the scores before Keita's shot gave the visitors the lead.

Al Sadd's goalkeeper Mohamed Saqr saved two penalties, as Jeonbuk stumbled at the last after a free-scoring campaign. It was a messy but enthralling game, played in front of a raucous crowd, and vindicates Al Sadd coach Jorge Fossati's pre-match warning that his unfancied side deserved to be in the final.

"I'm very happy for him. When I returned to the club people told me he can't play any more, they said he was too old, but he played fantastic," Fossati said of his goalkeeper.

"I couldn't imagine this game would go to penalties. I was really worried to get to extra time because our physical condition was not normal after ten hours of flight. I was worried we wouldn't finish the game."

Al Sadd started brightly with strikers Mamadou Niang and Keita - both back from suspensions - impressive early on and linking with the excellent Belhadj, who terrorised Jeonbuk's right side.

And when Eninho scored, the expected Jeonbuk goal glut failed to materialise and Al Sadd equalised near the half-hour mark when a seemingly innocuous Keita cross squirted off Sim Woo-Yeon's head and in.

The visitors then shocked the hosts as they took the lead with a sucker-punch counter-attack. Jeonbuk surged back, hitting the post from a corner and winning a series of free-kicks in and around the box, before finally being rewarded with Lee's goal.

But despite the presence of ex-Premier League striker Lee Dong-Gook, Jeonbuk could not find a way through again and paid the price in the gripping penalty shoot-out.