Showing posts with label uefa_cl. Show all posts
Showing posts with label uefa_cl. Show all posts

Wednesday, 3 October 2012

Bayern Beaten by Bate Borisov


Bate Borisov stunned Bayern Munich 3-1 in Champions League Group F, their second victory in two games.

Bate, who beat Lille by the same score in their opener, went ahead with a 23rd-minute goal from Aleksandr Pavlov and added late goals by Vitali Rodionov and Renan Bressan to snap Bayern's nine-game winning streak in all competitions. Frank Ribéry scored for Bayern in injury time.

"It was a very difficult match but we fought until the end," said the Bate winger Aleksandr Hleb, who spent seven years in the Bundesliga. "This is a sensational result for us. We will celebrate a bit but we need to keep working hard.

"Bayern are still favourites in our group. We are taking it one match at a time," said the former Barcelona player.

Last season's Champions League finalists had dominated the first half and hit the post through Toni Kroos but were nervous about going forward in the second period because of the Belarussian champions' potent counter-attacks. The result leaves the group wide open with Bate top on six points and Bayern on three with Valencia, who beat Lille 2-0.

The Bayern coach, Jupp Heynckes, aiming to break a club record with a 10th straight win, started with Javi Martínez instead of Bastian Schweinsteiger. However, the Spaniard, who cost €40m (£32m) in Bayern's biggest close-season transfer, showed little initiative and was taken off early in the second half.

The hosts were never intimidated by their more illustrious opponents and Denis Polyakov forced a reflex save from the Bayern goalkeeper, Manuel Neuer, after seven minutes.

"I knew this would be a very tough opponent and in such games you have to take the lead," said Heynckes. "We hit the post and bar and we had some bad luck.

"We constantly piled on the pressure but we have to give credit to our opponents. They are a very well-organised team, especially in defence, and they showed it again tonight."


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Thursday, 20 September 2012

Spartak Suffer Messi Comeback

Getty Images
Barcelona had to storm back from behind to get its Champions League campaign off to a winning start as two goals from Lionel Messi helped it beat Spartak Moscow 3-2 at the Camp Nou.

Cristian Tello had fired the host into the lead after just 13 minutes but Spartak refused to be overawed by their surroundings and were level 16 minutes before halftime when Dani Alves turned Emmanuel Emenike's cross into his own net.

The home fans were stunned on the hour mark when a excellent Spartak counterattack teed up Romulo to put the visitors in front, but Messi applied the finishing touch to two deadly crosses by Tello and Alexis Sanchez in the final 20 minutes to secure a precious three points. Messi has 10 goals in seven matches this season, including four two-goal games.

"To talk about Messi is to talk about excellence in football," Spartak coach Unai Emery said. "It is very tough to stop him."

Barca were hampered by another injury to one of its central defenders as Gerard Pique limped off after 12 minutes with Alex Song coming on the make his European debut for the Catalans in an unlikely central defensive pairing alongside Javier Mascherano.

However, that change did not affect their rhythm going forward early on and they were handed the lead in spectacular style as Tello cut in off the left wing and curled a perfectly measured shot into the bottom corner.

The 2011 winners then threatened to run riot as Messi came within inches of a second, but Spartak were level just before the half hour when Emenike's dangerous cross could only be turned into his own net by Alves.

The game then settled into its original pattern with Barca probing and Spartak leaving all 11 men behind the ball, and its defensive solidity restricted the host to mere half chances before the break as Sergio Busquets headed wide from a Xavi corner before Cesc Fabregas' looping header was comfortably tipped over the bar by Andrey Dikan.

Alves had a goal disallowed moments after the restart for a marginal offside decision but the complexion of the entire game changed on 59 minutes when Dikan brilliantly denied Messi at one end and the Russians broke down the other end for Aiden McGeady to play in Romulo in to score.

The expected waves of Barcelona attacks then descended upon the Spartak defence, but the Russians were holding out well until Tello produced another piece of magic to skip past McGeady on the left and tee up Messi for the easiest of finishes.

Tito Vilanova then threw on David Villa to join fellow substitute Alexis Sanchez in a bid to find the winner and Sanchez produced the killer cross for Messi to head home his second of the evening with 10 minutes remaining.

In other Champions League action, Glasgow Celtic drew 0-0 with Benfica in the other Group G game.

Romania's Cluj won 2-0 at Braga in the group's other game on goals by Rafael Bastos in the 19th and 34th minutes.

In Group F, Bayern Munich won 2-1 at home over Valencia on goals by Bastian Schweinsteiger in the 38th minute and Toni Kroos in the 76th. Valencia substitute Nelson Valdez outjumped two Bayern players to score on a header in injury time.

BATE Borisov of Belarus won 3-1 at Lille, with Aleksandr Volodko, Vitali Rodionov and Edgar Olekhnovich building a three-goal first-half lead. Aurelien Chedjou scored in the second half for the hosts.


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Sunday, 20 May 2012

In Defeat Heynckes Urges Di Matteo


Despite facing his own uncertain future Bayern Munich coach Jupp Heynckes called on Roman Abramovich to give Roberto Di Matteo a three-year contract after Chelsea secured Champions League glory for the first time in their history.

After presiding over a startling upturn in fortunes following Andre Villas-Boas' dismissal in February, Di Matteo still doesn't know if he is going to get the job on a permanent basis. 

Heynckes sees no reason for further delay.

Heynckes admitted his side had no-one to blame but themselves after dominating throughout the 120 minutes.

However, after taking the lead through Thomas Muller with just eight minutes remaining, Bayern allowed Didier Drogba to level in the final minute.

Then, after Arjen Robben had a penalty saved by Petr Cech in extra-time, the customary German efficiency in shoot-out situations failed them as Drogba scored the winning spot-kick to secure a 4-3 triumph.

'Chelsea played the way we thought,' said Heynckes. 'We must blame ourselves for having so many goalscoring opportunities without being able to score until the 83rd minute.'

Heynckes also confirmed he expected Franck Ribery to shrug off the injury that he sustained in a tackle by Drogba that earned Bayern their extra-time penalty.

The Bayern coach also cleared Robben of any responsibility, the Dutchman failing to take one of his side's five penalties following his earlier failure. 

'You can understand if he didn't score the penalty in extra-time that he may have lost some self-confidence to participate in the penalty shoot-out,' said Heynckes. 'That is quite easy to see.'

"My team played an outstanding match against opponents who played the way we expected and the way they'd played for the last few Champions League matches. We must blame ourselves for having so many opportunities without profiting. When you score in the 83rd minute you need to keep that lead; then we had a penalty in extra time. Penalties are a lottery, we know that from history.

Chelsea were the lucky team today; they played the way they know best and I'd like to congratulate them on their performance. They put on a real fight, defensively they were very well organised and in the shoot-out they had the luck to win the Champions League. It's a very bitter defeat. We can't blame Chelsea for playing their game; when you have so many opportunities you have to take advantage of them. We didn't do that today and that's why we lost.

These players had a huge fantasy about winning the Champions League here in Munich and then you have such a renowned, experienced player [Bastian Schweinsteiger] missing a penalty – that's something you have to cope with. Bastian was instrumental in getting us to the final and he'll take some time to get over it, but that's football and you have to learn to cope with that.

I said it would be something else to play in your own stadium, where you know everything and feel at home. The team played like we were at home, look at the statistics – we were better in every respect. The players delivered an outstanding performance and were not rewarded. But it wasn't an injustice – we should have scored more goals and kept a clean sheet after we scored, then we would have won the cup. Instead all we can do is congratulate Chelsea."


Saturday, 19 May 2012

Drogba Crowns Chelsea Champions



Didier Drogba scored the decisive penalty in the shootout as Chelsea beat Bayern Munich to win the Champions League final after a 1-1 draw on Saturday.

The unlikely storyline of an English team beating a German team on penalties in a high-profile match provided a fitting end to a dramatic night, as Chelsea became Europe's champion club for the first time.

The often theatrical figure of 34-year-old Drogba, playing possibly his last game for the club as his Chelsea contract expires next month, was at the heart of the show.

Drogba sent goalkeeper Manuel Neuer the wrong way to win the shootout 4-3 in front of massed Bayern fans in their home Allianz Arena. Bayern's Bastian Schweinsteiger missed the previous penalty.

The shootout was needed after Chelsea goalkeeper Petr Cech saved Arjen Robben's spot-kick early in extra time.

It was awarded for a foul by Drogba, whose 88th-minute header earned an unlikely reprieve.

After 83 minutes of Bayern domination, Thomas Mueller broke dogged Chelsea resistance with a header past the outstanding Cech.

Chelsea's first Champions League title came four years after losing in a shootout to Manchester United.

Drogba succeeded where his captain John Terry, who was suspended for Saturday's finale, failed in missing the fifth penalty in Moscow four years ago which would have given the club's Russian owner Roman Abramavich the Champions League title he has craved.

Victory also sealed Chelsea's last remaining route into next season's competition which is crucial to its elite status and finances.

Everything seemed stacked against Chelsea when Bayern won the toss to send the shootout to the home, south end of its stadium.

After Bayern captain Philipp Lahm scored first, Juan Mata saw his kick saved by Neuer.

Cech then saved Ivica Olic's fourth penalty for Bayern to put the otherwise excellent Schweinsteiger in the spotlight.

He struck the post to Cech's left and covered his face with his shirt. Drogba stepped up and sealed victory and awaited the adulation of his onrushing teammates.

With seven starters from the two teams suspended, Bayern settled quickly against a visiting team set up to absorb pressure.

The Germans' tempo was often dictated by Schweinsteiger, who excelled after collecting a needless yellow card in the second minute for handball.

Toni Kroos, Mario Gomez and Robben all failed to find the target, and anxiety rose in the Chelsea defense when Jose Bosingwa's miscue conceded a corner.

Robben, the former Chelsea winger, threatened again in the 21st when he wriggled through a tiny gap to create a left-footed shooting chance. So often Chelsea's Champions League savior, Cech blocked with his right leg and deflected the ball high up against his right post.

Drogba was being kept quiet before he linked with Frank Lampard to create Chelsea's first good chance in the 37th. Salomon Kalou was teed up to shoot low but Neuer's save was solid.

Gomez, with 13 goals in the competition this season, then wasted two good chances to draw level with Barcelona's Lionel Messi.

First, his control failed when Ribery's misdirected shot flew to his feet, then the big forward wrong-footed Gary Cahill but shot high and wide.

Bayern coach Jupp Heynckes stomped back to the bench throwing his hands in the air.

The second half resumed with the same pattern, and Cole's outstanding defending denied Robben.

The England left-back hunted down Robben's break, then blocked the Dutchman's clear sight of goal from 10 yards (meters) in the 54th. The loose ball found Ribery in an offside position before he thought he'd opened the scoring.

Cole repeated his heroics five minutes later, dashing across to block Robben's shot from 15 yards.

In the 76th, Cech stretched to tip the ball over the bar as Ribery's cross at the goalline squirted up from Cole's lunging challenge.

Cole was then booked for fouling Mueller, who responded by directing a header which Cech gathered.

One minute later, Mueller eluded Cole with a late run and headed home to spark delirious celebrations among the Bayern players and fans.

They underestimated Chelsea's admirable resolve, and Drogba soared to score with a header that Neuer couldn't keep out.

Drogba's taste for the dramatic flared up in the third minute of extra time, as he clipped Ribery's heels in the penalty area.

Referee Pedro Proenca's decision to point to the spot seemed to stun the Bayern fans, and their anxiety was well founded.

Robben fired low to Cech's left, and the Czech `keeper blocked with his arm and body, then reached across to collect the loose ball.

Bayern came agonizingly close in the 108th, when substitute Olic slipped the ball across the goalmouth but teammate Daniel van Buyten failed to anticipate the simple tap-in.


Paul Breitner is Final Ambassador


The 2011/12 UEFA Champions League concludes in Munich, and final ambassador Paul Breitner, brought up just 50km away, is already awaiting "the highlight of the whole season".

Having lifted the European Champion Clubs' Cup for FC Bayern München, scored in Germany's victorious FIFA World Cup final in Munich and been brought up just 50km away there are few people better placed than Paul Breitner to act as ambassador for the 2012 UEFA Champions League final at the Fußball Arena Munchen on 19 May.

The former Real Madrid CF midfielder saw it all in a glittering 13-year player career, but the return of club football's biggest game to Munich for a fourth time, and first at the new stadium, is a source of great pride for the 60-year-old. "The Champions League final next year in May is the highlight of the whole season, for the city of Munich and for Bayern," he told UEFA.com. "The people of Munich, including me, think we have the most beautiful city in the world."

As well as being a tourist attraction, Munich is also a footballing hotbed and the Fußball Arena Munchen, which opened in 2005 and houses almost 70,000 spectators for Bundesliga matches, is home to both TSV 1860 München and Bayern, Germany's most successful club. And it was with the three-time European champions that Breitner first made his name in some 41 years ago.

"In 1970, it was a time of evolutionary change at Bayern Munich. Uli Hoeness, the current club president, and I arrived at the right time to grow into the team, to learn from Franz Beckenbauer and Gerd Müller. We went through a development phase which led us, after our fourth season, to play in our first European Cup final, winning against Atlético Madrid in a replay after drawing the first match."

That victory came in May 1974, two years after Breitner had helped West Germany win the UEFA European Championship, and two months before he lifted the World Cup. He would go on to become one of his country's most successful footballers, winning five Bundesliga titles with Bayern and two Spanish championships with Madrid. 

In 1982 he became only the third player after Brazilians Vavá and Pelé to score in two World Cup finals - an elite club since joined by Zinédine Zidane.




Didier Wants to Forget Moscow



Didier Drogba wants to avoid a repeat of his Moscow melancholy and believes Chelsea's first UEFA Champions League final appearance was an educational experience.

Ahead of Saturday's return to Europe's showpiece club event, when the Premier League club will face Bayern Munich at the Allianz Arena, the striker has been reminded of 2008.


For Drogba it will mean avoiding the loss of control that saw him sent off in Chelsea's only previous final four years ago, which saw Chelsea lose on penalties to Manchester United.

But the Ivorian thinks he and his team-mates were taught a valuable lesson in Moscow and he does not want there to be a repeat.

"It was a difficult moment for me and for the club as well," he said. "I apologised to the fans.

"It's one memory I cannot forget but, at the same time, it's the past.

"It was a good experience, a first Champions League final for Chelsea - an experience. Now I think we've learned from that."
Responsible

The final defeat by United was one of seven Champions League failures for Drogba since joining Chelsea.

"I'm lucky to be playing Champions League games," he said. "When I was young, I used to watch the games on TV, when (Zinedine) Zidane scored that volley against (Bayer) Leverkusen - all these games.

"Every Champions League game is special for me. Every time I come on the pitch, I feel lucky, because I'm one of the few players able to play these kind of games.

"The Champions League doesn't really owe me anything. If I'm responsible for something, it's my club, my team-mates and the fans.

"I play for them. I have to perform for them."

Whatever happens, Drogba's place in Chelsea folklore is assured, according to interim first-team coach Roberto Di Matteo.

"He's brought Premier League trophies and cup competitions to us, scored many goals," Di Matteo said. "So, whatever happens tomorrow, he will be remembered as a legend at this club."





Wednesday, 2 May 2012

Champions Final Yellow Cards Remain


The Champions League's yellow cards rules will not change for at least three years, Uefa has confirmed.

Seven players are suspended for the Chelsea v Bayern Munich final after six were cautioned in the semi-finals.

Tuesday, 24 April 2012

Di Matteo Makes Blue Magic


The week from hell no doubt for Pep Guardiola who has seen his world XI beaten in their last three outings - two of which were home defeats.

Every year the Champions League throws up many script  but surely not one like this season where a temporary manager earns a place in the final and ends the dream of the holders - emphatically.

And doing so reduced to ten men.

In truth, Chelsea produced one of the greatest escapes in the history of European football tonight as they survived the sending off of John Terry to win an astonishing semi-final second leg in Barcelona.

On a night of unparallelled drama at the Nou Camp, Terry looked to have pressed the self-destruct button on the Blues' hopes of glory on the continent when he saw red for kneeing Alexis Sanchez from behind.

But the 10 men were simply magnificent for the rest of the second leg, fighting back from goals from Sergio Busquets and Andres Iniesta with a stunning chip from Ramires before half-time.

And after surviving a Barca siege from start to finish that saw Lionel Messi miss a penalty, Fernando Torres came off the bench to score a stoppage-time breakaway goal as Chelsea avenged their 2009 defeat in the most dramatic manner possible.

Reaching their second final came at a huge cost, with Terry's red card and yellows for Ramires, Branislav Ivanovic and Raul Meireles ruling them out of the final.

But they will worry about that in the morning after celebrating arguably the greatest result in the club's history and one which may finally convince Roman Abramovich to make Roberto Di Matteo's appointment as manager permanent.

Disaster struck for Chelsea as early as the sixth minute, Gary Cahill eventually forced off after slipping and pulling his hamstring, with Jose Bosingwa coming on and Ivanovic forced to move to centre-back.

It was soon 1-1 on the injury front, Gerard Pique lasting just 26 minutes of his recall after failing to recover from a sickening collision with the backside of Victor Valdes that appeared to leave him briefly unconscious.

That failed to alter the pattern of a game which was a carbon copy of the first leg as Chelsea parked the bus once more.

Messi rippled the side-netting inside three minutes and, after both sides' injury woes, he should have opening the scoring in the 20th minute, firing a one-two with Cesc Fabregas against Petr Cech's leg.

Fabregas also volleyed into the sidenetting and Cech tipped over Javier Mascherano's drive but there was hope for Chelsea before Pique's departure when Didier Drogba shrugged him off but could himself only find the side-netting from the tightest of angles.

The first sign of Chelsea's discipline wavering came when John Obi Mikel was booked for chopping down Alexis Sanchez in the 32nd minute.

And when they went to sleep three minutes later, they were behind, their failure to close down allowing Isaac Cuenca to square for Busquets to tap into a virtually unguarded net.

The build-up to this tie was dominated by talk of refereeing meltdowns in previous clashes but Terry simply gave Cuneyt Cakir no choice but to dismiss him less than two minutes later.

Sanchez over-reacted to the swipe, bringing back memories of David Beckham's 1998 World Cup sending-off, and Terry initially refused to walk.

But Cech made him listen to reason before picking the ball out of his own net again two minutes before half time, Chelsea carved apart as Messi teed up Iniesta to stroke the ball home.

Chelsea looked dead and buried but, as at Stamford Bridge, they struck a dagger blow with their first shot on target in first-half stoppage-time.

Frank Lampard was again the creator as Ramires burst through and floated a glorious finish over Valdes - moments after picking up a booking that would rule him out of the final.

The cascade of noise that had filled the Nou Camp turned to silence at half-time but they were soon cheering again after the restart when Drogba conceded a penalty.

Cakir adjudged the striker had tripped Fabregas and pointed to the spot, with Ivanovic cautioned for his protest.

It looked certain Messi would end his Chelsea hoodoo but, incredibly, he smashed his effort against the crossbar.

Lampard was fortunate to escape punishment for a flare-up with Fabregas, Sanchez nodded substitute Daniel Alves' cross wide, and Cech was booked for timewasting having already been warned before saving well again from Cuenca.

Ivanovic almost capitalised after Drogba helped Chelsea win a rare corner but he was warned himself after going down theatrically, while Lampard was lucky to only see yellow for cutting down Fabregas after Messi was booked for tugging him back.

The visitors were hanging on and were given two lifelines in 60 seconds in the final 10 minutes when Sanchez had a goal ruled out for offside and Messi hit the post from 20 yards.

With time running out, Meireles was ruled out of the final after being booked for fouling Mascherano, who Cech saved from again in the final minute.

Then, in stoppage-time, a long clearance found substitute Torres with 50 yards of space in which to run.

Unlike most of his Chelsea career, he made no mistake this time, rounding Valdes and slotting home to jubilant scenes from players, staff and fans..

And no doubt from owner Roman Abramovich too.

If there is a job interview for Di Matteo after tonight it will be a shock for Chelsea fans. So far it's looks more and more like the right man making the place right.

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Chelsea Have a Chance - Jim Beglin



"At the start of the Champions League a Camp Nou meeting between Barcelona and Chelsea – semi-final second leg – would have been an easy home win prediction for most pundits. After all, the holders have been playing an exquisite game for over eighteen months and on course for yet another final – according to most experts. Indeed, everyone assuming Pep Guardiola’s squad had more than enough in their tank to see off all comers this season. But the home defeat to Real Madrid on Saturday evening was the first La Liga loss by the Catalan club in eight meetings in the El Clasico – an untimely milestone. 

Then the 1-0 defeat at Stamford Bridge in the first leg last week was also a marker, but not as significant given Barcelona lost twelve months ago to Arsenal at the Etihad in the round of last 16. However all those three results give Chelsea manager Roberto di Matteo more than just a hope of upsetting the pre-tournament expectations on Tuesday night. 

Clearly the manager has regained the confidence of the senior players, who one by one have delivered in Champions League so far for Chelsea - starting with the heroic recovery against Napoli in the second leg in the previous round. On that night the Blues were immense and have not looked back since with Didier Drogba regaining the form that secured another appearance for his country in the African Cup of Nations final in January. Although excessive with the histrionics last Wednesday in London the big striker showed he can still deliver on the major occasions. None more important than the goal against Barcelona following a pass from Ramires that he slammed into the back of the net on the stroke of half time. 

In that kind of form the big Ivorian forward may prove too much even for the physical Javier Mascherano – over whom he holds six inch height advantage. Especially if high crosses rain in from Ivanovic and Ashley Cole. 

But Barcelona’s views on that same match at the Bridge will no doubt have a touch of what might have been, given that both Busquets and Fabregas missed clear cut chances. All compounded by two other strikes on woodwork. The first from Sanchez in the 9th minute, when he hit the cross bar, and then deep into injury time when Pedro’s shot spared Petr Cech’s blushes by hitting the upright. Not forgetting that Ashley Cole also cleared another Farbregas dink into an empty goal-mouth - right off the line. 

Guardiola knows though it is unlikely that such misses will happen again given the team's track record. Or at least Barcelona will be hoping it won't happen again at the hallowed sanctuary that is Camp Nou. 

Then again at this stage of the Champions League it is all about luck and Chelsea rode theirs in the first leg – earning a deserved win with an impressive defensive showing. The question is whether the same tactic will prove enough to survive ninety minutes in Catalunya. 

Clearly the quick counter attack is the staple diet of the last four teams left in the competition. Best highlighted by Frank Lampard cross field pass - after Chelsea Meireles rumbled the ball just inside the halfway line – that found Ramires racing free down the left flank. As is customary when Barca move forward neither Dani Alves or Carles Puyol were at home , so by the time the ball reached the six yard box, Drogba was more or less unmarked. By repeating the same formula in the return leg, Chelsea may have a chance to break away and score. But if not, they may need to rely on a more direct style and just service Drogba with long balls to chase down on the night. 

Last year that direct style from Arsenal nearly unravelled Barcelona in their return leg and Di Matteo may have taken notice. 

It might also make the case for choosing Fernando Torres as the support for Drogba - given his energy chasing down the Barcelona build up play, coming from Puyol. Busquets, Xavi and Iniesta. Failing that, a set piece might opens a door or two for Chelsea and that would be something Di Matteo will have thought about when assessing his options. Having brought a sense of pragmatism to Stamford Bridge, the Chelsea manager will leave no stone unturned before he names the team on Tuesday night. 

Memories of some famous European nights with Liverpool remind me of times in training when we could have spent more time preparing set pieces and corners. But given the level of success – and the inherent talent in the team - it was probably just a quick series of kicks at the end of training at Melwood in the end. Such a carefree attitude seems a little similar at this Barcelona team. Given their talent from dead ball situations though with Xavi, Dani Alves and Messi, free kicks are not viewed with the same priority perhaps as other teams. 

Also Barcelona are a team that create so many chances, set pieces must seem boring and irrelevant to them. Yet that maybe the difference in the two teams in the second leg if Chelsea get chances on the edge of the box. 

The formbook suggests that Barcelona are unlikely to miss as many chances second time around. In contrast Chelsea need to match the exact same formula from last week to protect their one goal advantage. In other words, another perfect game filled with tireless running, chasing and harrying on a pitch that is a couple of metres longer. But sometimes feels double in size when Barca start their tick tack passing game. 

Unfortunately for the visitors, it maybe the perfect number 10, Lionel Messi, who proves the difference on the night and gets Barcelona to a consecutive Champions League final come May 19th. After all, no one has yet figured out how to mark the genial Argentinian out of a game. Just one moment of magic from him early doors and the Chelsea legs may just start feeling their miles. 

Regardless, it will be intriguing to watch and you have to favour a home win.”

©JimBeglin