Thursday 28 June 2012

Euro 2012: Super Mario sends Italy into Final against potential history boys Spain



SEMI FINAL RESULTS

TVDate/time (BST)
Venue
BBCWed 27 June, 19:45PORTUGAL 0-0 SPAIN*Donetsk
BBCThu 28 June, 19:45GERMANY 1-2 ITALY Warsaw
*SPAIN won 4-2 on penalties


SEMI FINAL 2: GERMANY 1-2 ITALY
Germany Neuer - Boateng (Mueller 71), Hummels, Badstuber, Lahm (c) - Schweinsteiger, Khedira, Kroos, Oezil - Podolski (Reus 46), Gomez (Klose 46). Goal Oezil 90pen
Italy Buffon (c) - Balzaretti, Barzagli, Bonucci, Chiellini - Pirlo, Marchisio, Montolivo (Motta 63), De Rossi - Balotelli (Di Natale 69), Cassano (Diamanti 58). Goals Balotelli 20, 36
Attendance 58,500 at the National Stadium, Warsaw Referee Stephane Lannoy (France)

ITALY broke Germany hearts again, repeating their 2006 World Cup semi final win to set up a final against favourites Spain on Sunday.

Manchester City striker Mario Balotelli scored twice in the first half to shock the Germans who have now made it to the last four of the last four competitions but failed to win any of them.

Joachim Loew's men actually started on the front foot with Mats Hummels getting the first chance to break the deadlock after just five minutes.

Gianluigi Buffon flapped at a corner, but centre-back Hummels was unable to control the ball and it came off his knee from six yards out for a goal-kick.

Still, the Nationalmannschaft continued as they were surely meant to go on, justifying their tag as second favourites behind Spain having scored nine goals in the tournament already.

The next chance, on 12 minutes, also inadvertently fell the Germans' way. Buffon was again unsure, electing to parry Jerome Boateng's cross.

Unfortunately for the Juventus keeper, he only managed to palm the ball straight against club-mate Andrea Barzagli. But, fortunately for the pair, the ball was deflected inches wide of the post.

From the resultant corner, Toni Kroos tested Buffon again but, this time, the Italian was equal to his task, diving a full-length to keep out a really decent effort.

The Azzurri, though, seemingly had a serious problem. Their slow start against England had been repeated in Warsaw again.

However, the presence of Antonio Cassano and Balotelli up front was enough to keep the Cesare Prandelli's men hopeful, and the pair combined on 20 minutes to make it 1-0.

Picking the ball up on the left, Cassano turned past Hummels all too easily and, in the gap left in the middle, Balotelli out-jumped his marker Holger Badstuber to power home a header from six yards.

Suddenly, the whole course of the game had changed. Germany were behind for the first time in the tournament and had to chase, while Italy could settle into a traditional defensive formation.

Except that they did not. Sensing an unusual vulnerability in the Germans, the Azzurri kept going and, just a couple of minutes later, messed up a three-on-two opportunity.

Sami Khedira tried to turn the tide back in the favour of the Nationalmannschaft but Buffon was again equal to his long-range effort, tipping the ball over for a corner.

Germany then wasted the corner and, within 30 seconds, were 2-0 down.

For, immediately after the corner, Riccardo Montolivo sent a 40-yard diagonal through-ball from inside his own half in the direction of Balotelli.

Germany's defence had, unforgivably, been caught out by this one pass with Balotelli out-pacing captain Philipp Lahm.

Sensing the chance of a brace, the Man City forward then unleashed a swerving Geoff Hurst-style strike right into the corner.

It was absolutely unstoppable, and simply brilliant from Balotelli who was booked for removing his shirt in celebration.

Balotelli's reaction quite summed up Italy perfectly. They would not have imagined in their wildest dreams to be 2-0 at half-time.

For Germany - who had never beaten the Italians in seven previous competitive attempts - it was the latest chapter of a recurring nightmare.

Nevertheless, Loew's men were not going to go down without a fight, and it was no surprise to see the Germans start the second half strongly.

A double change at the interval had brought the introduction of Marko Reus and Miroslav Klose in favour of Mario Gomez and Lukas Podolski.

The prodigious Reus did not take long to get into the action but he could only scuff a poor effort having got past Leonardo Bonucci.

Reus did rather better just a couple of minutes later, combining with Khedira to set up Lahm.

But, while the Bayern Munich full-back had scored a memorable opener against Greece in the quarter finals, he could not repeat the feat on this occasion, sending the ball wildly over the bar.

Germany continued to push and Kroos brought another fine save out of Buffon with a 25-yard free-kick. The corner, however, came to nothing, and time was beginning to run out.

The Germans were having to become ever-more adventurous in their attempts to pull back their deficit, at times leaving just two at the back against Balotelli's replacement Antonio Di Natale, and Cassano's sub Alessandro Diamanti.

Unsurprisingly then, in the closing stages, the Italians became a real threat on the break, looking likelier indeed than the Germans to score.

Claudio Marchisio had the first big chance to make it 3-0 but, one-on-one against keeper Manuel Neuer, he dragged his effort woefully wide.

Di Natale was next to be sent into the clear but, looking himself for a Hurst-style climax, he got his technique all wrong and sliced horribly across the ball.

The last big chance for a game-killing goal came to Federico Balzaretti, the defender somehow finding himself in acres of space down the right.

Too much space, as it happened - for, while the pony-tailed Balzaretti did indeed find the net, he had foolishly strayed offside.

It was almost as if the fate had decided that the Italians were not going to score a third - but, with five minutes left, it seemed unlikely that they would need it.

Germany were not going to let Italy get away that easily, however, with Neuer playing as a sweeper on the half-way line for the last five minutes.

Unfortunately for the Germans, Kroos could only fire over from range again before Hummels ended the match in the same way as he started it - unable to get a proper shot away from six yards out.

In the second minute of stoppage time, Germany finally got some joy as Balzaretti was adjudged to have handled after leaning into the ball with his arm under pressure from Klose.

Mesut Oezil stepped up and scored, leaving Germany with perhaps one last chance to salvage an amazing draw.

The chance was wasted, though, with Bastian Schweinsteiger choosing to pass a free-kick short rather than launch it into the box.

The match was over, and Germany - finalists four years ago and twice semi-finalists in the World Cups of 2006 and 2010 - had fallen painfully just short again. Euro 96 remains their last major international success.

Of course, Italy only have to go back six years for their World Cup win when, as an unfancied side at the height of a domestic match-fixing scandal, they triumphed against the odds.

Those exact same stars have aligned this time again, so Spain better watch out. 


SEMI FINAL 1: PORTUGAL 0-0 SPAIN (2-4 on penalties)
Portugal Patricio - Pereira, Pepe, Alves, Coentrao - Meireles (Varela 113), Veloso (Custodio 106), Moutinho - Nani, Almeida (Oliveira 81), Ronaldo (c)
Spain Casillas (c) - Arbeloa, Pique, Sergio Ramos, Jordi Alba - Xavi (Pedro 87), Busquets, Alonso, Silva (Navas 60), Iniesta - Negredo (Fabregas 54)
Attendance 51,500 at the Donbass Arena, Donetsk Referee Cuneyt Cakir (Turkey)
Penalties 0-0 Alonso saved, 0-0 Moutinho saved, 0-1 Iniesta scores, 1-1 Pepe scores, 1-2 Pique scores, 2-2 Nani scores, 2-3 Ramos scores, 2-3 Alves missed, 2-4 Fabregas scores

THE FIRST semi final had a more predictable result but the ultimately victorious Spanish went the long way around securing a third successive final appearance.

Cesc Fabregas thumped the winning penalty in-off the post, leaving Cristiano Ronaldo stranded as the unused fifth Portuguese taker.

It was a bad end to a night which had begun well for Portugal. Early on, they were able to disrupt Spain's usual passing rhythm, and it paid dividends with the Portuguese enjoying the better chances.

In particular, Ronaldo was getting a lot of joy down the left. He made a couple of bursts in the first 15 minutes, though they came to very little.

Nevertheless, the Portuguese continued throughout the first half with these tactics and prevented Spain from fashioning a clear opening themselves.

Portugal were quieter in the second half but Spain were little better as the match descended into a disappointing scrap punctuated by bookings.

There were six yellow cards in that second period, and nine overall including the entirety of the Portuguese defence.

And so, as the 90th minute approached, it had to be concluded that this Iberian derby had been a let-down.

Would extra time be any better? Well, it did not look like it when, farcically, Spain ended up passing their corner back to goalkeeper Iker Casillas.

In fairness, though, the Spanish did have the best chance of the match in this period with Casillas's opposite number Rui Patricio just turning Andres Iniesta's close range effort around the post.

Spain also had the best chance in the second half of extra time through Jesus Navas but again Patricio palmed the effort away.

This match had, for a long while, seemed destined for penalties and that fate was confirmed when - in the last minute - Pedro opted to find a team-mate rather than shoot, only to see his pass intercepted.

So, after 27 matches without a 0-0 draw, Euro 2012 had produced two in a row. At least, though, the shoot-outs were exciting with the eventual winners missing first again.

Xabi Alonso was responsible for the first failure - though, in fairness to him, his low shot drew a fine save from Patricio.

The former Liverpool man was reprieved immediately anyway as captain Casillas saved a similar effort from Joao Moutinho.

Still at 0-0, Iniesta finally scored the first goal of the contest by wrong-footing Patricio and rolling his penalty down the middle.

Pepe and Gerald Pique traded respective thumps into the bottom corner for a 2-1 lead to Spain. But then came the decisive moment in the shoot-out.

For once, it was not a miss as Nani scored to make it 2-2. However, the fact that the Manchester United winger had ordered Bruno Alves back for almost taking out of turn would have a profound effect on the Zenit St Petersburg defender.

For, by the time Alves stepped forward for his proper turn, Spain were 3-2 up as Sergio Ramos audaciously followed Pirlo's Panenka from the Italy-England quarter final with one himself.

Alves's thoughts must have been all over the place and - while he came close to scoring - he could only smash the ball against the bar.

So, while Ramos had emulated Pirlo, Alves had the misfortune of aping Ashley Young. At 3-2, Spain had match point.

Fabregas converted the golden opportunity - but only just as the woodwork worked against Portugal yet again.

Ronaldo was responsible for most of the efforts which had seen Portugal hit the bar or the post more than any other side in the championship.

The Real Madrid winger, as stranded fifth taker, claimed it had been his coach Paulo Bento who had decided the order.

But, even then, Ronaldo - as captain - should have insisted on being higher up the 'batting order', rather than accept this dereliction of duty.

Ultimately, the mistake means Portugal must wait to break their duck, having failed to win a single major trophy in history.

And while Spain, themselves, were previously known as the perennial under-achievers, wins at Euro 2008 and World Cup 2010 have well and truly shredded that tag.

A unique third consecutive win could be achieved on Sunday but the Spanish know of Italy's threat after a 1-1 draw between the sides in the Group C opener.

In that match, the Italians even took the lead after Di Natale out-paced the defence and curled a wonderful effort past Casillas.

However, that was the last goal Spain have conceded at this tournament and - in the true style of champions - they even responded to that instantly through Fabregas.

Spain's passing style - possession for the sake of it - has irritated some viewers, including myself, as has Vincente del Bosque's refusal to field a striker.

However, it cannot be denied that Spain will be justifiable history-makers if they can nullify the threat of Balotelli and Cassano - and carry off a third championship in a row.

Monday 25 June 2012

Euro 2012: England's curse strikes again


QUARTER FINALS
TVDate/time (BST)
Venue
BBCThu 21 June, 19:45CZECH REPUBLIC 0-1 PORTUGALWarsaw
ITVSat 23 June, 19:45SPAIN 2-0 FRANCE Donetsk
ITVFri 22 June, 19:45GERMANY 4-2 GREECEGdansk
BBCSun 24 June, 19:45ENGLAND 0-0 ITALY*Kiev
*ITALY won 4-2 on penalties.


QUARTER FINAL 4: ENGLAND 0-0 ITALY (2-4 on penalties)
England Hart - Johnson, Terry, Lescott, Cole - Milner (Walcott 61), Gerrard (c), Parker (Henderson 94), Young - Rooney, Welbeck (Carroll 60)
Italy Buffon (c) - Balzaretti, Abate (Maggio 90), Barzagli, Bonucci - Marchisio, De Rossi (Nocerino 80), Montolivo, Pirlo - Balotelli, Cassano (Diamanti 78)
Attendance 56,500 at Olympic Stadium, Kiev Referee Pedro Proenca (Portugal)
Penalties 0-1 Balotelli scores, 1-1 Gerrard scores, 1-1 Montolivo misses, 2-1 Rooney scores, 2-2 Pirlo scores, 2-2 Young misses, 2-3 Nocerino scores, 2-3 Cole saved, 2-4 Diamanti scores

TURIN in 1990, Wembley in '96, Saint-Etienne in '98, Lisbon in '04, and Gelsenkirchen in '06. Kiev 2012 can be added to the list as England's penalty curse struck again.

This time, Ashleys Young and Cole missed the decisive spot-kicks allowing former West Ham United forward Alessandro Diamanti to put Italy into the semi finals against Germany.

In truth, it was no more than Cesare Prandelli's men deserved after a dominant performance against Roy Hodgson's boys. At times this was indeed men against boys.

Not right at the start though. In a competitive opening, the Italians had a chance almost straightaway when Daniele De Rossi sliced a 30-yard volley against the face of the post.

However, England responded almost immediately and should have scored when James Milner's cross inadvertently found Glen Johnson eight yards out.

Johnson dug the ball out from under hit feet but his lofted shot lacked power and was saved all-too-comfortably by Gianluigi Buffon. Incredibly, it would end up being the Three Lions' last effort on target.

Still, at the time, that chance seemed to encourage England who had much the better of the opening part of the match without further unduly testing Buffon.

But, as the first half drew to a close, the Italians began to establish themselves as the dominant force in the game with England struggling to keep possession.

The first sign of a shift in momentum came midway through the first half when Mario Balotelli sprung a weak offside trap, only for John Terry to get back and recover the situation brilliantly.

Then, just before half time, the Manchester City striker really should have opened the scoring but he was prevented from doing so by a great block from his club team-mate Joleon Lescott.

Straight after the interval, there was another big chance for Italy following a corner which was only half-cleared by Joe Hart. Roma's De Rossi was the guilty party on this occasion, volleying wide from six yards out.

But that miss was nothing as compared to what happened on 52 minutes when the Italians had three efforts in quick succession.

First, Claudio Marchisio called Hart into action with a drive from all of 30 yards, then Balotelli picked up the rebound, causing Hart to save again with his knees.

The second rebound fell to Riccardo Montolivo but, like De Rossi before him, he failed to find the target from no more than six yards out.

This was breathless stuff and it was England who were suffocating. There was little respite as Balotelli fired over an acrobatic effort on the hour mark, immediately before Hodgson rung the changes.

On came Theo Walcott and Andy Carroll for Milner and Danny Welbeck, and the substitutes quickly combined to good effect as England launched a rare foray into Italian territory.

The ball eventually fell to Young but his deflected shot went wide for a corner, from which Carroll could only concede a free-kick.

Still, England seemed to have picked up a little and were threatening on the rare occasions when they had the ball as Carroll only just failed to connect with the disappointing Wayne Rooney.

But the Italians were still the far better side in possession, which was dictated by the excellent Andrea Pirlo who pulled the strings all night in midfield.

Azzurri substitutes Diamanti and Antonio Nocerino had late chances to win it but the last chance of the 90 minutes actually fell to England.

Young found Cole on the overlap and his cross found Carroll. The big Geordie headed it back towards Rooney but the Manchester United striker's volley was well over. The attempt at daylight robbery had failed.

Into extra time and the well-established pattern of the game continued with England struggling for any kind of decent possession.

The danger of deep defending was exemplified when the Italians hit the post for the second time in the match as Diamanti's innocuous ball caused all sorts of concern in the England defence.

However, as the whistle blew for half time in extra time, England were still somehow at 0-0, despite having had just 37% of the ball.

The Three Lions had one more scare to survive when, with six minutes left, Italy thought they had won the tie.
 
Diamanti found Nocerino who headed into the net from close range but, thankfully, the flag had been raised for offside - and England could breathe again.

Onto penalties and, having missed several chances during the game, Balotelli finally found the net with the first kick before Steven Gerrard equalised for England.

Then, the seemingly impossible looked like it might just be pulled off as Montolivo missed the target dreadfully and Rooney gave England a 2-1 lead.

By the end of the third kicks, though, the match was back level as Pirlo chipped his penalty Panenka-style past Hart, and Young smashed his kick against the bar.

Suddenly, the atmosphere had changed and Italy regained the lead through Nocerino whose finish transferred the pressure onto Chelsea defender Cole.

The left-back seemed to feel it as he could only shoot tamely at Buffon who made an easy save.

All that was left was for Diamanti to apply the last rites to another England campaign to end from 12 yards.

England's Euro 2012 adventure was over - but, as Roy Hodgson pointed out in his press conference today, his team had probably done better than expected, and certainly no worse.

Hodgson said: "I think we have done well to come through the tournament without losing a match in normal time at least. I have learned so much about the team and the players and it has been an invaluable five weeks.

"I don't believe we have let people down apart from in the penalty shoot-out."

Hodgson is right in what he has said on this occasion but there remains a fundamental failing in English football, namely the familiar inability of the players to keep the ball.

That, more than anything, has haunted England once again this summer and it is a problem which will continue to prevent the Three Lions from dining at football's top table.

The hard work for Hodgson and the Football Association starts now, and it must start at the National Football Centre in Burton. It is time, at long last, to take the long-view.


QUARTER FINAL 2: GERMANY 4-2 GREECE 
Germany Neuer - Boateng, Hummels, Badstuber, Lahm (c) - Khedira, Schweinsteiger, Oezil, Schurrle (Mueller 67) - Reus (Goetze 80), Klose (Gomez 79). Goals Lahm 39, Khedira 61, Klose 68, Reus 74.
Greece Sifakis - Maniatis, Tzavelas (Fotakis 46), K Papadopoulos, Torosidis - Papastathopoulos, Makos (Liberopoulos 71), Ninis (Gekas 46), Katsouranis (c) - Samaras, Salpingidis. Goals Samaras 55, Salpingidis 89 pen
Attendance 43,000 at PGE Arena, Gdansk Referee Damir Skomina (Slovenia)

GERMANY produced an ominously dominant display on their way to beating Greece 4-2 in Gdansk.

It is no surprise to see the Nationalmannschaft have now been installed as favourites for the tournament ahead of Spain, given the squad depth that was on display in this quarter final.

Out went Thomas Mueller, Lukas Podolski and top scorer Mario Gomez, only for their replacements - Miroslav Klose, Marko Reus and Andre Schurrle - to fit into the side seamlessly.

The story of the first half looked as if it was actually going to be one of German profligacy after Mesut Oezil, Klose, and Reus all missed good chances in quick succession.

However, the complete dominance of Joachim Loew's team was eventually rewarded six minutes before the interval when captain Philipp Lahm hit a typically spectacular strike from outside the area.

Greece had failed even to have a single touch in their opponents' box in the first half so to say that their equaliser on 55 minutes was something of a shock is quite an understatement.

What was still yet more surprising was the source of the goal as enigmatic Celtic striker Giorgos Samaras managed to keep his cool and slide the ball under German keeper Manuel Neuer. It was completely against the run of play.

The feeling that the Greeks could actually pull off this almighty shock persisted just six minutes, though.

For, just after the hour mark, the Germans restored their lead when Sami Khedira volleyed into the roof of the net, and then Klose got in on the act with a simple header.

That made it 64 international goals for the Polish-born Klose meaning he now sits just four behind the all-time German record held by Gerd Mueller.

But, while Klose, 34, will soon be hanging up his boots, the Germans have discovered what looks to be another lethal forward in new Borussia Dortmund signing Reus.

The 23-year-old's emphatic finish off the underside of the bar made it 4-1 as Germany assumed complete control with still more than quarter of an hour left to play.

In that time, Oezil fired in a couple of shots as he sought a goal to complement his brilliant midfield performance but both of his efforts were beaten away.

It was, in fact, the Greeks who would write the final chapter of yet another excellent Euro 2012 match.

Poor Jerome Boateng was harshly adjudged to have handled Giogos Fotakis's cross and the Greeks received their second penalty of the tournament.

Dimitris Salpingidis, one of Fernando Santos's better players, converted but this was undoubtedly Germany's night.


QUARTER FINAL 1: CZECH REPUBLIC 0-1 PORTUGAL
Czech Republic Cech (c) - Gebre Selassie, Kadlec, Sivok, Limbersky - Plasil, Pilar, Hubschman (Pekhart 86), Jiracek, Darida (Rezek 61) - Baros.
Portugal
Rui Patricio - Alves, Pepe, Coentrao, Joao Pereira - Veloso, Joao Moutinho, Meireles (Rolando 88), Nani (Custodio 84), Ronaldo (c) - Postiga (Almeida 39). Goal Ronaldo 79
Attendance 58,145 at National Stadium, Warsaw Referee Howard Webb (England)

PORTUGAL prevailed against a staid Czech Republic side after Cristiano Ronaldo's winner 10 minutes from time.

The Real Madrid man rescued this match from an extra 30-minute period with a bullet header and, frankly, it was nothing more than Ronaldo - and Portugal - deserved.

The 27-year-old was in sparkling form in the final group game against Netherlands, scoring twice, and he carried on in Warsaw from where he had left off.

At first he was frustrated by the woodwork, which he hit twice, as well as a mighty performance by Czech keeper Petr Cech.

But the Chelsea stopper could do little as Portugal's pressure finally paid off when Ronaldo converted a fine cross from his former Manchester United team-mate, Nani.

A frantic close to the match saw Cech go up for a stoppage-time corner but even this went badly wrong for the Czechs as the delivery was much too deep.

Michal Bilek's side eventually won Group A, of course, but played here like they did in their first game when they were thrashed 4-1 by Russia.

In fact, from an attacking perspective, they were even worse, failing to have a shot on target all the way through this tie.

That made it easy for the Portuguese to control the game and for skipper Ronaldo to shine.

Shine, he did, and - quite patently - any side with his scoring prowess has a genuine chance of winning this tournament.


QUARTER FINAL 3: SPAIN 2-0 FRANCE
Spain Casillas (c) - Arbeloa, Ramos, Pique, Alba - Iniesta (Cazorla 84), Xavi, Fabregas (Torres 67), Alonso, Busquets, Silva (Pedrito 65). Goals Alonso 19, 90 (pen).
France Lloris (c) - Reveillere, Rami, Koscielny, Clichy - Debuchy (Menez 64), Cabaye, M'Vila (Giroud 79), Malouda (Nasri 64), Ribery - Benzema.
Attendance 46,145 at Donbass Arena, Donetsk Referee Nicola Rizzoli (Italy)

SPAIN marched past lacklustre France in Donetsk to set up an all-Iberian semi final against Portugal on Wednesday.

World Cup-winning coach Vincente del Bosque opted once again to field a first XI without a recognised striker.

But it did not make any difference as La Roja beat Les Bleus in a competitive match for the first time in history.

The early goal helped, of course, allowing Spain to settle into their possession game without feeling under pressure to add to their score.

Ironically, the vital moment on 19 minutes came down the side that France had reinforced by fielding two right-backs.

Instead, impressive Valencia left-back Jordi Alba skipped past Anthony Reveillere and Mathieu Debuchy who ended up flat out on the turf.

Having reached the byline, Alba floated a delightful ball to the back post where Xabi Alonso was waiting, having abandoned his lazy French marker Florent Malouda.

Former Liverpool midfielder Alonso applied the coup de grace to a great move by planting a perfect header past goalkeeper captain Hugo Lloris. It was exactly what Laurent Blanc had hoped to avoid.

The onus was now on France to get an equaliser but, save for a 30-yard free-kick from Yohan Cabaye which was tipped over by Iker Casillas, Les Bleus were strangely lacking in... well, anything really.

Franck Ribery, drifting wide left, continually ran up blind alleys while Karim Benzema toiled in his thankless task as the loan striker.

This pattern of play continued into the second half before Blanc eventually decided to change it up by introducing Samir Nasri and Jeremy Menez for the disappointing Debuchy and Malouda.

At this point, del Bosque also made a change, finally bringing on a recognised striker in Fernando Torres in the expectation of more gaps in the French back line.

However, the anticipated advance from France barely happened, even when Blanc brought on a second striker in Montpellier's Olivier Giroud.

Instead, it always seemed more likely that Spain would step it up momentarily and score a second. In the first minute of stoppage time, that is exactly what happened.

Substitute Pedro weaved past the hapless Reveillere only for the full-back to challenge clumsily giving the Italian referee no option but to point at the spot.

Alonso stepped up to sweep the ball into the net, thus marking his 100th international cap in style.

France are out and, like the Czechs and the Greeks before them, cannot complain at their result.

Indeed, their negativity on the pitch was repeated off it with confirmed reports of a fall-out between key players and a foul-mouthed post-match tirade by Nasri at a journalist.

Blanc will now depart from his post as France coach, but he has left his successor with yet another rebuilding job.

Spain, meanwhile, continue to defy their critics and refuse to be distracted from going for an historic third consecutive crown.


SEMI FINALS

TVDate/time (BST)
Venue
BBCWed 27 June, 19:45PORTUGAL v SPAINDonetsk
BBCThu 28 June, 19:45GERMANY v ITALY Warsaw

Wednesday 20 June 2012

Euro 2012: Group winners England into the last eight




EURO 2012 QUARTER FINALS LINE-UP

TVDate/time (BST)
Venue
BBCThu 21 June, 19:45CZECH REPUBLIC 0-1 PORTUGALWarsaw
ITVSat 23 June, 19:45SPAIN v FRANCE Donetsk
ITVFri 22 June, 19:45GERMANY 4-1 GREECEGdansk
BBCSun 24 June, 19:45ENGLAND v ITALYKiev


ENGLAND exceeded expectations, topping Group D with seven points after victories over Sweden in Kiev and co-hosts Ukraine in Donetsk.

Wayne Rooney made a scoring return against the Ukrainians, converting Steven Gerrard's centre for the only goal of the game.

Remarkably it was Rooney's first goal at a major tournament since Euro 2004 but it hardly tells the whole story of the match at the Donbass Arena.

Ukraine, requiring a win for a chance to progress to the quarter finals, started much sprightlier, controlling possession without doing too much to threaten Joe Hart's goal.

But the best chance of the half fell to Rooney who looked rusty as he steered a simple header wide in his first start for six weeks.

The Manchester United striker made amends shortly after half time when Gerrard's cross - his third assist of Euro 2012 - took two deflections to evade keeper Andriy Pyatov, and found Rooney about two yards out.

This time, the header was unmissable and Ukraine were now in deep trouble.

Nevertheless, with already-ousted Sweden leading France in the other match courtesy of a brilliant Zlatan Ibrahimovic volley, all hope was not lost for the hosts.

It showed as Ukraine launched a series of attacks on the England goal. First, Artem Milevskiy really should have done better with a header which was no further out than Rooney was for his goal.

But the big controversy came just a minute later when Ukraine were denied a clear goal in yet another 'over-the-line' incident in an England match.

The England backline was in trouble as soon as John Terry misread a through-ball to Marko Devic. Having advanced unchallenged from the halfway line, Devic pulled the trigger only for Hart to spread himself well.

Hart took the sting off the effort but the ball looped past him and towards the goal where Terry had made a frantic effort to make amends.

The former skipper appeared to have hooked the ball off the line but replays showed the whole of the ball had in fact crossed the whole of the line. Ukraine should have been level.

Moreover, there will be consequences for world football now. For a start, Uefa president Michel Platini's risk of using extra officials in lieu of goal-line technology has failed.

Quite frankly, what is the point of the goal-line officials if they could not see what happened last night?

At least world governing body has changed its stance on the matter with FIFA president Sepp Blatter stating on Twitter that technology was "no longer alternative but a necessity".

Meanwhile, England will claim that the error evens out the rick in Bloemfontein which denied Frank Lampard an equaliser against Germany at World Cup 2010.

Also, there was a suspicion of offside about the original through-ball - and it would be unfair on Roy Hodgson's team to suggest that the only reason they are in the quarter finals is down to luck.

Still, in-form Italy strikers Mario Ballotelli and Antonio Cassano will rip apart the defence on Sunday if it looks as open as it did in Donetsk, and also against Sweden.

Both Italians scored to complete a thoroughly miserable first tournament finals in 10 years for Ireland.

Giovanni Trapattoni's team lost all three group games and finished with a -8 goal difference, the joint worst in the tournament's history.

Cardinal sins - conceding early goals in all four halves against Croatia and Spain, and several goals from set-pieces - were committed and undermined what had been a fine effort by the Irish to qualify in the first place.

Several of the Irish players - including Robbie Keane, Shay Given and Richard Dunne - will now surely retire while former international Kevin Kilbane fears coach Trapattoni may also be on borrowed time.

 



GROUP-BY-GROUP: FIRST ROUND RESULTS/REVIEW


GROUP A
TVDate/time (BST)
Venue
BBCFri 8 June, 17:00POLAND 1-1 GREECEWarsaw
ITVFri 8 June, 19:45RUSSIA 4-1 CZECH REPUBLICWroclaw
ITVTue 12 June, 17:00GREECE 1-2 CZECH REPUBLICWroclaw
ITVTue 12 June, 19:45POLAND 1-1 RUSSIA Warsaw
BBCSat 16 June, 19:45CZECH REPUBLIC 1-0 POLANDWroclaw
BBCSat 16 June, 19:45GREECE 1-0 RUSSIAWarsaw

Group A tableWDLFAPts
CZECH REPUBLIC201456
*GREECE111334
RUSSIA111534
POLAND021232
Note: *GREECE finished above Russia based on head-to-head record (1-0)

Czech Republic
The Czechs did remarkably well to recover from a 4-1 humping in their opening game against Russia to win their final two matches against Greece, with two quick-fire goals from Petr Jiracek and Vaclav Pilar inside six minutes. Credit must go to the defence for not crumbling again when Theofanis Gekas pulled one back for Greece, though the Czechs' real star has got to be Jiracek after he broke Polish hearts with 20 minutes left in the final group match.

Greece
Miraculous European Championships are nothing new to Greece and they also had to stage a recovery to qualify from Group A. First Dimitris Salpingidis scored as they came from behind with ten men to claim a point against Poland. Then, after losing to the Czechs, they landed a sucker punch against Russia with Giorgios Karagounis' goal in first half stoppage time, a half that had been dominated by the Russians.

Russia
Surely no team has started a tournament so well and still gone out in the first round. Russia won their first game 4-1 with a star performance from Alan Dzagoev and then looked to be making it two wins out of two when Dzagoev scored again to make it 1-0 against Poland. The Poles equalised, however, and a shock defeat in their last game to Greece was enough to put Dick Advocaat's men out on a head-to-head basis against the Greeks.

Poland
The hosts only have themselves to blame for not making it through to the knockout stage, or even winning a match. An opening goal from Robert Lewandowski, and a man to the good, in their first match really should have seen them start with a win but poor defending let ten-man Greeks equalise. Though Poland then fought back valiantly against Russia thanks to Jakub Blaszczykowski's superb strike, a single-goal defeat to the Czechs left the Poles with just two points from three games. Their coach, Franciszek Smuda, has resigned.


GROUP B
TVDate/time (BST)
Venue
BBCSat 9 June, 17:00NETHERLANDS 0-1 DENMARKKharkiv
BBCSat 9 June, 19:45GERMANY 1-0 PORTUGALLviv
ITVWed 13 June, 17:00DENMARK 2-3 PORTUGALLviv
BBCWed 13 June, 19:45NETHERLANDS 1-2 GERMANYKharkiv
ITVSun 17 June, 19:45PORTUGAL 2-1 NETHERLANDSKharkiv
ITVSun 17 June, 19:45DENMARK 1-2 GERMANYLviv

Group B tableWDLFAPts
GERMANY300529
PORTUGAL201546
DENMARK102453
NETHERLANDS003250

Germany
Only team with a 100% record in the group stages as three wins out of three and that makes it 13 out of 13 for Germany at Euro 2012 including qualifiers. Joachim Loew's men may have started slowly in scraping past Portugal in their opening game but the Germans would have taken huge pleasure in their 2-1 victory over Netherlands before they showed their best form in another 2-1 win over Denmark. Mario Gomez has scored three goals, including two against the Dutch.
Portugal
Cristiano Ronaldo finally showed his worth at a major tournament finals, scoring twice against Netherlands as Portugal took the runners-up spot in Group B. It had not started so well, after a single-goal defeat to the Germans, but a vital 3-2 win over Denmark - courtesy of a late winner by Silvestre Valera - set up the Ronaldo show in the final group game as Portuguese qualified with two wins out of three.  

Denmark
Made a brilliant start as Michael Krohn-Dehli scored a shock winner against the Dutch but the vital match was the middle one against Portugal. The Danes may have finished above their opponents in the qualifying group but that counted for nothing when, despite two earlier Nicklas Bendtner goals, Valera scored a late winner for the Portuguese. That left the Danes with a tough task against Germany and, while hope was restored when Krohn-Dehli equalised, the Germans were just too strong in the end. Denmark were, nevertheless, a credit to their long-serving coach Morten Olsen.

Netherlands
The same could not be said for the Dutch who lost all three games to head home without a single point. A bad start against the Danes was exacerbated by a 2-0 deficit at half time in the second game against Germany. Robin van Persie pulled a goal back with less than 20 minutes left but it was not enough to inspire a comeback. Still with a slim chance of progressing, the Oranje made the perfect start to the last game when Rafael van der Vaart scored early but Portugal's Cristiano Ronaldo-inspired comeback sent the Dutch tumbling out amid purely predictable claims of a dressing room rift.


GROUP C
TVDate/time (BST)
Venue
ITVSun 10 June, 17:00SPAIN 1-1 ITALYGdansk
ITVSun 10 June, 19:45IRELAND 1-3 CROATIAPoznan
BBCThu 14 June, 17:00ITALY 1-1 CROATIAPoznan
ITVThu 14 June, 19:45SPAIN 4-0 IRELANDGdansk
BBCMon 18 June, 19:45CROATIA 0-1 SPAINGdansk
BBCMon 18 June, 19:45ITALY 2-0 IRELANDPoznan

Group C tableWDLFAPts
SPAIN210617
ITALY120425
CROATIA111434
IRELAND003190

Spain
Spain topped the group in the end, following up their 1-1 draw against Italy with two victories against Ireland and Croatia. But, while Fernando Torres looked to have found some form with two goals against the Irish, he found it much tougher going against Croatia who enjoyed the better chances and could have knocked out Vincent del Bosque's men with a single goal while it remained 0-0. Ultimately, Jesus Navas saved the day for the Spanish who continue to adhere strictly to the tiki-taka philosophy even though it looks more than a little unconvincing.

Italy
Unbeaten and through without too much controversy from striker Mario Balotelli. A fine effort from Antonio di Natale opened the scoring against Spain but, before the Azzurri could organise themselves to try and hold out for a big win, Cesc Fabregas quickly converted a well-worked equaliser. Italy's second match was also 1-1 but this time they took the lead thanks to a wonderful free-kick from the in-form Andrea Pirlo. Antonio Cassano and Balotelli made it four different scorers as Italy eased past the Irish 2-0 in the final game.

Croatia
Made a blistering start with Mario Mandzukic just too much to handle for the Irish. The Wolfsburg striker scored after just three minutes and, though Sean St Ledger equalised for Ireland, the Croats were back in front at the break through Nikola Jelavic and further ahead at the start of the second half after Mandzukic's second headed goal. He scored again against Italy as Croatia rescued a point, before they then had the best chances in their final match against Spain. Iker Casillas made several fine saves, however, and Navas' late effort was a disappointing way for Slaven Bilic's reign to end.

Ireland
Exited the tournament with the worst record in European Championship group stage history - no points and a -8 goal difference. It would be nice to say that it was a harsh judgement on the Irish but, unfortunately, this is not the case. Lessons from goals conceded at the start and end of the first half - and again at the start of the second half - against Croatia were not heeded as goals at the start of both halves of the game against Spain contributed to a 4-0 hammering. Although Giovanni Trapattoni's men kept it a bit tighter against Italy, the Boys in Green continued their other bad habit of conceding from set-pieces in a grim overall performance.


GROUP D
TVDate/time (BST)
Venue
ITVMon 11 June, 17:00FRANCE 1-1 ENGLANDDonetsk
BBCMon 11 June, 19:45UKRAINE 2-1 SWEDEN Kiev
ITVFri 15 June, 17:00UKRAINE 0-2 FRANCEDonetsk
BBCFri 15 June, 19:45SWEDEN 2-3 ENGLANDKiev
ITVTue 19 June, 19:45ENGLAND 1-0 UKRAINEDonetsk
ITVTue 19 June, 19:45SWEDEN 2-0 FRANCEKiev

Group D tableWDLFAPts
ENGLAND210537
FRANCE111334
UKRAINE102243
SWEDEN102553

England
Exceeded all expectations by topping Group D with seven points, though rode their luck at times. Roy Hodgson's men may have taken the lead against France - Joleon Lescott converting Steven Gerrard's cross - but played too deep and it was no surprise that the equaliser came quickly. A dramatic second match against Sweden saw England take the lead again as Andy Carroll was set up for a header by Gerrard - before the Swedes turned it around after half-time to lead 2-1. England kept their cool and Theo Walcott's introduction from the bench transformed the game again: first, the Arsenal winger scored a thumping drive from 20 yards then he set up Danny Welbeck who rolled the ball in with his heel. In the final match against Ukraine, the returning Wayne Rooney became the latest beneficiary of Gerrard's aerial delivery before the Three Lions held on with the aid of officials. 

France
Much was made of Les Bleus' long unbeaten record in the run-up to the championships but Laurent Blanc's men have failed to excite at Euro 2012. Needing a Samir Nasri goal to equalise against England, France produced a better performance in their second game, beating Ukraine 2-0 with goals shortly after half time from Jeremy Menez and Yohan Cabaye. Their last group game was their worst, however, as they slumped meekly to a 2-0 defeat to Sweden, a result which means they must now play Spain in the quarter finals.

Ukraine
The co-hosts enjoyed the perfect start as Dynamo legend Andriy Shevchenko scored twice as Ukraine came from a goal behind to beat Sweden. Sadly, that form could not be continued into the second match as Ukraine went down 2-0 to France in a match that was interrupted by torrential rain and thunderstorms. And so it all came down to the last match against England. But, while Ukraine enjoyed most of the ball, it was England's Rooney who had the best chances. He scored with his second opportunity to put England 1-0 up but, to the disgust of Ukraine coach Oleg Blokhin, the hosts were denied an equaliser from Marko Devic despite the ball clearly crossing the line.

Sweden
The Swedes had little to cheer in this tournament with only Ireland going out at the same stage after two losses in their first two games. In both matches, Erik Hamren's side were unable to hold a lead - they were 1-0 up against Ukraine thanks to Zlatan Ibrahimovic before Shevchenko inspired Ukraine's recovery, and 2-1 up against England after Olof Mellberg took advantage of poor defending. Still, the Swedes were tighter against France in a 2-0 win which will be remembered for Ibrahimovic's brilliant volley - the goal of the tournament so far.

Tuesday 12 June 2012

Euro 2012: England grind out opening point


ENGLAND dug deep to earn a 1-1 draw from their opening Euro 2012 Group D clash against France in Kiev.

Joleon Lescott headed the Three Lions in front on the half hour mark but the lead lasted just nine minutes before his Manchester City club mate Samir Nasri equalised for the French.

Roy Hodgson made a relatively bold selection for his first competitive game with Danny Welbeck and Alex Oxlade-Chamberlain keeping Andy Carroll and Stewart Downing out of the first XI.

It seemed to have worked early on as England carved out the first real chance of the game which James Milner spurned, hitting the side netting despite having done the hard work in getting round the goalkeeper.

Nevertheless, Hodgson's tactics were still very conservative on the whole and, with the French dominating the ball, it was no surprise that the England breakthrough came from a set-piece.

Skipper Steven Gerrard, for whom this is a fifth international tournament, has often been criticised for failing to produce as well in an England shirt as he does in a Liverpool one.

But rarely will the 32-year-old have swept in a better ball than the free-kick which landed on Lescott's head as England defied all the pre-tournament doom-mongers by taking the lead.

As stated above, though, it did not last long - and it was not as if England did not get a warning before Laurent Blanc's men restored parity.

For, just moments before Nasri's 20-yard strike, another Man City player - Joe Hart - was forced to make a point-blank save from an Alou Diarra header.

Then, with six minutes before half time, England were sitting even deeper than usual and this allowed a neat French passing move to culminate in Nasri picking his spot with little pressure on the ball.

It would be fair to say that the Three Lions were glad of a breather at the interval.

That seemed to be enough for England to regain some composure and Hodgson's men enjoyed their best spell of possession just after the break, though they created little.

Indeed, the lack of a creative spark remains a concern with Ashley Young unusually quiet and Milner on the other flank little more than a workhorse.

Being brutally honest, England only look a real threat from set-pieces and, as well as Welbeck did in his largely thankless task up front, he failed to get a shot on target all game.

It would be harsh to be too critical of the young Manchester United player's overall performance, though - and England were in fact indebted to his deflection which took Yohan Cabaye's rasping drive wide.

That was in the last quarter of an hour as England fell into the worrying trap of sitting too deep again.

Cabaye's strike was as good as it got, though, for Les Bleus who became the latest big-name team not to hit top gear in the first round of matches...


-


Easily the biggest let-down came from the Dutch who were stunned by a 1-0 defeat to Denmark in Group B.

The Danes were not well-fancied and seemed a little out of place in the much-vaunted Group of Death - but this was all actually being rather unfair to Morten Olsen's men.

After all, Denmark finished top of their qualifying pool - ahead of one of their opponents, Portugal - and had also risen to ninth in the world rankings.

This was not as big a shock as the BBC made out with Michael Krohn-Dehli exposing Netherlands' known weakness in defence to score a first-half winner.

Nevertheless, the Oranje only had themselves to blame for not taking at least a point from this encounter. Between them, Robin van Persie, Arjen Robben and Ibrahim Afellay hit 18 shots but only three went on target.

Krohn-Dehli made Dutch keeper Maarten Stekelenburg work just as hard from his own three efforts.

It left Dutch coach Bert van Marwijk ruing the referee's failure to give a penalty for handball against Lars Jacobsen in the closing minutes.

But, in truth, van Marwijk would do better to look closer to home for his side's failure - and, with Germany to come next, Netherlands are already on the precipe.

Not that the Germans produced anything particularly of note themselves in their laboured 1-0 win over Portugal.

The Germans and the Portuguese produced a cracking quarter final four years ago but this match was the antithesis of that one, with Portugal particularly guilty of just sitting back.

Pepe did hit the underside of the bar in a rare foray but the ball did not cross the line, and the Germans survived.

UEFA president Michael Platini will be glad there was no controversy about that but his insistence on extra officials only seems to be further delaying the introduction of proper goal-line technology.

Back to on-field matters and, almost inevitably, Portugal paid the price for their negative approach when Mario Gomez headed Germany into the lead with less than 20 minutes left.

Belatedly, the Portuguese stirred themselves into action as Nani hit the woodwork with a cross-shot and Manuel Neuer saved well from Silvestre Varela.

But the defeat leaves Paulo Bento's men needing to beat Denmark - something which was beyond them in their final qualification match...

In the end, then, the tasty Group B line-up could not much match a frantic opening day from the supposed lesser teams in Group A.

Hosts Poland began the tournament with just a 15-minute opening ceremony - Olympic and World Cup officials should take note - before providing entertainment on the pitch.

They started well against Greece with striker-turned-right-back Lukasz Piszczek regularly making a mockery of his marker on the wing.

Piszczek should have already done better with one of his early crosses but, on 17 minutes, he made amends by whipping in a lovely ball for Poland's main striker Robert Lewandowski to head in.

Rafal Murawski could have doubled the lead minutes later but his shot was tipped over before the Spanish referee, Carlos Velasco Carballo, decided to make a name for himself.

Having let the game flow in its opening stages, the official booked his first player, even though Sokratis Papastathopoulos appeared to challenge fairly for a header.

The booking would cost ultimately Papastathopoulos who was then sent off before half time for blocking the run of Ludovic Obraniak. One down, and a man down, the Greeks now had a mountain to climb.

With 10 men, and in their habitual defensive rut, all hope looked lost for them but the circumstances seemed to shock the Euro 2004 champions into action.

Dimitris Salpingidis took advantage of some weak Polish defending to fire in an equaliser and, with 20 minutes left, he was then brought down by goalkeeper Wojciech Szczesny.

The Arsenal stopper was promptly sent off making it 10 v 10 but, more crucially, his replacement Przemyslaw Tyton's first action was to save Giorgos Karagounis' penalty low down to his right.

So, in the end, it was Greece who missed the big chance for a glorious start. But Poland, too, will regret not putting away their opponents after a strong first-half showing... particularly as next up for the hosts are Russia.

The Russians produced perhaps the best team performance of the tournament so far as they dismantled the Czech Republic defence in a 4-1 thrashing.

Alan Dzagoev scored twice as Dick Advocaat's side totally overran their opponents from the very first kick.

Indeed, Russia were 2-0 up in 24 minutes - first, Dzagoev converted a rebound from Aleksandr Kerzhakov's shot which had hit the post, then Roman Shirokov chipped in number two.

From nowhere, at the start of the second half, the Czechs reduced their arrears when Jaroslav Plasil sliced open the Russia defence and Vaclav Pilar rounded the keeper to finish.

But, far from changing the course of the match, the Czechs' goal only seemed to make Russia more determined to make a winning start.

First, though, they had to endure Kerzhakov missing a hatful of chances before Dzagoev made it 3-1 with a ruthless finish.

Kerzhakov's replacement - former Tottenham Hotspur striker Roman Pavlyuchenko - made it 4-1 after he was set up brilliantly by Andrei Arshavin - and it was not a score which could be said to have flattered Russia.

Another team with who started with a comfortable victory were Croatia, who beat Ireland in Group C on Sunday in Poznan.

Ireland entered the tournament on the back of a 14-game unbeaten run which included 11 clean sheets - but none of this defensive ability was on show in a disappointing opener for Giovanni Trapattoni.

In fact, there were less than three minutes on the clock when the Croatians opened the scoring, as Mario Mandzukic took advantage of some slack marking to head home.

Though - in fairness - Ireland made a creditable comeback to draw level with a header of their own from Sean St Ledger, Croatia restored their lead before half time.

That came courtesy of Nikola Jelavic's dinked finish just before the interval - and then Ireland committed the cardinal sin of conceding just after the break as well.

Mandzukic scored his second header on 49 minutes to put the game ultimately out of reach - though the contest would have taken on a different complexion if Ireland had been awarded what looked a blatant penalty for a foul on Robbie Keane.

A late rally also produced a trio of chances for Keith Andrews but, while they were short on luck, Ireland must admit that they lost to the technically better team.  

Next, the Irish face Spain who themselves failed to open with a win after starting without a recognised striker in their eagerly-anticipated clash against Italy.

That seemed to suit the Italians who fielded three centre-backs and, though Cesare Prandelli's men let the Spaniards dominate possession, Italy looked the more threatening team.

Andrea Pirlo produced a fine save from Iker Casillas with an early free-kick before Antonio Cassano disappointingly dragged his shot wide when well placed.

Just before the break, Thiaggo Motta forced another excellent save from Casillas with a point-blank header, and consequently the sides returned to the dressing rooms at 0-0.

Prandelli's Italians picked up from where they left off after half time and Mario Balotelli really should have opened his account early in the second half.

The Man City striker, though, dallied on the ball and allowed Sergio Ramos to get back and rob him of his one-on-one chance.

It did not matter much as Balotelli was soon replaced by Antonio di Natale... and the Udinese forward did open the scoring, curling a delightful shot into the far corner.

Spain's reaction was one of champions - it was immediate. The impressive Andres Iniesta squeezed a ball through to David Silva as, for once, a Spanish passing build-up looked to carry some real threat.

Silva then poked the ball from the edge of the box through to Cesc Fabregas who had beaten his marker and he also beat Buffon with his shot to make it all-square again.

Soon after the equaliser, Vicente del Bosque finally decided to bring on recognised forwards in Jesus Navas and Fernando Torres, and the World and European champions pressed for the winner.

The two best chances fell to Torres but the Chelsea striker let himself down with his first-touch immediately after coming on, and later lobbed his second effort wide.

Italy were more happy with the point in the end, but they too could have stolen the game at the death, only for Claudio Marchisio to shoot straight at Casillas when in plenty of space. Truly, though, the demise of the Italians had been greatly exaggerated.

Ukraine were another team not fancied to do so well, despite being hosts - but they also washed away all that negativity with a wonderful comeback in Kiev last night.

The hero of the match was Andriy Shevchenko who scored two second-half goals in seven minutes as Ukraine came back from 1-0 down to win.

After a first half which promised much but failed to deliver, Sweden shocked the hosts by taking the lead on 52 minutes. Zlatan Ibrahimovic was afforded far too much space and it looked as if the nay-sayers were going to be right.

But, determined to have none of it, Shevchenko grabbed the match by the scruff of the neck and, just three minutes later, headed home Andriy Yarmolenko's fine cross for the equaliser.

Seven minutes after that, the Olympic Stadium was going wild for their number seven again when he evaded poor marking to glance a near-post header from a corner.

Ukraine now had a lead to protect and they did so by taking off Shevchenko to a noisy, standing ovation.

By playing so defensively, however, Ukraine had handed the initiative back to Sweden - and Erik Hamsen's men nearly, very nearly, took advantage.

First, Ibrahimovic came close with a stinging drive from the edge of the box, and then substitute Johan Elmander spurned the best opportunity by blazing wide in the box.

Finally, Olof Mellberg scooped a volley onto the roof of the net and, having held their collective breath thoughout the last 10 minutes, the Ukrainian fans and players let it all out on the final whistle.

Shevchenko was king of Kiev once more as an excellent set of opening matches concluded in memorable fashion.



GROUP A
TVDate/time (BST)
Venue
BBCFri 8 June, 17:00POLAND 1-1 GREECEWarsaw
ITVFri 8 June, 19:45RUSSIA 4-1 CZECH REPUBLICWroclaw
ITVTue 12 June, 17:00GREECE v CZECH REPUBLICWroclaw
ITVTue 12 June, 19:45POLAND v RUSSIAWarsaw
BBCSat 16 June, 19:45CZECH REPUBLIC v POLANDWroclaw
BBCSat 16 June, 19:45GREECE v RUSSIAWarsaw

Group AWDLFAPts
RUSSIA100413
GREECE010111
POLAND010111
CZECH REPUBLIC001140

GROUP B
TVDate/time (BST)
Venue
BBCSat 9 June, 17:00NETHERLANDS 1-0 DENMARKKharkiv
BBCSat 9 June, 19:45GERMANY 1-0 PORTUGALLviv
ITVWed 13 June, 17:00DENMARK v PORTUGALLviv
BBCWed 13 June, 19:45NETHERLANDS v GERMANYKharkiv
ITVSun 17 June, 19:45PORTUGAL v NETHERLANDSKharkiv
ITVSun 17 June, 19:45DENMARK v GERMANYLviv

Group BWDLFAPts
DENMARK100103
GERMANY100103
NETHERLANDS001010
PORTUGAL001010

GROUP C
TVDate/time (BST)
Venue
ITVSun 10 June, 17:00SPAIN 1-1 ITALYGdansk
ITVSun 10 June, 19:45IRELAND 1-3 CROATIAPoznan
BBCThu 14 June, 17:00ITALY v CROATIAPoznan
ITVThu 14 June, 19:45SPAIN v IRELANDGdansk
BBCMon 18 June, 19:45CROATIA v SPAINGdansk
BBCMon 18 June, 19:45ITALY v IRELANDPoznan

Group CWDLFAPts
CROATIA100313
ITALY010111
SPAIN010111
IRELAND001130

GROUP D
TVDate/time (BST)
Venue
ITVMon 11 June, 17:00FRANCE 1-1 ENGLANDDonetsk
BBCMon 11 June, 19:45UKRAINE 2-1 SWEDEN Kiev
ITVFri 15 June, 17:00UKRAINE v FRANCEDonetsk
BBCFri 15 June, 19:45SWEDEN v ENGLANDKiev
ITVTue 19 June, 19:45ENGLAND v UKRAINEDonetsk
ITVTue 19 June, 19:45SWEDEN v FRANCEKiev

Group DWDLFAPts
UKRAINE100213
ENGLAND010111
FRANCE010111
SWEDEN001120

SCORERS
2 Alan Dzagoev (Russia), Mario Mandzukic (Croatia), Andriy Shevchenko (Ukraine)
1 Robert Lewandowski (Poland), Dimitris Salpingidis (Greece), Roman Shirokov (Russia), Vaclav Pilar (Czech Republic), Roman Pavlyuchenko (Russia), Michael Krohn-Dehli (Denmark), Mario Gomez (Germany), Antonio di Natale (Italy), Cesc Fabregas (Spain), Sean St Ledger (Ireland), Nikola Jelavic (Croatia), Joleon Lescott (England), Samir Nasri (France), Zlatan Ibrahimovic (Sweden)

RED CARDS
Sokratis Papastathopoulos (Greece) v Poland
Wojciech Szczesny (Poland) v Greece
Yellow cards: 21




Saturday 9 June 2012

"The rain it poor'd doon aal the day an' it myed the groond quite muddy"*

*For non-Geordie speakers, this line from the final verse of Geordie Ridley's Blaydon Races translates as: "The rain poured down all day and made the ground very muddy."


THE WEATHER gods certainly had their say at yesterday's Blaydon Races - but they still could not spoil a brilliant - if very wet - 150th anniversary of Geordie Ridley's tune.

Dark clouds had been gathering on Tyneside all afternoon as flagship celebrations took place at Grey's Monument in Newcastle and beside Shibdon Pond in Blaydon.

Typically, though, the drizzle had somehow held off until all the runners were lined up at the bottom of the Groat Market for the start at 6pm.

And, pretty soon, those dark clouds had unleashed their torrents of rain, flooding the tarmac and soaking us as we headed alang the Scotswood Road.

Mercifully, the rain had eased a little by the time I had squelched across the Scotswood Bridge and around the Derwenthaugh loop as a series of bands encouraged us hearty souls alang the 5.9-mile route.

By then, heading into the last third of the race alang the Chainbridge Road, I knew I was going to make it again to the amended finish line this year.

That feeling came as quite a relief for, throughout the afternoon, my anxiety had unfortunately tried once again to get the better of me.

Specifically, I worried that my failure this year to do any training at all would cost me on the way round - even to the extent that I might collapse or at least embarrass myself by failing to finish.

Of course, my nervous disposition this time had some rational thought behind it - and my stiff leg muscles today are testament to the fact that it certainly is not best practice to run without training.

In the end, though, my negative mindset had still made far too much of the task ahead of me.

Indeed, as I ran onto the new finish on the Shibdon Road playing fields, the official timer told me that I had completed the race in 69 minutes - exactly the same as last year.

Now, I am fully aware that such a time is hardly an outstanding achievement. Certainly, my sister can be a lot prouder having broken through the hour mark this year.

But, like a horse competing in the Grand National at Aintree, my primary aim was simply just to negotiate a safe path all the way round.

Incidentally, Ridley's verse (see below) tells of an incident-packed bus journey from Balmbra's in Newcastle to a horse race on Stella island.

Crashing on the way, the bus loses a wheel and some of its passengers require medical attention. But those who continue eventually reach the racecourse on a rain-soaked day where they find "spice stalls, an' munkey shows, an' aud wives selling ciders" among other attractions.

As such, it just seemed to be keeping with tradition that I allowed myself a few fizzy ciders in the Bisley pub in Blaydon while gathering my post-race thoughts.

Prevalent among them was a sense of pride in taking part in one of the biggest days in Blaydon's history. However, I did also wonder just how well I might do at the event if I ever managed to train properly for it.

Ah well, there's always next year. Perhaps...








THE BLAYDON RACES
(1862)
Geordie Ridley


Aw went to Blaydon Races, 'twas on the ninth of Joon,
Eiteen hundred an' sixty-two, on a summer's efternoon;
Aw tyuk the 'bus frae Balmbra's, an' she wis heavy laden,
Away we went alang Collingwood Street, that's on the road to Blaydon.


Ah me lads, ye shud have seen us gannin',
We pass'd the foaks upon the road just as they wor stannin';
Thor wes lots o' lads an' lasses there, all wi' smiling faces,
Gawn alang the Scotswood Road, to see the Blaydon Races.

 

We flew past Airmstrang's factory, and up to the "Robin Adair",
Just gannin' doon te the railway bridge, the 'bus wheel flew off there.
The lasses lost their crinolines off, an' the veils that hid their faces,
An' aw got two black eyes an' a broken nose in gan te Blaydon Races.

When we gat the wheel put on away we went agyen,
But them that had their noses broke they cam back ower hyem;
Sum went to the Dispensary an' uthers to Doctor Gibbs,
An' sum to the Infirmary to mend their broken ribs.

Noo when we gat to Paradise thor wes bonny gam begun;
Thor was fower-an-twenty on the 'bus, man, hoo they danced an' sung;
They called on me to sing a sang, aw sung them "Paddy Fagan",
Aw danced a jig an' swung my twig that day aw went to Blaydon.

We flew across the Chain Bridge reet into Blaydon toon,
The bellman he was callin' there, they call him Jackie Broon;
Aw saw him talkin' to sum cheps, an' them he was pursuadin'
To gan an' see Geordy Ridley's show in the Mechanics' Hall at Blaydon.

The rain it poor'd aw the day an' myed the groond quite muddy,
Coffy Johnny had a white hat on - they war shootin' "Whe stole the cuddy?!"
There wes spice stalls an' munkey shows an' aud wives selling ciders
,
An' a chep wiv a hapenny roond aboot, shootin' "Noo, me lads, for riders."

Friday 8 June 2012

Euro 2012: The Results




GROUP A GROUP BGROUP CGROUP D
POLANDNETHERLANDSSPAINUKRAINE
GREECEDENMARKITALYENGLAND
RUSSIAGERMANYIRELANDFRANCE
CZECH REPUBLICPORTUGALCROATIASWEDEN


GROUP STAGE
Opening matches - First round fallers

GROUP A
TVDate/time (BST)
Venue
BBCFri 8 June, 17:00POLAND 1-1 GREECEWarsaw
ITVFri 8 June, 19:45RUSSIA 4-1 CZECH REPUBLICWroclaw
ITVTue 12 June, 17:00GREECE 1-2 CZECH REPUBLICWroclaw
ITVTue 12 June, 19:45POLAND 1-1 RUSSIA Warsaw
BBCSat 16 June, 19:45CZECH REPUBLIC 1-0 POLANDWroclaw
BBCSat 16 June, 19:45GREECE 1-0 RUSSIAWarsaw

Group AWDLFAPts
CZECH REPUBLIC201456
GREECE111334
RUSSIA111534
POLAND021232
Note: GREECE finished above Russia based on head-to-head record (1-0)

GROUP B
TVDate/time (BST)
Venue
BBCSat 9 June, 17:00NETHERLANDS 0-1 DENMARKKharkiv
BBCSat 9 June, 19:45GERMANY 1-0 PORTUGALLviv
ITVWed 13 June, 17:00DENMARK 2-3 PORTUGALLviv
BBCWed 13 June, 19:45NETHERLANDS 1-2 GERMANYKharkiv
ITVSun 17 June, 19:45PORTUGAL 2-1 NETHERLANDSKharkiv
ITVSun 17 June, 19:45DENMARK 1-2 GERMANYLviv

Group BWDLFAPts
GERMANY300529
PORTUGAL201546
DENMARK102453
NETHERLANDS003250

GROUP C
TVDate/time (BST)
Venue
ITVSun 10 June, 17:00SPAIN 1-1 ITALYGdansk
ITVSun 10 June, 19:45IRELAND 1-3 CROATIAPoznan
BBCThu 14 June, 17:00ITALY 1-1 CROATIAPoznan
ITVThu 14 June, 19:45SPAIN 4-0 IRELANDGdansk
BBCMon 18 June, 19:45CROATIA 0-1 SPAINGdansk
BBCMon 18 June, 19:45ITALY 2-0 IRELANDPoznan

Group CWDLFAPts
SPAIN210617
ITALY120425
CROATIA111434
IRELAND003190

GROUP D
TVDate/time (BST)
Venue
ITVMon 11 June, 17:00FRANCE 1-1 ENGLANDDonetsk
BBCMon 11 June, 19:45UKRAINE 2-1 SWEDEN Kiev
ITVFri 15 June, 17:00UKRAINE 0-2 FRANCEDonetsk
BBCFri 15 June, 19:45SWEDEN 2-3 ENGLANDKiev
ITVTue 19 June, 19:45ENGLAND 1-0 UKRAINEDonetsk
ITVTue 19 June, 19:45SWEDEN 2-0 FRANCEKiev

Group DWDLFAPts
ENGLAND210537
FRANCE111334
UKRAINE102243
SWEDEN102553


QUARTER FINALS Reports
TVDate/time (BST)
Venue
BBCThu 21 June, 19:45CZECH REPUBLIC 0-1 PORTUGALWarsaw
ITVSat 23 June, 19:45SPAIN 2-0 FRANCE Donetsk
ITVFri 22 June, 19:45GERMANY 4-2 GREECEGdansk
BBCSun 24 June, 19:45ENGLAND 0-0 ITALY*Kiev
*ITALY won 4-2 on penalties.

SEMI FINALS Reports
TVDate/time (BST)
Venue
BBCWed 27 June, 19:45PORTUGAL 0-0 SPAIN*Donetsk
BBCThu 28 June, 19:45GERMANY 1-2 ITALY Warsaw
*SPAIN won 4-2 on penalties



THE FINAL
Olympic Stadium, Kiev
SPAIN 4-0 ITALY


SPAIN Casillas (c) - Arbeloa, Ramos, Pique, Alba - Busquets, Xavi, Alonso, Iniesta (Mata 87), Silva (Pedro 59), Fabregas (Torres 75). Goals Silva 14, Alba 40, Torres 84, Mata 88
ITALY Buffon (c) - Abate, Barzagli, Bonucci, Chiellini (Balzaretti 21) - Pirlo, Marchisio, De Rossi, Montolivo (Motta 56) - Cassano (Di Natale 46), Balotelli
Kick-off 7:45pm on BBC/ITV Attendance 60,000 Referee Pedro Proença (Portugal)
Match Report


SCORERS
Golden Boot winner: Fernando Torres (3 goals, 1 assist in fewer minutes [189] than Mario Gomez [282])
3 Fernando Torres (Spain), Alan Dzagoev (Russia), Mario Gomez (Germany), Mario Mandzukic (Croatia), Cristiano Ronaldo (Portugal), Mario Balotelli (Italy)
2 Andriy Shevchenko (Ukraine), Vaclav Pilar (Czech Republic), Cesc Fabregas (Spain), Petr Jiracek (Czech Republic), Nicklas Bendtner (Denmark), Michael Krohn-Dehli (Denmark), Zlatan Ibrahimovic (Sweden), Xabi Alonso (Spain), Dimitris Salpingidis (Greece), David Silva (Spain)
1 Robert Lewandowski (Poland), Roman Shirokov (Russia), Roman Pavlyuchenko (Russia), Antonio di Natale (Italy), Sean St Ledger (Ireland), Nikola Jelavic (Croatia), Joleon Lescott (England), Samir Nasri (France), Theofanis Gekas (Greece), Jakub Blaszczykowski (Poland), Pepe (Portugal), Helder Postiga (Portugal), Silvestre Valera (Portugal), Robin van Persie (Netherlands), Andrea Pirlo (Italy), Jeremy Menez (France), Yohan Cabaye (France), Andy Carroll (England), Olof Mellberg (Sweden), Theo Walcott (England), Danny Welbeck (England), Giorgos Karagounis (Greece), Rafael van der Vaart (Netherlands), Lukas Podolski (Germany), Lars Bender (Germany), Antonio Cassano (Italy), Jesus Navas (Spain), Wayne Rooney (England), Sebastian Larsson (Sweden), Philipp Lahm (Germany), Giorgios Samaras (Greece), Sami Khedira (Germany), Miroslav Klose (Germany), Marko Reus (Germany), Mesut Oezil (Germany), Juan Mata (Spain)
1 own goal Glen Johnson (England) for Sweden

RED CARDS
Sokratis Papastathopoulos (Greece) v Poland
Wojciech Szczesny (Poland) v Greece
Keith Andrews (Ireland) v Italy
Yellow cards: 123

CLASSIFICATION
1 SPAIN - beat Italy 4-0 in the Final
2 ITALY - lost to Spain 0-4 in the Final
3 PORTUGAL - lost to Spain in the semi finals on penalties after 0-0 draw
4 GERMANY - lost 1-2 to Italy in the semi finals
5 ENGLAND - lost to Italy in the quarter finals on penalties after 0-0 draw
6 CZECH REPUBLIC - lost 0-1 to Portugal in the quarter finals
7 GREECE - lost 2-4 to Germany in the quarter finals
8 FRANCE - lost 0-2 to Spain in the quarter finals
9 RUSSIA - eliminated at the group stage with four points (+2 GD)
10 CROATIA - eliminated at the group stage with four points (+1 GD)
11 SWEDEN - eliminated at the group stage with three points (0 GD)
12 DENMARK - eliminated at the group stage with three points (-1 GD)
13 UKRAINE - eliminated at the group stage with three points (-2 GD)
14 POLAND - eliminated at the group stage with two points
15 NETHERLANDS - eliminated at the group stage with zero points (-3 GD)
16 IRELAND - eliminated at the group stage with zero points (-8 GD)