Wins by all three Spanish teams
playing in the Champions League means that all of them are through to
the next league phase of the competition with one match to play. The
second leg of the UEFA cup second round will be played this week, with
all four Spanish clubs in favourable positions to qualify for the next
round. Results were as follows:
Champions League
Barcelona 5 - AIK Solna 0 With
the team already qualified for the next phase, Van Gaal decided to
rest six of his key players and give the youngsters a chance. They
took the opportunity with open arms, beating a poor Solna side who
were thinking more of their crucial Swedish league match at the
weekend rather than the task in hand. Rivaldo, Luis Enrique, Sergi,
Figo, Cocu and Guardiola were all given a three day holiday by the Barça
manager, and with Frank de Boer and Bogarde unavailable through
injury, B team youngsters Xavi, Gabri, Puyol, Mario and Nano were all
given a run out, together with Litmanen, Zenden, Ronald de Boer, Simao
and Déhu (just back from injury). Patrick Kluivert, serving a
four match suspension in the Spanish league was the only first choice
player in the starting line up, and his contribution was vital as the
home side added five more goals to end the day the League's most
successful team with 13 points and 16 goals in five matches. Kluivert
scored his first two goals of the Champions League in the opening half
hour of the match, both coming from crosses from Simao on the right.
Just before half time he combined to give Zenden his first goal, and
eight minutes into the second half his pass to Litmanen set up Gabri
to head home the fourth. Two minutes later Déhu scored his
first goal for the club with a long shot which Asper could not hold,
the ball falling behind the Swedish keeper and into the net.
Real Madrid 3 - Olympiakos
0 Madrid strolled through to the next phase of the competition
with a comfortable win against third placed Olympiakos. Having gone
seven matches without a win in the league they needed a victory to
reconcile themselves with the local supporters, and the result was a
tonic for their manager. Toshack recovered Hierro in defence and opted
for Geremi at right back in place of Michel Salgado. Guti and Seedorf
came in to midfield to support Raúl and Morientes up front.
Olympiakos were without ex Barcelona forward Giovanni who was
suspended after picking up a third yellow card in his last match.
Madrid were two goals up within the first half hour, the first coming
from Raúl after Morientes laid back a long pass from Seedorf,
and the second came from Morientes himself from a pass from Guti, the
ball escaping from the hands of the delightfully named Greek keeper
Elefthoropoulos (sewing his name on his shirt must be a full time
job). Shortly before half time Hierro had to go off after he once
again aggravated his back injury, Iván Campo replacing him, and
Madrid's injury problems worsened when Geremi was carried off on the
hour, Michel substituting. Toshack gave McManaman a spin out for the
last 20 minutes in place of Guti, and the home side wrapped up the
match seven minutes from time with the best goal of the game, Roberto
Carlos starting the move with a clever chipped pass to Seedorf, and
then racing forward to meet Seedorf's cross on the far post. Madrid
are still second two points behind Oporto, but could go top if they
beat Molde next week and Oporto lose in Greece.
Glasgow Rangers 1 -
Valencia 2 Valencia joined Barcelona and Real Madrid in the
second league phase with a good victory against the Scottish champions
in Ibrox park. Cúper kept the same side which beat Deportivo at
the weekend, with Angulo staying at right back and Djukic keeping his
place in the centre of defence. Valencia's controversial president
Pedro Cortés (which Spanish club president isn't
controversial?) caused raised eyebrows and the odd call for a straight
jacket when he accused UEFA and their referees of conspiring to
eliminate his team after refereeing decisions had gone against
Valencia in previous matches. In the end the Austrian referee Gunter
Benko did not send off any of the Valencia players, nor did he
disallow either of their goals, the first of which was scored by
Mendieta in the 34th minute with a snapshot from the edge of the area
which surprised keeper Stefan Klos, and the second coming from Claudio
López three minutes after the restart from a breakaway. The
referee could have been at fault however for awarding a dubious corner
to Rangers on the hour mark which lead to the Ranger's scrambled goal
from Moore, but he didn't invent any non-existent penalties or blow
the final whistle during a Valencia attack, and with Bayern Munich
losing at PSV, Valencia are mathematically through to the next stage.
Cortés wasn´t there to see it however: his nerves got the
better of him and he left the stand three minutes before the end. With
their plans frustrated, presumably UEFA will be meeting next week to
decide their next dastardly move. |