Sunday 29 May 2011

Barcelona 3 ManUre 1

http://www.3news.co.nz/VIDEO-HIGHLIGHTS-Barcelona-wins-Champions-League-Final-2011-at-Wembley/tabid/415/articleID/213073/Default.aspx

Pep Guardiola's tactics were spot on. His back 4 kept an appropriate distance between them and Valdes. They know that Hernandez and Rooney can outrun Mascherano and Pique. So they did not press up very far.

The midfield of Basquets, Xavi and Iniesta were rock solid. Iniesta and Xavi roamed the furthest afield. They were the first line of defence whenever Messi, Pedro or Villa lost possession. Boy were they effective. Even if ManUre got past them, Basquets sat deep, just in front of Pique and Mascherano, protecting the central defence.

There is a bigger gap between midfield and defence. But ManUre did not quite exploit the space. That's because none of their midfielders managed to break out of defensive positions. All they could muster were long passes to Hernandez and Rooney. This played right into the hands of Pep Guardiola. He knew United didn't have a speedy midfielder able to splay passes. Giggs at 37 has lost his legs. Scholes is a shadow of a player he once was. ManUre needed a Zinedine Zidane. Fergie could have let Rooney drop a bit deeper to play in that hole. Perhaps he did, which was how ManUre scored the equaliser and temporarily gave them hope.

Messi dropped deep and was a decoy for most of the game. He gave Pedro, Iniesta, Villa and Xavi space whenever he took possession, because he almost always drew 3 ManUre players to him.

The other players, especially Xavi, Iniesta and Villa were incredible as well, able to create space out of a barrage of ManUre bodies. The impecable timing of holding on to the ball long enough to draw an opponent towards you before releasing it to a team mate in space.

Pure beauty, pure poetry.





No answer to Barca genius

Sir Alex's side left chasing shadows as brilliant Barca boss Wembley showpiece

Last updated: 28th May 2011 Subscribe to RSS Feed
Lionel Messi Barcelona Champions League final
Messi: Scorching second leaves United flummoxed
David Villa Barcelona Champions League final
Villa: Made the game safe with gorgeous third
Wayne Rooney Manchester United Champions League final
Rooney: Scored a brilliant leveller for United

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History repeated itself at Wembley as Manchester United were left chasing Barcelona's shadow in a European Cup final, with Pep Guardiola's side reclaiming the Champions League with a deserved 3-1 victory in the capital.
United went into half-time level after Wayne Rooney had exquisitely equalised Pedro's opener for Barcelona but after the interval had to concede to their opponent's collective and individual genius, as Lionel Messi and David Villa both etched their names on the scoresheet.
Sir Alex Ferguson's side were spirited throughout but in the end had no answer to a Barcelona team that plays a brand of football that is unparalleled in the modern game in terms of its majestic simplicity.
Before a ball had even been kicked both coaches had demonstrated possessing backbones made of iron in making unsentimental and unflinching team selections. For United top goalscorer Dimitar Berbatov was afforded not even a place on the substitutes' bench, with Michael Owen surprisingly preferred to the 21-goal Bulgarian to provide striking back-up for Rooney and Javier Hernandez.

Tough choices

In resisting the urge to start with the fit-again Darren Fletcher the Scot remained true to his promise of trading blows with Barca, when many had predicted he'd box clever and utilise his compatriot in a tight midfield five designed to hustle as far up the field as possible.
Guardiola sprung an even bigger shock when leaving out the club's heartbeat and captain Carles Puyel, with the Caveman of Catalunya left to lick his wounds on the bench as Javier Mascherano was selected alongside Gerard Pique at centre-half.
As the atmosphere simmered inside a stadium that housed both clubs' first European Cup wins, in 1968 and 1992 respectively, the inclusion of Eric Abidal in Barcelona's starting XI despite only having recently returned to playing after a battle with liver cancer provided a human element to proceedings that put into perspective Bill Shankly's infamous quip about life, death and its relation to football.
The opening sparring almost held up a mirror to the game which ensued in Rome two years' ago as United snarled out of the traps with a collective curled lip. The omnipresent Park ji-Sung was like a dog with a bone in gnarling at the legs of Xavi and Andres Iniesta, while Hernandez's infectious workrate and clever movement in the lines between Pique and Mascherano gave Barcelona plenty to ponder.

Bright start
Twice Victor Valdes was forced to race off his line after first Edwin van der Sar's huge clearance upfield and then Ryan Giggs' more subtle threaded pass threatened to get United in behind.
As if bristled by United's brio Barcelona soon awoke from their relative slumber to engine chances of their own. Trademark pockets of pretty football had United at full stretch as Rio Ferdinand had to show immaculate timing on Villa to dispossess the Spaniard with his left boot cocked to strike, before Van der Sar gathered smartly as the same player looked to shoot across him from Xavi's cute pass.
Such is the precision of Xavi's passing it looks as though he's worked them out beforehand with a protractor and so it proved as Guardiola's on-field lieutenant began to dictate from the centre of the field.
It was though from the right that he fashioned Barca's first genuine chance as his low cross saw Pedro dart in front of Vidic before pulling the ball wide, while Villa set his sights from range before arching one a yard or so wide.
With United looking punch drunk if not quite on the ropes Vidic had to pull off his finest Bobby Moore, circa '66 impersonation, with Messi in full flow on the edge of the box. Respite proved only to be momentary.
With rhythmic fluidity Barcelona forged ahead in the 27th minute of an engaging first half, which Guardiola's side very much bossed in terms of possession.
Iniesta found tormentor-in-chief Xavi in the peripheral space between defence and midfield and with United's back four uncertain whether to go to the ball or back off, Barcelona struck with the clinical precision of a Mafioso hit-man.
Pedro's darting run into the space vacated by Patrice Evra's decision to track Messi was expertly found by Xavi's slide-rule pass and after wrong footing Van der Sar with his eyes, the finish was beautiful in its simplicity.
With Messi, The Flea, dropping his shoulder at will and ghosting into dangerous areas United's players looked as though they might have to resort to using a rolled-up newspaper to stop him.
If United were to exorcise the spectre of Rome an immediate response was required. Rooney had the answer.
After dropping deep close to Barcelona's left touchline he exchanged short passes with Carrick before making inroads towards Barca's box. There was a suspicion of off-side when he stabbed the ball into the path of Hernandez but when the Mexican found his team-mate with a return pass there was nothing uncertain about Rooney's finish as he empathically wrapped his boot around the ball to send it high beyond Valdes from the penalty spot.

Screamer
Barcelona were right to be shocked such was their ascendancy at that stage but still they kept playing their football as the effervescent Messi eased past Vidic with a gorgeous nutmeg before just failing to meet Villa's return pass on the stretch.
If United were happy to hear the half-time whistle to regroup the words of their manager proved fruitless, as after the interval Barcelona set about living up to their mantle as one of the world's greatest ever club sides.
Like an express train they made United look like a more prosaic steam model in comparison, as a buccaneering Dani Alves forced Van der Sar to save with his feet after Messi's pass had carved United open again.
As if hypnotised by Barcelona's almost abstract understanding of space and how to find it, United had no answers to their incessant forward forays.
Messi's 53rd goal in the 53rd minute of the final game of a most remarkable of seasons owed little to their famed passing, but rather the Argentine's innate ability to conjure something from nothing. As United backed off Messi made a yard before unleashing a rocket of a daisy-cutter from around 20-yards that beat Van der Sar all ends up.

Messi magic
There was to be no answer this time. Instead Barcelona treated the ball expertly, caressing it around the field - teasing United's players as an alley cat would a wounded field mouse.
Just shy of the 70 minute mark Messi turned from goalscorer to architect as he laid on a stunning third for Villa. Bewitching Evra on the left flank he cut inside United's box at speed. As Nani failed to clear, Sergio Busquets was allowed to nudge into the path of Villa, whose curling finish into the top corner from the edge of the area was no less than a masterpiece.
United never let their heads drop as Rooney scooped onto the top of the net and Giggs cried penalty when striking the ball onto the hand of Villa but in truth, even Ferguson must have known this was a bridge too far, even for a Manchester United side famed for its ability to conjure miracles in the face of adversity.
Paul Scholes and Puyol were handed touching cameos but the likely last game in the Manchester United legend's career will be remembered for Barcelona's brilliance in claiming a fourth European crown. It was one they richly deserved.

Barcelona Team Statistics Manchester United
3Goals 1
11st Half Goals 1
12Shots on Target 1
4Shots off Target 2
6Blocked Shots 1
6Corners 0
5Fouls 16
1Offsides 5
2Yellow Cards 2
0Red Cards 0
89.6Passing Success 79.6
15Tackles 23
73.3Tackles Success 73.9
68.4Possession 31.6
54.7Territorial Advantage 45.3

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