Poland
averts a Greek tragedy
by rick olivares pic borrowed from Getty Images/UEFA
The opening match of Euro 2012 was all
about missed chances.
Poland should have had been up by two
goals had defender Damien Perquis scored as he rushed inside the box with the
defenders scattered like tenpins and Greek goalkeeper Kostas Chalkias like a deer
in front of a Mack truck.
When Dimitris Salpingidis came on as a
45th minute substitute for Sotiris Ninis in a tactical substitution
after keeper Sokratis Papasthathopolous was sent off, he equalized, scored
again but had the goal waived off because a teammate was offside, and forced a
penalty and the sending off of starting goalkeeper Wojciech Szczesny only for
captain Giorgios Karagounis to flub his penalty kick that would have given
Greece an incredible 2-1 win (or a 2-2 draw had Perquis been like Hawkeye). But this is a tragedy in itself for Greece has missed its last three penalty shots.
Yes, it was thrilling all right and
the Polish fans never wavered in cheering their team on even if they were for
the most part of the match looking outclassed by the Greeks. They came alive
once more when PSV Eindhoven’s Przemysław Tytoń
saved the penalty and proved to be outstanding in holding back the Greeks and keeping the final result to a 1-1 draw.
Poland dominated possession? Yeah,
right. Maybe only for the first 18 minutes. They had a few good crosses that
was about it. The Poles started off with a 4-2-3-1 formation and their defense
held forcing the Greeks to abandon their 4-3-3 for a 4-5-1 with everybody in
their defensive half.
It sure didn’t help that central
forward Georgios Samaras kept giving the ball away with his poor first touch
and horrid decision-making (samaras did redeem himself but only late in the
match). With Greece unable to take good attempts the Poles advanced. The
traditional tough Greek defense forced Franciszek Smuda’s men to find their way
through a porous right side. And when Jakub Blaszczykowski sent a cross from the deep
right of the Greek side, just as it was in the Philippines-Indonesia game,
Greek keeper Kostas Chalkias had no chance when Borussia Dortmund striker
Robert Lewandowski (who looks to going to Manchester United next season) headed
the ball in for the first goal.
Yet after
Lewandowski’s goal, the outnumbered Greeks defended like their ancestors did on
the plains of Marathon when they turned back Persian King Darius’ hordes. And
they had the better build up of their attack and counter attack that had the
Poles on their heels. They simply had a tough time trying to defend Salpingidis
(imagine if Samaras played a whole lot better).
There was
added drama to the match when Spanish referee Carlos Velasco Carballo sent
of Papasthathopolous for what were weak
calls. I am shocked that UEFA allowed this idiot to officiate the European
Championships considered how this guy hands out cards like it is going out of
style. While officiating 29 La Liga match last season, he showed 178 yellow
cards and 16 red cards. That’s an average of six yellow cards a game. He has
earned the eternal enmity of Real Madrid head coach Jose Mourinho. And now the
Special One’s countryman in Fernando Santos who was named coach of the decade
in Greece. Carballo
is amusing whatsoever.
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