Real Madrid v Atletico Madrid semifinals – Reporters Nepal https://nepalireporter.com Impart Educate Propel Thu, 11 May 2017 05:58:25 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.2.6 https://nepalireporter.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/01/cropped-RN_Logo-32x32.png Real Madrid v Atletico Madrid semifinals – Reporters Nepal https://nepalireporter.com 32 32 Madrid eliminates Atletico, reaches Champions League final https://nepalireporter.com/2017/05/36053 https://nepalireporter.com/2017/05/36053#respond Thu, 11 May 2017 05:58:25 +0000 http://nepalireporter.com/?p=36053 MadridMADRID, May 11: Atletico Madrid gave its passionate fans hope early on, but in the end it was city rival Real Madrid that celebrated a return to the Champions League final. Madrid withstood an early onslaught by Atletico to reach a third Champions League final in four years despite a 2-1 loss on Wednesday. Atletico, […]]]> Madrid

MADRID, May 11: Atletico Madrid gave its passionate fans hope early on, but in the end it was city rival Real Madrid that celebrated a return to the Champions League final.

Madrid withstood an early onslaught by Atletico to reach a third Champions League final in four years despite a 2-1 loss on Wednesday.

Atletico, which trailed 3-0 after the first leg, scored twice in the first 16 minutes at the Vicente Calderon Stadium to move within a goal of sending the semifinal, second-leg into extra time. But Francisco “Isco” Alarcon netted a crucial away goal for Madrid before halftime to secure a 4-2 victory on aggregate and a spot in the final against Juventus on June 3 in Cardiff.

“We knew we were going to suffer, but we are extremely happy to have made it to the final,” Madrid coach Zinedine Zidane said. “It’s been a very long road and it hasn’t been easy. And to do it for the second year in a row, we need to congratulate everyone in this club.”

Atletico ends its Champions League campaign without a shot at the title and with its fourth straight elimination to its powerful Spanish rival. Madrid defeated Atletico in the final last year and in 2014, and also eliminated the crosstown opponent in the quarterfinals in 2015.

“I’m happy and proud to have shown what we are all about,” Atletico coach Diego Simeone said. “When we said we believed in a comeback, a lot of people didn’t take it seriously. The first 30, 35 minutes we played will remain in the fans’ memory for a long time. But we were playing against a great rival and they took advantage of our mistake in defense.”

Madrid will try to become the first team to win back-to-back titles since the competition’s new format was created in 1992. It will be the first team to have a chance to defend its title since Manchester United made it to consecutive finals in 2008-09.

Atletico kept its hopes alive on Wednesday by scoring two early goals to ignite the crowd at the packed Calderon.

Saul Niguez netted the first goal with a header off a corner in the 12th minute, and Antoine Griezmann added to the lead four minutes later by converting a penalty after Fernando Torres was tripped by defender Raphael Varane. Griezmann, who had missed a penalty in last year’s final against Madrid, slipped slightly just as he was taking the shot. Madrid goalkeeper Keylor Navas got his glove to the ball, but couldn’t keep it out.

“They started strongly but eventually we were able to find our game,” Zidane said. “In the second half, we were much better.”

The early goals gave Atletico real hope of causing an upset, but Simeone’s team was unable to keep pressuring as it did in the opening minutes.

The match was evenly-balanced when Karim Benzema came up with a spectacular move to set up Isco’s goal. The French striker was surrounded by three Atletico defenders at the byline, but somehow found a way past all of them with a pair of quick touches. He sped into the area and sent a backward pass to Toni Kroos, whose shot was parried by goalkeeper Jan Oblak. But Isco pounced on the rebound to score from close range.

“It was difficult to maintain that same rhythm, and against a team like Madrid your first mistake will be costly, and that’s what happened,” Simeone said. “Our first half was nearly perfect but that great play by Benzema cost us.”

Zidane was unable to shed any light on the French forward’s inspired piece of skill.

“After the game, I asked Benzema how he was able to do that. But he didn’t know either,” the Madrid coach said.

The goal all but ended Atletico’s hopes of advancing, and the second half was played at a much calmer pace, with few significant scoring opportunities for both teams.

“This performance was the least that we could have done,” Atletico captain Gabi said. “I thought we were excellent in the first half. A moment of genius from Benzema ended our dream but we never stopped fighting and I’m proud of everyone.”

Navas had to make a fine double-save in the 66th minute to block a shot by Yannick Carrasco and a header by Kevin Gameiro, while Cristiano Ronaldo had a goal disallowed for offside at the other end in the 69th.

Before the game, Atletico fans displayed huge banners that read, “proud not to be like you,” a response to Madrid’s message before the first leg.

The banners at the Bernabeu last week read “tell me how it feels,” along with an image of the Champions League trophy and the words “Milan” and “Lisbon,” the cities which hosted the finals where Madrid defeated Atletico in 2014 and 2016.

Atletico was upset by the banners and provoked Madrid in the run-up to the second leg. The club sent a series of tweets that praised its fans for having unconditional love for the team despite the results, accompanied by the hashtag “they can’t understand.”

The Atletico crowd stayed on to cheer their team long after the final whistle, while the players returned from the changing rooms several minutes after the game to greet the fans. Simeone was loudly cheered. He was still asking for the crowd’s support in second-half stoppage time.

Madrid players also returned to thanks their own supporters, and many Atletico fans threw objects toward them.

It was the final European game at the Calderon before Atletico moves into a new venue next season.-AP

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Ronaldo hits hat-trick as Real demolishes derby rivals https://nepalireporter.com/2017/05/35826 https://nepalireporter.com/2017/05/35826#respond Wed, 03 May 2017 06:47:35 +0000 http://nepalireporter.com/?p=35826 RonaldoMADRID, May 3: There will come a day when he is unable to do it any longer, when the appeals to his team-mates at a pass gone astray will just be the grumblings of a footballer past his usefulness, but for the time being, Cristiano Ronaldo consistently and defiantly announces himself as the man for […]]]> Ronaldo

MADRID, May 3: There will come a day when he is unable to do it any longer, when the appeals to his team-mates at a pass gone astray will just be the grumblings of a footballer past his usefulness, but for the time being, Cristiano Ronaldo consistently and defiantly announces himself as the man for the big occasion.

His second goal had already killed the little hope Atletico Madrid had of rescuing this Champions League semi-final in the second leg in eight days’ time but the third, the hat-trick goal, turned it into something else altogether. This was another monument to the phenomenal goalscoring achievements of this footballer with his 103 goals in this competition and an unerring ability to be the right man in the right place at all the right times.

At 32, Ronaldo is already a reigning European champion for club and country and now, on track for the fourth Champions League title of his career. He has 47 career hat-tricks, 42 for Real and six this season although the numbers, staggering though they are, do not quite do justice to the occasion. This is a man who relentlessly puts himself at the centre of the story, year after year, game after game.

His 101st, 102nd and 103rd goals in European competition mean that he now has three more goals than the total Atletico have scored in their entire Champions League history. He had previously scored five over the two quarter-final games against Bayern Munich. Soon he will pass Jimmy Greaves’ record of 366 top-flight league goals and then it will just be a question of how high he can raise the bar for the next generation.

He was not Real Madrid’s best player, but he was the man to whom they all look as the final, critical part of the winning machine, the finisher with blood in his veins, the most inevitable goalscorer in the history of the European game. Real’s dominance of this competition is creeping ever closer with the final in Cardiff next month potentially their third European Cup in four seasons and their 12th of all time.

They crushed Atletico who never recovered from the tenth minute opener from Ronaldo. He had been in an offside position in the first phase of play and while it was a marginal call for English referee Martin Atkinson he got it right, correctly judging that Ronaldo had not challenged for the ball or prevented the defender from playing it when first it was crossed and subsequently cleared.

It was a terrible evening for Diego Simeone and his team with just one attempt on target all game and just one chance of note in the first half for Kevin Gameiro. They found themselves outgunned in midfield where Toni Kroos, Isco and Luka Modric ran the show all on their own and Antoine Griezmann never got close to exerting the kind of influence that Ronaldo had on the match.

Afterwards, Simeone, faced with the prospect of defeat to Real in this competition for the fourth straight season, tried hard to put a brave face on it ahead of next Wednesday’s second leg. “I have peace of mind, I’m calm and I will prepare for Saturday’s game,” he said. “We have to try to do something that seems impossible but we are Atletico and we can do it.”

The win burnishes once more the crown of Zinedine Zidane who is on course for his second straight Champions League title as a rookie manager and whose galaxy of stars undeniably play a kind of football that is hard for the rest to live with. “We have players who have patience,” he said, “and who can do damage at any time.”

They were superb in the opening stages of the first half, going close through Dani Carvajal and then Karim Benzema before Ronaldo scored his first. He had come in from an offside position in the first phase of play, when Stefan Savic cleared a Carvajal cross, and then stepped back onside in time send Casemiro’ awkward high-bouncing volley into the goal with a flick of the neck.

Atletico just seemed to be half-paced, and unsure quite how they were supposed to be approaching this test. When Griezmann was forced on one occasion before the break to chase an awkward ball which Carvajal reached first, the Frenchman threw his arms in the air in disgust. Jan Oblak saved from a Raphael Varane header seven minutes after the Ronaldo goal.

For all their straining, there was one chance from nowhere, when Koke played in Kevin Gameiro and the Real goalkeeper Keylor Navas raced off his line quickly and decisively to bat the ball away from the French striker’s feet. It might have been different had Gameiro been able to hold his nerve but after the break, having had to replace the injured Carvajal, Real were dominant.

There was a masterful second-half performance from Kroos and Isco, the latter, on a booking, was substituted for his own good after one too many nibbles at Koke. Ronaldo’s second came with 18 minutes left when he found enough space in the right channel and connected cleanly with a volley that gave Oblak no chance of saving.

 From there Atletico were on the rack and caught badly between pushing forward for more or protecting the deficit as it stood. They managed neither with substitute Lucas Vazquez the penultimate part of a counter attack, his cross from the byline and then Ronaldo finishing unmarked in the centre for a goal that must have felt devastating to Atletico, and perfectly normal for their city rivals.-THE TELEGRAPH
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