Showing posts with label Switzerland. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Switzerland. Show all posts

Friday, June 20, 2014

France dismantle the Swiss 5-2 in 2014 Fifa World Cup

France meant business from the start of their 5-2 demolition job of the Swiss, their team selection and offensive line-up being evidence of their serious intentions. They were so good that they had the luxury of squandering a penalty kick. Switzerland looked the part until the Olivier Giroud header from a corner conceded by Djourou. Benzema sprinted to meet a low cross from the right, only for the Swiss defender to clear his lines and play the ball over the by-line.

The corner kick taken from the right to the far post, drifted away from goal. Giroud was not tightly marked as he jumped above his marker to jerk-knife the header past the goalkeeper and the covering defender. The marking by the Swiss was bad and the challenge for the ball was token Moments from the restart, Karim Benzema stole a Swiss ball in midfield, charged towards goal and threaded a neat pass to his left for the scampering Motuidi who scored with his inside of the foot at the near post.

In almost a carbon copy of that goal, the Real Madrid gunman, received the long ball and sped with the ball, carried it into the penalty box on the left. Djourou challenged him despite the fact that he had little chance to score from the narrow angle he created. The referee gave a penalty. Benzema picked himself up and took the spot kick. Benaglio blocked the shot by diving to his right. Cabaye took advantage of a static Swiss defence and shot his attempt against the crossbar.

France grew in confidence and began to menace as they found spaces in the porous defence that had Senderos who came in to replace the injured Von Bergen. Switzerland lost concentration and compactness in defence. There was no cohesion between units and lost battles in defence and midfield. They could not exploit the open wing left by the attacking French defenders and failed to penetrate the central defence. They became naïve when faced with the French attacking power and vulnerable against counter attacks as they let Giroud pick up the ball from midfield and attack the left wing. He played the ball square for Valbuena to score with a first-time shot. There was no closing down of the cross and Valbuena popped up at the far post without a defender tracking his run. The defenders could do little sprinting facing their goalkeeper.

The second half started slowly as the French seemed content to wait and absorb all the pressure the Swiss threw at them. The Swiss were got the encouragement to engage the French seriously by pushing harder and further ahead creating clear-cut chances. They failed to capitalise as they hurried the shots and missed the target. After those scary moments, France lifted their act a notch up and passé the ball around. They found spaces on the right flank, exchanged a few passes. Paul Pogba’s clever cross found Benzema who finished it off by driving the ball between the goalkeeper’s legs. The French striker ran in front of the defence across the centre to meet the ball. Switzerland were guilty of not tracking his run. The goalkeeper came off his line and started flying in the air as the ball came, instead of staying on his feet to deal with the shot.

The former Fifa World Cup champions enjoyed a purple patch and increased the pace of their game. They found spaces left, right and centre. They won the ball in midfield on the left and interpassed their way into the attacking third to the left. Benzema played the ball to his right and Sissoko placed the ball into the net. Again, the marking was atrocious as the defenders were just ball watching. They seemed lost and unaware of the third-man running. They were neither compact nor tactical aware of the events around them.

France had it a little easy from that point on and became guilt of loss of concentration in midfield. They lost the hunger to fight and win the second ball. It was at that point that Switzerland scored two quick goals as they won a free-kick outside the penalty box. Hugo Lloris’ wall was porous at it let a hard and low Dzemaili strike nestle at the left bottom corner of the net. Lightining struck twic at the same place as quick exchanges on the right resulted in the long pass to the central position to Inler. The Swiss midfielder picked up a good run by Xhaka who hooked the ball with a first time shot past a bemused Lloris.

The referee stole the limelight from a goal infested game when he blew the whistle while the ball was enroute to goal when Benzema connected a volley from a pass delivered from the right wing. He celebrated the goal that never was, as did some French players. As much as France played very well, the Swiss defence was shocking.  

Sunday, June 15, 2014

Switzerland beat Ecuador 2-1 in 2014 Fifa World Cup

The Switzerland versus Ecuador match started at a fast pace, both teams showing tactical awareness and maturity. Naturally, the South Americans were technically superior and they were very quick off the marks and first on the ball. They probed for the opener from the onset, winning a corner within seconds.

The Swiss showed tactical organisation to absorb that pressure and then mount their attacks of their own. Montero was a thorn in the flesh on the left wing and won free-kick on his flank. A one man wall proved fatal as Eno Valencia headed home the resultant kick. The goalkeeper failed to organise the defence to pick up all men in the 12-yard box. The ball was sweetly whipped in, the defence remained static and the goalkeeper rooted to his line, allowing a free header that was hammered down with excessive power into goal.

The Europeans upped their game seeking an equaliser by attacking from both flanks, pushing and pressurising from all angles and firing long range shots from the right and left. They attempted intricate passing into the box winning several corners. Their short corner-kicks from the right were swerved to the far post while the longer version was often over-hit to the far post. The forward push exposed their defence, which became prone to dangerous counter-attacks that the Ecuadorians failed to utilise.

The second half began with a Swiss push that saw a corner on the left side within two minutes. The defence was static, the goalkeeper remained rooted to the ground and the shot man behind him did not jump, neither did Mehmedi’s marker. The Swiss striker did not need to jump either as he directed the free-header past a bemused goalkeeper.
There were several 3 versus 2s and seldom 3 versus 1s that were wasted by Switzerland as Ecuador were too sloppy and a little careless. This was a result the South Americans’ attacks that took all men forward looking for the winner. Montero was having a fantastic game as he was confident to take his men on. As soon as he was substituted, the attacking sting died and Ecuador were in big trouble as the game swung the other way immediately.

The match was having a scrappy ending and fighting spirit of the Swiss with probably the dying kick of the horse, saw them win a vital tackle, a match saving combat in the 18-yard box at a moment all felt Ecuador would kill off the game. The ball was received in midfield, a failed bid to halt a counter attack was played as advantage by the referee as the ball was played to the right flank and quickly switched to the left.

That counter attack was completed by a pass to the near post, and the ball was met by the left boot that sent the ball to the roof of the net. There was no time for a response for the South Americans who wasted it and gave it away in a silver platter.    

Thursday, August 26, 2010

Tottenham Hotspurs Too Hot For Young Boys.

Tottenham Hotspurs beat BSC Young Boys of Switzerland by a 4-0 margin on the night and 6-3 on aggregate to advance to the UEFA Champions' League group stages.

As if to separate boys from men, Tottenham Hotspurs hit 4 past hapless Swiss Young Boys at White Hart Lane. Blog followers know well there was never a question of if Spurs will proceed, but how much the Boys would suffer.

Peter Crouch was red-hot scoring a hat-trick, while Jermaine Defoe weighed in with a 2nd goal before half time. Young Boys, as expected were never in it, resorting to hard tackling and indiscipline that saw them concede a converted penalty and a defender sent off.

Crouch could have converted 2 easy chances in the second half. Gary Baile and Assu Ekotto looked sharp enough to suggest that the prediction of Spurs as the team of the season is not far-fetched. While Spurs were superb in defence, there was a concern as goalkeeper Gomes limped off at half time. 

What a fantastic night for Spurs and the English game.  Do you think Spurs will have an impact in Europe this season?

Tottenham Hotspurs Too Hot For Young Boys.

Tottenham Hotspurs beat BSC Young Boys of Switzerland by a 4-0 margin on the night and 6-3 on aggregate to advance to the UEFA Champions' League group stages.

As if to separate boys from men, Tottenham Hotspurs hit 4 past hapless Swiss Young Boys at White Hart Lane. Blog followers know well there was never a question of if Spurs will proceed, but how much the Boys would suffer.

Peter Crouch was red-hot scoring a hat-trick, while Jermaine Defoe weighed in with a 2nd goal before half time. Young Boys, as expected were never in it, resorting to hard tackling and indiscipline that saw them concede a converted penalty and a defender sent off.

Crouch could have converted 2 easy chances in the second half. Gary Baile and Assu Ekotto looked sharp enough to suggest that the prediction of Spurs as the team of the season is not far-fetched. While Spurs were superb in defence, there was a concern as goalkeeper Gomes limped off at half time. 

What a fantastic night for Spurs and the English game.  Do you think Spurs will have an impact in Europe this season?

Tottenham Hotspurs Too Hot For Young Boys.

Tottenham Hotspurs beat BSC Young Boys of Switzerland by a 4-0 margin on the night and 6-3 on aggregate to advance to the UEFA Champions' League group stages.

As if to separate boys from men, Tottenham Hotspurs hit 4 past hapless Swiss Young Boys at White Hart Lane. Blog followers know well there was never a question of if Spurs will proceed, but how much the Boys would suffer.

Peter Crouch was red-hot scoring a hat-trick, while Jermaine Defoe weighed in with a 2nd goal before half time. Young Boys, as expected were never in it, resorting to hard tackling and indiscipline that saw them concede a converted penalty and a defender sent off.

Crouch could have converted 2 easy chances in the second half. Gary Baile and Assu Ekotto looked sharp enough to suggest that the prediction of Spurs as the team of the season is not far-fetched. While Spurs were superb in defence, there was a concern as goalkeeper Gomes limped off at half time. 

What a fantastic night for Spurs and the English game.  Do you think Spurs will have an impact in Europe this season?