Committed to PEOPLE'S RIGHT TO KNOW
Vol. 5 Num 1052 Fri. May 18, 2007  
   
Sports


UEFA Cup
Sevilla retain cup


Sevilla won a penalty shoot-out to lift the UEFA Cup for the second succ-essive season on a heartbreaking night for Espa-nyol.

When a long-range equaliser by Brazilian substitute Jonatas levelled the match at 2-2 at the end of extra-time, the script appeared to have been written for Barcelona's lesser-known club to clinch their first European trophy after playing for almost an hour with ten men.

But it was not to be, Sevilla winning an edgy shoot-out 3-1.

The outcome was hard on the Catalans, who had defied the odds to equalise for a second time with five minutes of extra-time to play.

After the 90 minutes had finished with the sides tied at 1-1, Fredi Kanoute's strike appeared to have killed the contest.

But the Andalucians were left stunned when Jonatas let fly from 25 yards and found the bottom corner to send the match to penalties.

It was a goal from nowhere, but no more than Espanyol deserved on a night when they had looked to be on track for victory until they had midfielder Moises Hurtado sent off with just over 20 minutes of regulation time remaining.

Up until then, Espanyol had looked the more likely winners, despite requiring a 28th-minute strike from Albert Riera to cancel out a stunning opening goal by Sevilla's Brazilian midfielder Adriano.

Sevilla's status as short odds favourites to overcome opponents struggling in the bottom half of La Liga was justified by an opening in which Enzo Maresca fired narrowly over the angle of bar and post and Freddie Kanoute went close with a near post header.

Espanyol soon provided a reminder of the dangers of complacency however, after Hurtado was allowed to advance unchecked from midfield to inside 30 yards of goal. The midfielder's drive skidded treacherously off the sodden Hampden turf and Andres Palop did well to gather it low to his right.

With Raul Tamudo jinking to the byline immediately afterwards, Espanyol suddenly looked the more dangerous of the two sides, but their momentum was about to be halted in exhilarating fashion by Adriano.

The corner that Tamudo had won was gathered cleanly by Palop, who immediately sent Adriano racing clear down the left with a huge throw of immaculate accuracy.

The Brazilian's gear changes were too much for a short-staffed Catalan back four and he was unchallenged as he cut into the box and placed a right-foot finish beyond the hopelessly-exposed Gorka Iraizoz and into the far corner.

The brutal simplicity of the goal appeared to underline the perceived gulf in class between the two sides.

Yet within ten minutes, Riera had put Espanyol back on level terms, albeit with the help of a deflection off the boot of Liverpool target Daniel Alves.

Riera had gone past the centreback with ease, cutting in from the left flank, but his hesitation allowed the defender to recover his ground sufficiently to get a touch on the ball, ensuring Palop could not get enough of a contact to push it round the post.

Sevilla hauled Maresca off at half-time to allow Jesus Navas to ply his tricks down the right flank, but it was Espanyol who displayed the greater appetite for victory.

Palop did well to keep out another Tamudo strike at close range after Christian Poulsen had casually conceded possession in midfield and the Sevilla goalkeeper had to produce an even better save to deny Riera a second goal from a shot that was destined for the top corner.

Uruguay's Walter Pandiani, who had surprisingly been left on the bench at the start, had been introduced by that stage, but Espanyol's commitment to attack was to be compromised by the loss of Moises with just over 20 minutes left.

With Sevilla surging forward in search of a winner inside 90 minutes, Iraizoz pulled off a superb reflex stop from Kanoute and, with the ball rebounding to the edge of the six-yard box, Ivica Dragutinovic blasted a glorious chance to kill off the contest high into the stand.

Picture
Sevilla defender Javi Navarro (2ndR) holds the trophy next to coach Juande Ramos (R) after their triumph in the UEFA Cup final against Espanyol on penalties at Hampden Park in Glasgow on Wednesday. PHOTO: AFP