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Euro 2008: Serbia Hales Her Lisbon Lions

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  • Euro 2008: Serbia Hales Her Lisbon Lions

    EURO 2008: SERBIA HALES HER LISBON LIONS

    B92
    13 September 2007
    Serbia

    Serbia snatched a last-gasp equalizer in Lisbon last night to keep
    alive their hopes of qualifying for Euro 2008.

    After 178 minutes of ineptitude and frustration, just when Serbia's
    qualification hopes looked to be dead and buried, and the players'
    wives and girlfriends thought they were free to start making plans for
    next year's summer holidays - anywhere except Austria and Switzerland -
    the unthinkable happened. Serbia scored.

    The hero of the hour was in the unlikely form of Lokomotiv Moscow
    right-back Branislav Ivanoviæ. In the dying seconds, team captain
    Dejan Stankoviæ drifted in a free-kick from the right, causing panic
    in the Portuguese penalty box. In the ensuing melee, the ball broke
    to Ivanoviæ who drilled the ball past keeper Ricardo to send the
    visiting fans into raptures.

    However, the early signs had not boded well. From the opening whistle,
    the Portuguese took the game to the visitors, who had started with
    only one man up front.

    Despite earlier rumours to the contrary, Valencia forward Nikola ~Nigiæ
    started on the bench, leaving Milan Jovanoviæ as the sole striker.

    In the eleventh minute, the home side won a free-kick on the edge of
    the penalty area, some twenty-five yards out. Simao Sabrosa stepped up,
    and sent an exquisite curling shot inside keeper Vladimir Stojkoviæ's
    right-hand post to put Portugal one up. It looked like it was going
    to be a long night.

    Ten minutes later, things could have got even worse.

    Jose Bosingwa, who was making hay down Serbia's left flank, broke
    free again, and whipped in a tantalizing cross. Nuno Gomes rose
    heighest in the box, only to see his header crash off the post. The
    resulting rebound fell to Nuno Maniche ten yards out, who sent the
    ball goalwards, but by now Stojkoviæ had found his bearings, and
    pulled off a great save to keep the visitors in the match.

    Serbia, by now virtually encamped on the edge of their own
    eighteen-yard box, and with as shots raining in on their goal, somehow
    managed to cling on until half-time, and Javier Clement was able to
    regroup his charges.

    In the second half, he made a bold decision. He took off the
    out-of-sorts Milo~Z Krasiæ and Zoran To~Ziæ, and brought on Marko
    Panteliæ and ~Nigiæ, changing to an attacking 4-3-3 formation. If
    nothing else, ~Nigiæ's arrival gave the team and the visiting fans
    alike a boost.

    The swap almost brought benefits immediately. The big striker caused
    Ricardo to spill a cross from the right, which fell to Jovanoviæ on
    the volley ten yards out. Sadly, the young striker sliced his shot,
    and the ball flew harmlessly into the stands behind the goal.

    This was to set a pattern for the second half, as the home side began
    to pull more men back, in a bid now to hang for a 1-0 victory. And
    though Serbia looked more threatening than they had in the opening
    period, Portuguese manager Scolari's tactics seemed to be paying off,
    as they were unable to put the home goal under any serious threat.

    And it was then, two minutes from time, with Portuguese fans heading
    for the exits, confident that their side had done enough, that Ivanoviæ
    had his moment of glory.

    Drama was to follow after the final whistle when an unseemly scuffle
    broke out along the touchline, TV pictures showing Scolari striking
    Ivica Dragutinovic on the chin, after an argument. UEFA will
    undoubtedly be looking further into the incident

    While it was not the result of the night - little could match
    Scotland's triumph in Paris - few can argue that Ivanoviæ's goal was
    the footballing equivalent of getting away with murder. The draw,
    together with the 1-1 draw in Helsinki between Finland and Poland,
    means the Eagles still have their Euro 2008 destiny in their own hands,
    and can go into next month's clash with Armenia with heads held high
    and all guns blazing.

    --Boundary_(ID_xo9nxWRaVwrcFQYkT4LsBw)--
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