Juventus-Arsenal: 0-0 (1 Viewer)

Marty

tuz
Administrator
Jul 2, 2005
16,991
#1
Category: <b>Match Reports</b><br><br>Almost 56,000 fans packed into the Stadio delle Alpi for Juve’s quarter-final showdown with Arsenal. Although the bianconeri fought from the first to the last whistle, after ninety minutes the score remained goalless and Juventus’ Champions League challenge ended in the quarter-finals.

With Juventus trailing 2-0 from the game in London, both teams knew that the first goal could prove decisive. Juventus were the first to strike, Zambrotta’s long-range effort sailing just past the left-hand post after a quarter of an hour. This was followed by a similar effort from Chiellini which typified the bianconeri’s determination to break the deadlock. Arsenal soon followed suit; a neat turn by Henry on the edge of the area opened up space for a shot but the Frenchman’s effort was well saved by Buffon.

Capello had warned about the danger of the opposition on the counter-attack, and Arsenal went close several times through Eboue, although the bianconeri defence managed to prevent any real danger. When Mr.Fandel blew for the end of the first half the score remained 0-0, and the restart looked certain to bring more drama.

Five minutes into the second half it was the Gunners who had the first opportunity. Picking up the ball on the halfway line, Henry used his pace to dash past the Juve defence and into the box. Buffon reacted brilliantly however and dived at the Frenchman’s feet to smother the ball.

Having been suspended for the first leg, Pavel Nedved was keen to make his presence felt and was the key danger-man for the bianconeri. His turn of pace and consistent crossing caused panic in the Arsenal box, and he was almost on the scoresheet after twenty-five minutes when his fierce shot from outside the area had to be beaten away by Lehmann. Yet again however the Czech midfielder let his passion run away with him and was sent off after with fifteen minutes to go after receiving his second yellow card.

With a numerical advantage Arsenal broke several times through Hleb and Ljunberg but both times the Juve defence did enough to prevent the north London club from scoring. The game ended 0-0 and Juventus exited the Champions League unable to reach the semi-finals. <br><br>Source: Juventus.com
 

Buy on AliExpress.com
Apr 1, 2006
23
#4
Layce Erayce said:
Italian runaway league leaders beaten by 5th place English(heh) team.

Thats one for the history books, huh?

To put it in perspective here is the history:

For the previous 9 seasons under Wenger they have never finished below 2nd

Arsena are 5th so far this season because of a combination of factors:

A large amount of longterm injuries to key players

The restructuring of their team and style of play.

A transfer policy which had concentrated predominantly on buying in youth [fee and wages are much lower] because of the uncertainty of available funds due to the extremely high cost of financing of a new larger stadium in London

Lastly, in the absence of Vieira some english teams found the way to stop arsenal playing football at away venues was to adopt hard physical closing down tactics which border on or cross the line of foul play which would largely be penalised by CL referees.

Playing in Europe with the time and space most CL teams give combined with a lower tempo was almost like going on a holiday after all that !

English CL match commentators have regularly said "I can't believe the time and space Real. Juve - or whomever - are giving arsenal on the ball"


Juve were beaten by a more defensively sound, tactically superior, & creative team.

Regards

From The times
Juventus are a team based on more traditional lines, an assembly of players, many brought in with experience and reputation and achievement. That’s the obvious way to do it &#8212; it’s safer that way. You have known quantities. You have reliability. You know what you’ve got.

But there comes, it seems, a stage when this no longer satisfies. A team such as Juventus are like a collection of paintings of various merit &#8212; paintings you have bought. For Wenger, a team such as the Arsenal side who played with such heart last night are more like a collection of paintings you have painted.

Not assembly but creation. If you like, not adoption but giving birth. In the horsey world, you can buy a made horse and it will do what you tell it to and if you spend a lot of money and pick the right horse and are good enough, you can win stuff. Or you can take a young horse &#8212; even breed a young horse &#8212; and train it yourself. The latter is more fun, far more deeply satisfying, even if you achieve much less.

It is, you might say, more spiritually rewarding. And that is what this great Arsenal adventure is all about &#8212; spiritual reward. Sir Alex Ferguson had his reward with Manchester United when he went mad on youth and, having famously been told that you win nothing with kids, won his immortal treble, including the Champions League.

And that is what Wenger is seeking. He is doing it, not to be upsides with his old rival but because the thrill of creativity has seized him and will not be denied. That is why he risks the sudden moment of callowness, of self-doubt, of uncertainty, because the joy of watching it happen is so peculiarly intense.

Wenger is ambitious, but not to manage Real Madrid or France or England. He is ambitious to make Arsenal greater than they were. His ambition is expressed not in terms of personal status but of corporate achievement. It’s all the way the egomania of the profession &#8212; all creative professions &#8212; happens to take you.

They began their European matches this season without anyone knowing how good they were. The experts didn’t know, Wenger didn’t know, spectators didn’t know, the kids themselves didn’t know. Bullied out of away matches in the Barclays Premiership early in the season, they have found balance and purpose in Europe. And last night, as the Ultras attempted to put the fear of God into them with horrible noises, they played a first half of assurance and, at times, danger and authority.
 

swag

L'autista
Administrator
Sep 23, 2003
84,757
#6
CL victories certainly make a nice deodorant for EPL failures.

Hmmm... 0-0 scoreline in the home second leg against the 5th place EPL team in the CL quarterfinals. Where have I seen this before?

Oh, just last year. :rolleyes:
 

El Feno

New Member
Mar 13, 2006
6
#9
I think our beloved Team needs to input some new blood in our striking force...i really dont know what zlatan or treze played in that game....I wish DP was fit to add some creativity....Moggi use ur wizzardry to buy good strikers not lackluster freaks who claimed to be good strikers....Please dont forget to start lookin for a coach...am even a better manager than capello........
 

petersmit

Senior Member
Mar 14, 2006
7,028
#10
aggain no goal for ibra and treze :S even when mutu and zalayeta are on the field juventus cant score the last time... very weird..:( but buffon was great.. a + point for juve.. no goals aggainst.. great.. but.... aggain no silver :(
 
Mar 30, 2006
20
#11
Well we played alright yesterday i guess... That deal with Nedved was disgracefull... Just cumin back from suspension nd ya get this shit....
Hope he doesn't turn out to be like Camoranesi (i kinda hate him)
But i don't think arsenal will get TOO far... Villareal could beat them....
Tha problem Juve had yesterday is that they had 63% ball possesion(!!) but didn't use it right... Well Cappello will get it straight with Juve.... Nd our time shall come:smoke: :) Sometimes i actually think Juve only plays good against bad teams:S.....

But we'll see what tha CL will turn into:eyebrows: ...
4 now (4 Juve) it's just back to tha drawing board nd back to tha good ol' Scudetto.....:smoke:
 

Scirea75

New Member
Apr 6, 2006
3
#12
The problem is Capello just wont change the system, why didnt he move nedved to the position behind the 2 strikers then he could have got more shots in and feed the front 2 who got nothing all night!!
Real, please take him off our hands!!!!!!!!!!!!!
 
Apr 1, 2006
23
#13
You just don't get it do you ?
Juve fans are more tactically unaware than the manager they constantly moan at.

You aren't going to thread balls to the 2 front men from a man sitting behind them when up against a 5 man midfield with gilberto sitting deep covering the back 4 [arsenal played a 4 -1 - 4 - 1 system]

Nedved starting drifting in just as wenger anticipated which gave eboue the freedom of the flank, the english co commentator I listened to [an ex manager] predicted this would happen after 5 minutes of the game had passed.

Today's guardian
Deserting his wide post early in the game, he [Nedved]drifted infield to support Zlatan Ibrahimovic and David Trezeguet from a floating position. Wenger had read the script. Emmanuel Eboué stayed back and kept the shape of the Arsenal defence as expected and the nearest player at at any one time picked up Nedved as he floated inside.

The difference was that Eboué's great pace and enthusiasm for bursting forward were not quelled. Indeed it was his forcefulness down the right-hand side into the space that Nedved had vacated which Arsenal utilised to such great effect in the first period.
Capello had to send nedved back out wide again for the 2nd half to stop the rot.

Juventus did not have the ability to get into advanced wide positions - their quality of wide player is way short for the advanced stages of this competition - and directed their efforts from deeper towards Ibrahimovic or Trezeguet.

Regards
 

swag

L'autista
Administrator
Sep 23, 2003
84,757
#14
Nothing we don't already know, but from the Bahrain Gulf Daily News, summarizing what's in the Italian press:

http://www.gulf-daily-news.com/Story.asp?Article=140198&Sn=SPOR&IssueID=29018

Press slam 'impotent' Juventus
ROME: The Italian press ripped into Fabio Capello and his Juventus side after they were dumped out of the Champions League by Arsenal at the quarter-final stage.

The Italian champions and current Serie A leaders were jeered off the pitch by their own fans after Wednesday's goalless draw at the Delle Alpi stadium, which gave the Gunners a 2-0 aggregate victory and a place in the last four.

Prior to the match, Capello said sometimes miracles happen and promised Juve would even be aggressive in the tunnel.

But they rarely threatened a rock-solid Arsenal defence and their misery was compounded by the sending-off of Czech midfielder Pavel Nedved 13 minutes from time.

"Impotent Juve exit to whistles," headlined the Gazzetta dello Sport.

"No miracle in Turin, just disappointment.

"In the tunnel. That's where Juve and Fabio Capello left their desire to win.

"Maybe the promise to attack Arsenal even before they were on the pitch was just wishful thinking.

"Hope became Utopia. From that tunnel, imprisoned by a fitness inferior to their opponents, Juve were unsuccessful.

"Their first shot at Jens Lehmann's goal didn't arrive until the 68th minute.

"Too late to start talking about qualifying in a match compromised by the 2-0 defeat in the first-leg.

"When Pavel Nedved was sent off, just as Mauro Camoranesi and Jonathan Zebina were sent off in the first-leg, the tiny crack that Juve had finally started to make in the Arsenal defence closed."

Nervousness

La Repubblica was equally damning after Juve's lacklustre display.

"Few shots, the usual nervousness and the condemnation of the public," it wrote.

"Juve finished the match with no goals, but also with no ideas, no heart and no strength."

Juve defender Fabio Cannavaro said the jeers and whistled that greeted his team were not deserved as Juve crashed out in the quarter-finals for the second successive season.

"Theres something about Italian football when if something goes wrong the jeers start," he said.

"A team should be supported until the final whistle and judged at the end of a season."

Juventus have a nine-point lead over AC Milan at the top of Serie A, with just six games to go.

AC Milan are the only Italian team left in the Champions League, having beaten French side Lyon in their quarter-final.
 

Layce Erayce

Senior Member
Aug 11, 2002
9,116
#15
swag said:
CL victories certainly make a nice deodorant for EPL failures.

Hmmm... 0-0 scoreline in the home second leg against the 5th place EPL team in the CL quarterfinals. Where have I seen this before?

Oh, just last year. :rolleyes:
But Serie A success doesnt make up for CL failures. :cry:
 

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