Poll: EURO 2008 Group A (9 Viewers)

Group A

  • Switzerland

  • Czech Republic

  • Portugal

  • Turkey


Results are only viewable after voting.

HelterSkelter

Senior Member
Apr 15, 2005
20,535
#61
At least the MVP of the first half was a Juve player.
Grygera - only because he injured Swiss best and most dangerous player, Frei. :D
Hopefully he'd repeat the feat against Portugal too:jvefan:

:faq2:

i can't watch the game .. I hope my luck changes soon ...
You arent missing much.Ive seen games of Chess that are more fast faced than this game.
 

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Omair

Herticity
Sep 27, 2006
3,254
#64
Hopefully he'd repeat the feat against Portugal too:jvefan:



You arent missing much.Ive seen games of Chess that are more fast faced than this game.
Awesome .. give Ronaldo a recurring injury that affects him once a week .. at least ..

Oh, good .. though I love chess .. how was the opening ceremony ?
 

Cuti

The Real MC
Jul 30, 2006
13,517
#68
Switzerland 0 - 1 Czech Republic
Sverkos 71 (C)
Basel, Switzerland

The Czech Republic got their Euro 2008 campaign off to the best of starts with a 1-0 win over hosts Switzerland. A second half goal by substitute Vaclav Sverkos netted his side the three points which, in all honesty, they were perhaps fortunate to gain. Switzerland, who were much more lively in front of goal, will now need something special to progress to the knock-out stages.

The Czechs lined up with the towering Jan Koller leading the line and without Milan Baros who was benched. The Swiss responded with a 4-4-2 which included Tranquillo Barnetta after his ankle problem was resolved in the week, as well as Patrick Muller – despite the fact that he basically missed all of last season at Lyon with a knee injury.

Those expecting the Czech Republic to dominate proceedings, given their superior ability, were caught out as they posed no threat real threat in the opening exchanges. Although they retained possession for long periods, they did nothing of any real note in the attacking third. Switzerland, on the other hand, did keep Petr Cech busy.

In fact, the first 45 minutes was basically the Alexander Frei versus Petr Cech show as the two caught the eye. The big Borussia Dortmund striker took just three minutes to have his first attempt on goal, but the ball drifted wide of the goalkeeper’s post.

On 16 minutes, the Chelsea No 1 was forced into action when Frei – who ignored Valon Behrami who was free to his right – had an ambitious effort from 25 yards. Cech then saved with his feet from Frei just five minutes later.

Frei, the host’s standout player in the first half along with Lazio’s Behrami and left-back Ludovic Magnin, didn’t miss any opportunity to shoot and his wildest effort arrived in the 36th minute. In a central position, 30 yards out, he blasted towards goal. Cech found it too hot to handle but as the ball fell to another Swiss player, the flag went up for offside.

The first half ended without any goals but it did conclude with a sucker punch for the Swiss. Frei jarred his knee in a challenge and was forced off. As he hobbled away, he couldn’t hold back the tears and his tournament could already be over. Hakan Yakin replaced him.

The latter, a fantasista now playing at Young Boys, quickly settled and went close to getting the first goal of the tournament in minute 50. Having won a free-kick on the edge of the box, he lifted the resulting set-piece over the wall but also just over the crossbar.

The half-time oranges did little to revitalise the Czechs and boss Karel Bruckner decided to freshen up his attack by replacing the sluggish Koller with Sverkos. But it was arguably Koller who they needed in the box on the hour as a dangerous Marek Jankulovski cross missed everyone as the St Jakob crowd, who were treated to an unforgettable opening ceremony – for the wrong reasons, held their breath.

Barnetta and Jankulovski exchanged efforts as the game seemed to go up a gear, before Yakin wasted a golden opportunity. As the veteran rose freely inside the box to head down towards the far post, he didn’t even force Cech into a save as the ball finished up against the advertising boards.

That proved to be a costly miss as the Czechs scored with their first shot on goal. A header looped over the advancing Swiss rearguard which found the onside Sverkos with just the 'keeper to beat. The substitute, winning just his third cap, swiped in his first ever goal with the help of his shinpad.

Coach Kobi Kuhn immediately played his Johan Vonlanthen card and it almost proved to be a masterstroke. A Barnetta strike was impressively saved by Cech in the 80th minute, but the rebound fell straight to the youngster who, from close range, struck the bar.

Switzerland pressed for an equaliser and had a late penalty appeal turned down, but it ended 1-0. They’ll now face Turkey on June 11, while the Czechs face Portugal on the same evening.
Switzerland: Benaglio; Lichtsteiner (Vonlanthen 75), Mueller, Senderos, Magnin; Barnetta, Inler, Fernandes, Behrami (Derdiyok 83); Frei (Hakan Yakin 46), Streller

Czech Republic: Cech; Grygera, Ujfalusi, Rozehnal, Jankulovski; Plasil, Polak, Jarolim (Kovac 87), Galasek, Sionko (Vlcek 83); Koller (Sverkos 56)

Ref: Rosetti (Ita)
 

swag

L'autista
Administrator
Sep 23, 2003
84,749
#69
Well, Swiss didn't look bad after-all. They impressed me TBH.
The Swiss should have won. Cech was awesome. But the Swiss were the better team in this match. I really feel bad for Frei, given the huge opportunity this is for his team and him personally. (But I will feel less bad for him Tuesday.)

Bizarre that Quim, the backup keeper for Portugal, broke his wrist and will be out. Some in the Portugal camp were calling for him to start. But their 3rd keeper, Patricio, is a young (19?) up-and-comer and will definitely be one to watch in the coming years. Though they should hope not to have to rely on someone so untested in NT play.
 

dao_nq

Junior Member
Feb 6, 2008
325
#70
Portugal are so strong, wow. They still destroyed Turkey though they were unlucky. They'll definitely get through the group stage. I'm really worried about Czech, they were quite clueless today. They'll face great danger from Turkey.

I started to dislike Turkey after today match, why did they have to foul so many times, they played ugly football. ????
 

swag

L'autista
Administrator
Sep 23, 2003
84,749
#71
I don't think they destroyed Turkey. And Portugal didn't really put the game away until the last minute -- Turkey was in it the whole time.

Turkey will hopefully group together later in the group stage... they're better than this, and it's not like they have powerhouses to contend with given what we saw of the Czech Republic and Switzerland today.
 

Azzurri7

Pinturicchio
Moderator
Dec 16, 2003
72,692
#73
I don't think they destroyed Turkey. And Portugal didn't really put the game away until the last minute -- Turkey was in it the whole time.

Turkey will hopefully group together later in the group stage... they're better than this, and it's not like they have powerhouses to contend with given what we saw of the Czech Republic and Switzerland today.
Exactly....They didnt really destroy Turkey...thats untrue. Turkey looked like a solid team, but experience played role in the last minutes of the game If you ask me.
 

Christina

vanilla pudding
Aug 21, 2006
19,775
#74
How serious is Frei's injury? Any news on that?
St. Jakob-Park fell eerily silent shortly after the half-time whistle as Switzerland supporters digested the shock of seeing Alexander Frei limp off in tears moments before the break of the opening game of UEFA EURO 2008™, his left knee heavily strapped and, it later emerged, out of the tournament.
 

swag

L'autista
Administrator
Sep 23, 2003
84,749
#75
How serious is Frei's injury? Any news on that?
St. Jakob-Park fell eerily silent shortly after the half-time whistle as Switzerland supporters digested the shock of seeing Alexander Frei limp off in tears moments before the break of the opening game of UEFA EURO 2008™, his left knee heavily strapped and, it later emerged, out of the tournament.
That sucks. It looked bad all around, and being on the sidelines in crutches in the second half didn't make things look any better.
 

Cuti

The Real MC
Jul 30, 2006
13,517
#76
Portugal 2 - 0 Turkey
Pepe 61 (P), Meireles 93 (P)
Geneva, Switzerland

Portugal underlined their Euro 2008 intentions with a fully deserved 2-0 win over an unimpressive Turkey. Real Madrid stopper Pepe was the hero in Geneva, with a rare goal, after the woodwork threatened to make it a frustrating evening for one of this summer’s glamour sides. Raul Meireles grabbed a second in stoppages.

Having seen the Czech Republic take a grip of Group A earlier in the day with a 1-0 win over Switzerland, Portugal were looking to join them at the top of the table to stake their claim for a place in the last eight.

The opening 15 minutes of the tie were pretty balanced with both sides weighing up exactly what they were up against. Ronaldo seemed the keenest to make an impact after his stellar season, but his ambition got the better of him on six minutes as his wild, really wild effort illustrated.

Turkey never truly threatened in the first half and an early foray in the box only saw Tuncay Sanli make a desperate appeal for a penalty. Referee Herbert Fandel – something of a Simon Cowell look-a-like – rightly played on for what replays showed was a clear dive. And a poor one at that.

On 17 minutes, Portugal thought they’d taken the lead. A perfect cross from Simao on the left was headed in by Pepe – the man who rejected Juventus last summer – only for the offside flag to bring his goal celebration to an abrupt end.

Nihat responded for Turkey with a free-kick, but it was basically all Portugal from that point onwards. A Simao set-piece was deflected by the wall for a corner, but where was Ronaldo? The man who everyone just can’t stop talking about at the minute.

Well, he re-appeared soon after. A solo run saw him dribble past three only for him to scuff his shot, before he came within inches of scoring. He drilled in a free-kick from the left edge of the box which was crucially tipped on to the post by Volkan Demirel in the 38th minute.

Portugal, for whom new Chelsea recruit Jose Bosingwa impressed, finished strongly – with Pepe and Joao Moutinho getting forward – but the Turks held on to go in at the break all square.

The scores were still level in the 50th minute but only just. The woodwork again kept Portugal out when a defensive lapse allowed Nuno Gomes in. The veteran, who once played for Turkey boss Fatih Terim at Fiorentina, struck the post with a delightful shot with the outside of his right boot.

Ronaldo and Sabri Sarioglu, a second half substitute, exchanged efforts before Portugal took a deserved lead. And what a goal it was. Pepe, a centre-back who had never scored on the international stage, played a neat one-two with Nuno Gomes to then ripple the net from inside the box on the hour.

It was almost 2-0 just five minutes later when Ronaldo curled in a cross which Nuno Gomes got on the end of. He did enough to beat Demirel but – surprise, surprise – the ball skimmed the top of the bar. It was a hat-trick that Portugal could have done without. The striker was replaced soon after with Ronaldo taking not only the armband, but also his centre-forward duties.

Turkey had to up their game to get back into it, but there was no cohesion in their frontline. Emre Asik wasted a decent chance when he flashed a header wide from a great position and Sanli miss-kicked in front of goal. And with time running out, Portugal hit the Turks on the break as Meireles also opened his international scoring account just before the final whistle.

Portugal face the Czechs next on June 11, with Turkey now facing a must-win against Switzerland.
Portugal: Ricardo; Bosingwa, Pepe, Carvalho, Ferreira; Petit, Joao Moutinho; Ronaldo, Deco (Meira 92), Simao (Meireles 83), Nuno Gomes (Nani 69)

Turkey: Demirel; Altintop (Semih 76), Cetin, Zan (Asik 55), Balta; Kazim-Richards, Emre, Aurelio, Erding (Sabri 46); Sanli, Nihat

Ref: Fandel (Ger)
 

Bjerknes

"Top Economist"
Mar 16, 2004
115,904
#79
We understand. It's that overflowing medals and cups cabinet of theirs. :shifty:
It just stems from the last World Cup, where even now UEFA has these utterly retarded commercials that portray the Azzurri as a bunch of diving cheaters while the Portuguese version is essentially all Ronaldo. Then throw in the likes of other divers such as Nani and Simao, as well as the particularly douche-bagish Petit, along with other arrogance, and I just can't but abhore them.

If it's anybody who are divers in this Euros, it's Portugal. And this is coming from someone who doesn't really care to see the Azzurri win or not.
 

swag

L'autista
Administrator
Sep 23, 2003
84,749
#80
It just stems from the last World Cup, where even now UEFA has these utterly retarded commercials that portray the Azzurri as a bunch of diving cheaters while the Portuguese version is essentially all Ronaldo. Then throw in the likes of other divers such as Nani and Simao, as well as the particularly douche-bagish Petit, along with other arrogance, and I just can't but abhore them.

If it's anybody who are divers in this Euros, it's Portugal. And this is coming from someone who doesn't really care to see the Azzurri win or not.
Did you watch the same match as me today?

In any case, thank you for your unsolicited opinion. I'll return the favor by telling you how much I despise coffee posers.
 

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