Rabu, 10 April 2013

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The Malaysian Insider :: Sports


Malaga to make official UEFA complaint over exit

Posted: 10 Apr 2013 08:46 AM PDT

April 10, 2013

alaga's Willy and his team mates appeal for off-side as Borussia Dortmund's Santana celebrates after scoring in Champions League quarter-final second leg soccer match in Dortmund. — Reuters picBARCELONA, April 10 — Malaga plan to make a formal complaint about the referee after Tuesday's last-gasp defeat at Borussia Dortmund cruelly denied the Champions League debutants a place in the last four.

The Qatar-owned club were leading the quarter-final, second leg 2-1 as the game went into stoppage time before Dortmund, who were held to a 0-0 draw in last week's first leg in Spain, equalised and then grabbed a 93rd-minute winner.

Replays showed several players from the Bundesliga team in offside positions in the build-up to the third goal and the normally restrained Malaga coach Manuel Pellegrini slammed the match officials in his post-match news conference.

The club's director general, Vicente Casado, told reporters on Wednesday before flying back to Spain with the squad that Malaga would file a written complaint with soccer's European governing body UEFA about the refereeing.

"On this occasion we could not, or they did not want us to, get through," Pellegrini said. "After we went 2-1 ahead there was no refereeing," the Chilean added, although Eliseu's 82nd minute goal for the Spaniards also appeared to be offside.

"They forced us back with elbows and shoves. There were two sendings off that were not given, a double offside in the third goal which should not have counted.

"They said this was the best team in Europe and by the end they were hoofing long balls forward. We are leaving with very bitter feelings."

Casado said the performance of Scottish referee Craig Thomson and his officials had not been up to the level of a Champions League quarter-final.

"We are outraged," he said."Not only Malaga lost but football too. Our complaint is not directed at UEFA but at the refereeing that was absolutely not at the right level."

Winger Joaquin, who put Malaga ahead in the 25th minute, and club owner Sheikh Abdullah Al Thani, a member of the Qatar royal family, were even more outspoken.

In a series of tweets on his official Twitter feed soon after the final whistle, Al Thani blamed the defeat on "racism" and called on UEFA to launch an inquiry.

UEFA general secretary Gianni Infantino on Wednesday dismissed Al Thani's claim, telling reporters: "UEFA is not taking any racist action against any club.

"Now depending on what he has said or not said... I can understand if you lose a match in the 93rd minute then the emotions come up and you say things you have not really thought through and should not say," Infantino said at the Soccerex European forum in Manchester.

"I don't know how there could be any racist abuse from UEFA. How can he blame UEFA for racism when they (Malaga) lost the game from two late goals?"

Infantino added: "We will analyse his comments and the UEFA disciplinary inspectors will act if they have to act depending on what has been said."

Deeply unpopular

Joaquin, who scored malaga's first goal, suggested UEFA president Michel Platini may have had something to do with the defeat.

Platini is deeply unpopular in Malaga after UEFA slapped a ban on the club from competing in continental competition from next season due to delays in payments to creditors.

"We suspect Platini and all the rest of them who are involved," Joaquin told Spanish radio. "Because we are Malaga and not Real Madrid it's easier to do this to us."

Whatever conclusions are drawn about Tuesday's game, Malaga performed above expectations on their first foray into Europe's elite club competition but now need to put their disappointment behind them and focus on qualifying again for next season.

They have appealed against the UEFA ban at the Court of Arbitration for Sport (CAS). Malaga are sixth in La Liga, four points behind Real Sociedad who occupy Spain's fourth Champions League qualification berth.

"We all made a super-human effort and going out of the competition because of a mistake like that is painful," their Paraguayan forward Roque Santa Cruz told Spanish television.

"We were four minutes away from the semi-finals and it was snatched away from us. Now we have to lift our spirits and tackle the rest of the season in the best possible way." — Reuters

Ronaldo guiding Real towards elusive 10th European crown

Posted: 10 Apr 2013 02:28 AM PDT

April 10, 2013

BARCELONA, April 10 — If Real Madrid win their 10th European title this season, coach Jose Mourinho will no doubt take many of the plaudits but it is his Portuguese compatriot Cristiano Ronaldo who continues to do the business on the pitch.

Ronaldo struck twice in Tuesday's 3-2 quarter-final, second leg defeat at Galatasaray, which put Real through to the last four of the Champions League 5-3 on aggregate, taking his tally in the latest edition of the competition to 11 in 10 matches.

Lionel Messi of Barcelona has topped the scoring chart the past four seasons but Ronaldo is on course to displace his great rival with the Argentine World Player of the Year on eight goals ahead of Wednesday's match against Paris St Germain.

Ronaldo, 28, who became the world's most expensive player when he joined Real from Manchester United for a fee of around 90 million euros (RM358 million) in 2009, now has 50 goals in Europe, 34 for the La Liga champions and 16 for United.

"There nothing left to say, the statistics are there and speak for themselves," Mourinho told a news conference after the game in Istanbul.

"What I think about Ronaldo is what everyone thinks," he added. "I don't think anyone in perfect mental health thinks any differently."

Ronaldo initially found it tough to win over the Real fans when he arrived in the Spanish capital and raised eyebrows earlier this season when he complained of being "unhappy for professional reasons".

He has mainly let his football do the talking since then and although Real's La Liga title defence has faltered they have every chance of securing the record 10th European title that has eluded them since their last triumph in 2002.

"Goals help us to win matches and it is what I have been doing since I arrived here (at Real)," Ronaldo told reporters.

"I am and I feel good and motivated," he added.

"The team too and they are giving me good passes so I can do my work, which is to score goals."

Real's stumble in Istanbul, when Galatasaray scored three goals in 15 second-half minutes, will be a matter of some concern for Mourinho and Ronaldo said there was plenty of room for improvement.

"You always learn from your mistakes," he said.

"The team always tries its best but sometimes we make mistakes," he added.

"It's better that it happens now than in a decisive match. We have to improve in many areas but we are happy to get through to the semi-finals." — Reuters

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