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Match Report
Champions League S/F Leg 2
El Madrigal
Tuesday, April 25, 2006, 7.45pm


Villarreal0


Arsenal0


By Chris Harris at El Madrigal

Arsenal have reached their first ever Champions League Final after a tough, tense but ultimately magical night at El Madrigal.

They rode their luck. Jens Lehmann was the hero, saving Juan Roman Riquelme's penalty two minutes from time. Guillermo Franco and Diego Forlan were both inches from scoring but, in the end, Kolo Toure's goal in the first leg was enough to set up a tantalising showpiece with Barcelona or Milan on May 17.

After seeing off the luminaries of Real Madrid and Juventus, this was deemed a more benign obstacle. Not a bit of it. Villarreal stretched Arsenal to the limit but they could not find a way past Arsene Wenger's resilient rearguard. They have now kept a record 10 consecutive clean sheets in the Champions League. One more in Paris next month could see Arsenal lift the one trophy which has eluded their glittering history.

As expected, Wenger made two changes from the team which started last week's first leg at Highbury. Sol Campbell replaced the injured Philippe Senderos and Jose Antonio Reyes, having served a one-match ban, was restored to the line-up. Robert Pires dropped to the bench.

Villarreal is the smallest town to host a Champions League Semi-Final and the local stadium holds little more than 20,000, but they certainly make some noise. El Madrigal was awash with yellow and a combination of claxons, drums and shrill whistling made for an atmosphere to behold.

Wenger had expected to see a more "exciting, attacking Villarreal" tonight and he got just that. Manuel Pellegrini opted for the mobility of Franco ahead of Jose Mari and, with Riquelme pulling the strings alongside the impressive Marcos Senna, the home side caused Arsenal problems.

The Gunners' cause was not helped by an early injury to Mathieu Flamini. The Frenchman, so impressive at left back of late, left the pitch with a grimace after nine minutes. On came Gael Clichy, with just 90 minutes of reserve-team football under his belt since suffering a stress fracture to his foot in November.

Predictably, Villarreal tried to exploit Clichy's perceived lack of sharpness. Javi Venta's diagonal ball from the right left Kolo Toure in a race with Diego Forlan. The Ivorian poked out a boot to concede the game's first corner. After 14 minutes, Franco cut in from the left but wasted a good chance to test Lehmann by firing wildly over the bar from the edge of the box.

Four minutes later Riquelme, drifting wide to escape the attentions of Gilberto, got to the byline to drive over a low cross from the left. Senna, on the edge of the six-yard box, laid the ball back to Juan Pablo Sorin but the Argentina captain shot straight at Lehmann.

It was hard going for Arsenal. Their central midfield shield hustled and harried but struggled to keep the ball for long enough periods to change the flow of the game. When Arsenal did burst forward, the offside flag stopped Henry in his tracks after Alexander Hleb had exchanged passes with Cesc Fabregas and picked out his captain's run in the left channel.

At the other end, Toure made a clutch of important interventions, some well-timed, others fortuitous. But still Villarreal created half-chances. On the half-hour, Riquelme drifted a free-kick into the box but the ball just eluded Sorin's run.

Gilberto, having another good game, made a vital interception when Venta tried to slip Forlan through but the home side continued to prosper on the right flank. Four minutes from the interval Venta took advantage of a loose header from Clichy to loop a cross into the box. Franco stooped low at the near post but Lehmann thrust out his right leg to stop the goalbound header.

Arsenal's goalkeeper was quickly back in the midst of it all when the second half started, getting everything behind Senna's swerving, long-range effort. But Lehmann was well beaten when Franco climbed above Toure to get his head on yet another dangerous cross from Venta. Fortunately for the visitors, the ball flew just wide.

The same striker - fully justifying his inclusion ahead of Jose Mari - was first to Senna's teasing cross but, again, Franco was marginally off target. The away section breathed another sigh of relief.

It looked ominous for Arsenal at that point, particularly with Clichy and Reyes unable to cut off the supply line from the right flank. Nonetheless, as the hour mark ticked by, Arsenal still held their slender advantage. Moreover, an away goal would leave Villarreal needing three.

The problem was Arsenal didn't look like scoring, and Villarreal did. Forlan was the next to go very, very close after 65 minutes, flashing a shot wide after Franco had laid the ball back to him on the edge of the area. Lehmann deserves huge credit for closing down the angle.

Arsenal kept plugging away. Henry was rewarded for more tireless running with a free-kick on the left, near the corner flag. Fabregas whipped the ball across but Campbell's glancing header took the ball away from Henry at the far post. At least another minute had passed. Just 20 left now.

Pires replaced Reyes and his fresh legs helped stem the Villarreal tide. Franco had the ball in the net but an offside flag cut short his celebrations. With Jose Mari now on, Arsenal braced themselves for a final onslaught. But it never really came as Villarreal's relentless efforts seemed to finally take their toll.

There was one final twist. Two minutes from time, Villarreal were awarded a penalty after Clichy had jumped into Jose Mari. THEY CHEATED! But Lehmann, so magnificent this season, pushed away Riquelme's spot kick. The final whistle finally ended the home side's resistance as Arsenal finally reigned in Spain after seeing their Champions League dream die just down the road in Valencia twice in the 21st century.

Speaking of history, it's 11 years since Arsenal left Paris in shock after Nayim's last-gasp winner in the Cup Winners Cup Final. On May 17, they return to the French capital with a chance to make this so-called 'season of transition' one to remember forever.
 
Lehmann sends Gunners to Paris

Jens Lehmann wrote himself into the Arsenal history books with a last-minute penalty save to the put the Gunners in their first European Cup final.
JohnWalton/Empics
Emmanuel Eboue gets away from Guillermo Franco

Lehmann saved from Riquelme in the 90th minute after Gael Clichy had been harshly penalised for a push on Jose Mari.

It was a dramatic final episode in a nail-biting semi-final.

It was not pretty. In fact it was downright ugly. But Arsenal will not care. This was a night for street-fighters not showboaters.

Gilberto was outstanding again and Sol Campbell overcame his rustiness with pure willpower and strength of spirit.

Arsenal barely mustered a shot at goal but the crucial thing was to keep a clean sheet and they did it for the 10th European game on the trot.

They rode their luck at times but Lehmann was a colossus in goal and the Gunners can look forward to the Champions League final in Paris, on May 17.

European glory could be just the thing to keep skipper Thierry Henry at Arsenal beyond this summer.

Alternatively, a triumphant night in his hometown Paris could be seen as the perfect moment to bid au revoir to the club he has served brilliantly.

Take your pick.

Arsenal's biggest-ever contract is on the table waiting to be signed. Barcelona and Real Madrid would also pay millions for his skills.

As the Arsenal captain prepared to kick-off for the second half, a fan ran onto the pitch with a Barcelona shirt with ``Henry 14'' printed on the back.

He draped it on Henry's shoulders before the invader, who wore an Argentina shirt, was rugby-tackled and thrown out by security.

This success, however, is not all about superman Henry. It has been a team effort and every player can bask in the success.

Arsenal have not leaked a goal in Europe since September and they seemed happy to play for time from the first minute.

They sat deep with Gilberto expertly patrolling his defence but the Gunners looked nervy.

Rarely did they get forward to support lone striker Henry and `keeper Mariano Barbosa was rarely troubled.

The task was not helped when left-back Mathieu Flamini was forced off after only nine minutes.

Clichy came on for his first appearance since breaking a foot in November.

Along with Campbell, playing to the left of central defence in place of the injured Philippe Senderos, it meant half the back four were seriously short of match practice.

At times that was clear. Arsenal creaked but hung in there with a combination of good fortune and dogged defending.

Toure made a sharp tackle to dent Diego Forlan early on and Guillermo Franco wasted good chances with wild finishing.

Lehmann broke an individual Champions League record in the fourth minute, when he past Edwin van der Sar's 658 consecutive minutes without letting a goal in.

The big German has been immense for the Gunners this season and he looked in good touch again in Spain.

He saved from Juan Pablo Sorin and then blocked a cross-shot from Javi Venta which Franco dummied with a missed header at the near post.

Dangerman Riquelme tested him before the break with a scorching free-kick from 30 yards but the Arsenal `keeper was equal to it.

He was back in action within two minutes of the restart, leaping high to claim a teasing cross and then safely clutching a long-range drive.

Villarreal thought they had the breakthrough in the 48th minute.

Venta, a constant problem for Clichy on Villarreal's right, whipped another ball into the centre and Franco arrived unmarked.

The Mexican met the cross with a thumping header. Lehmann was rooted to the spot but it flashed inches wide of his left-hand post.

Livewire Franco missed an even better chance, five minutes later, heading over from Marcos Senna's cross.

It was starting to look like Arsenal's night when Forlan rifled over from 15 yards with Lehmann out of position, in the 65th minute.

Villarreal started to gamble, pushing men forward. Franco found the net but it was rightly ruled out for offside.

Then Riquelme saw his spot-kick saved by Lehmann and the Yellow Submarine was finally sunk.
 
it was a very very sad arsenal performance. was very very lucky to get a draw. just check the stats, 2 shot for the entire game.... still..... they got thru..... just hope the final they can do better. :) cheers. :)
 
Hoho...lucky, lucky ARSEnal...penalty saved in the dying minutes of the game...who knows what would have happened had the penalty not been saved...
 
hahahahaha!!! Arsenal Through to the finals of the Champions League!!!!! yeahoooooo!!!!!!!!!! i know they can do it... so Arsenal gets a shot at the Champions League Cup, Chelsea takes the premiership, liverpool FA cup??.. Man Utd??? Carling Cup??? muahahahah!!!!
 
doesn't matter.. Barca will win tmr and Barca will win the CL!! It's Barca's yr!! If Lehmann can't even stop Rooney then he def. can't stop Ronaldinho!!
 
It was a pathetic performance by the Gunners. You wonder if they chose to play like that? Defend deep and lose the ball while not going far up?

We cannot play like that, anywhere, anytime, let alone the final. We'll only be shooting ourselves in the foot if we do.

I fancy Barca to fly to Paris as well, although I hope AC Milan turn the odds. I fear the Brazilian Bucktooth more than the Russian Razor.

But most of all, I fancy Arsenal to win the league this year!!!!!!!

:twisted:
 
Darkness fury: it could never been a goal from the spotkick. why? riquelme's pathetic. and dude, you can eat dust now, cause the gunner's on their way to paris. hoho. :lol:

duest-dude: this is an arsenal thread.
its your problem if you think man u's great:roll:
go make a man u thread.:roll:

but overall it was a mediocre match last night. but nonetheless, a goal is still a goal, and a win is still a win.

kudos, arsenal.
 
khai_stereotype said:
Darkness fury: it could never been a goal from the spotkick. why? riquelme's pathetic. and dude, you can eat dust now, cause the gunner's on their way to paris. hoho. :lol:

Yea sure, The Gooners are on their way to Paris...but will they win there? Don't grab your trophy before it's given to you. =)

And I won't eat dust...I'll eat KFC!
 
danialshimizuzu said:
killinghall said:
Man U sux dude! LOL Arsenal is so much better...... <@
oh REALLY?? but why is arsenal 5th while Man U is 2nd in the league table?
hmm.. i wonder why. :twisted:

Dude read the tittle its ARSENAL in CL finals not 'Man u in Second place and not getting any closer to First place.What to do?'
Stop hijacking this thread unless you are going to talk on how great Arsenal is...
 
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