Real Madrid score late to draw with 10-man Atletico

Real Madrid's Alvaro Rodriguez scores during their La Liga derby match against Atletico Madrid Santiago Bernabeu on Saturday. (Reuters)
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Updated 26 February 2023
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Real Madrid score late to draw with 10-man Atletico

  • Teenage Madrid striker Alvaro Rodríguez scored in the 85th minute after Atletico opened through Jose Maria Gimenez in the 78th

MADRID: There was more of the same in the latest Madrid derby at Santiago Bernabeu Stadium.

Again, Real Madrid avoided defeat. Again, Atletico Madrid complained about the refereeing.

Madrid scored late to draw 1-1 in the Spanish league on Saturday, and extend their unbeaten streak against the city rival at home to seven years.

Atletico played with 10 men from the 64th minute after forward Angel Correa was shown a disputed red card for elbowing Madrid defender Antonio Rudiger.

“Nothing new at the Bernabeu,” Atletico tweeted after the match. It also complained about the officiating after a Copa del Rey loss at the Bernabeu last month.

Atletico coach Diego Simeone said Correa’s action was not harsh enough to merit a red card.

“There was contact but it was not a strike,” Simeone said. “Rüdiger immediately got up. Maybe it was a yellow, but it was not enough to take a player out of the game. There wouldn’t be any players left if they always called that. This keeps happening all the time against us, it has become normal, and that’s not right. It would be nice to be able to compete under the same conditions. Every time we come here, the calls go against us.”

Atletico also posted on Twitter a photo of a bloody leg of whom it called “our aggressor” during the match. “Still nothing new at the Bernabeu,” it added.

“Five derbies in a row with a red card,” Atletico goalkeeper Jan Oblak said. “Maybe the next one we start with 10 men.”

Teenage Madrid striker Alvaro Rodríguez scored in the 85th minute after Atletico opened through Jose Maria Gimenez in the 78th and was poised to end its winless drought at the Bernabéu dating to 2016.

The draw left Madrid seven points behind Barcelona ahead of the latter’s match at relegation-threatened Almeria on Sunday.

“It was tough before this match, and now it can become even tougher,” Madrid coach Carlo Ancelotti said. “All we can do is keep fighting until the last match.”

Madrid was coming off a 5-2 come-from-behind win at Liverpool in the Champions League, and was trying to win its sixth consecutive game in all competitions.

The result kept Atletico, unbeaten in the Spanish league since early January, from moving to third place ahead of Real Sociedad, which lost at struggling Valencia 1-0 late Saturday. Atletico stayed one point behind the Basque Country team.

When Madrid won the previous derby in January, also at the Bernabeu, to advance to the Copa semifinals, Atletico claimed Madrid midfielder Dani Ceballos should have been sent off for a hard foul when Atletico was ahead.

On Saturday, Atletico defender Reinildo injured his right knee midway through the first half and was carried off on a stretcher.

Before the match, Madrid honored Amancio Amaro, the 1960s and 70s club great who died last week.

Madrid on Thursday host Barcelona in the first leg of the Copa del Rey semis. Atletico host Sevilla in the league next Saturday.

VALENCIA WIN AGAIN

Valencia edged Sociedad to end a six-game losing streak in all competitions and leave the relegation zone.

Valencia’s first league win since before the World Cup lifted the club to 17th place, one point outside the relegation zone. The winner came from an own goal by Sociedad midfielder Igor Zubeldia in the 40th.

It was Valencia’s second match under new coach Ruben Baraja.

Before the match, thousands of Valencia fans again protested against Singaporean owner Peter Lim. The crowd at Mestalla Stadium also jeered Lim and called for him to leave the club.

BRAITHWAITE’S BRACE

Denmark international Martin Braithwaite scored in each half as Espanyol defeated Mallorca 2-1 to move further away from the relegation zone.

Espanyol, in 12th place, has won two consecutive league matches for the first time this season.

CADIZ THRIVE AT HOME

Sergi Guardiola scored a 74th-minute winner as Cadiz defeated Rayo Vallecano 1-0.

Cadiz are unbeaten in the league at home in nine matches. The southern club was three points above the drop zone.

Rayo stayed in sixth place.


Injuries a blessing in disguise for Australia as new Ashes heroes emerge

Updated 19 sec ago
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Injuries a blessing in disguise for Australia as new Ashes heroes emerge

  • The absence of key bowlers did not hamper the home team’s determination to win the series

LONDON: Before the recently concluded Ashes series between Australia and England began, I mused on the potential impact which injuries to two of Australia’s fast bowlers may have on the outcome.

There was a sense, at least amongst England’s supporters, that they had a chance of winning the series or, at least, running Australia very close. As those supporters are now well aware, any such hopes were dashed in disappointing fashion.

England’s performances have been raked over ad infinitum in the media and on social media. It seems almost unnecessary to add to this welter of views and analyses.

However, it is worth going back to my pre-series thoughts about the potential impact of injuries and whether they did have an impact on the outcome.

One of the triumvirate of Australian quicks, Josh Hazlewood, was ruled out of the series before it began. Doubts over a second member, Pat Cummins, the team captain, were confirmed before the first Test. Ongoing back problems restricted him to one Test, the third.

This placed significant responsibility on the third member, Mitchell Starc, as well as the replacements for Hazlewood and Cummins and the stand-in captain, Steve Smith. Starc rose to the occasion magnificently.

At lunch on the second day, England sat in the box seat, 100 runs ahead and nine second innings wickets standing. By the end of the day, Australia had won the match. This was thanks to a seven-wicket haul by Starc and a swashbuckling 123 by Travis Head that left England “shellshocked,” according to its captain, Ben Stokes.

Head had been promoted to open because of injury to regular opener, Usman Khawaja. In the second Test at Brisbane, Starc reduced England to five for two in its first innings, going on to claim six wickets. It was a replacement quick bowler, Michael Nesser, who took the honors in the second innings with five wickets in Australia’s victory.

At Adelaide in the third Test, Starc was relatively quiet, claiming four wickets, as Cummins returned to claim six, along with spinner Nathan Lyon, who added five to take his total Test wickets to 567. He would not add more because of a hamstring injury. Cummins also sat out the rest of the series.

Although England won the fourth Test at Melbourne, in another two-day contest, Australia claimed the fifth Test at Sydney, where Starc took five wickets to take his series total to 31 and become player of the series. It may be safely concluded that injuries to key Australian bowlers did not hamper Australia’s determination to win the series.

One English broadcaster of considerable experience opined that England had played Australia’s second XI for most of the time. Although, in addition to key bowlers, Australia was without opening batter, Khawaja, for 1.5 Tests, this seems to be pushing the impact of injuries too far.

It also begs the question of why England could not take advantage. Three quick bowlers left the series due to injury, dealing a blow to a strategy based on fast bowlers.

Both Mark Wood and Jofra Archer have had their careers blighted by injury in recent years and it was little surprise that Wood’s tour ended after the first Test and Archer’s after the third.

Gus Atkinson followed them in Melbourne, whilst the super-human efforts to which Ben Stokes insisted on subjecting his body, finally got the better of him in the final Test. None of the batters got physically injured sufficiently to cause them to miss a Test.

The postmortems on where it all went wrong for England have intensified since the fifth Test was concluded. There are myriad views ranging from ex-players, to broadcasters, print and press media and anyone who loves the game.

The England and Wales Cricket Board will conduct an internal review. It will not be the first one and probably not the last. At the heart of any review should be a central question: If the two teams were judged to be close in ability prior to the series, as they were by most pundits, how did that judgement translate into a 4-1 advantage for Australia?

All manner of accusations have been levelled at England’s players and management.

Amongst these are inadequate preparation, poor technique, inferior mental toughness, arrogance, an unwavering belief in the aggressive, fearless, strategy adopted over the last three years, a laissez-faire culture that has led to a lack of discipline, and a drinking culture. This is a long charge sheet.

There is an old saying that cricket is played in the head. The strategy adopted by England over the last three years has put into the players’ heads the need to be positive and aggressive. Some have been confused by this mantra and have moved away from playing their natural game.

Joe Root has been an example. His class and technique do not need him to be any more aggressive than his talent naturally facilitates. The best opponents — India and Australia — have prepared themselves for England’s approach.

In this last series Australia effectively nullified it, except for several sessions. One of these was at Adelaide, where England made a bold attempt to chase down a target of 424 runs. The consensus view is that Australia outplayed England in the basics of the game.

Glenn McGrath, who took 563 Test wickets for Australia between 1993 and 2007, said that he “bored” people out. He aimed to hit the top of off stump with every delivery, saying that “it is pretty simple stuff, but the complicated thing is to keep it simple.”

This requires a combination of mental discipline and technical skill. Australia’s bowlers followed this approach more successfully than England’s. Australia’s batters scored faster than England when they needed to do so. When conditions changed, they adapted, as in the first innings in Brisbane where they ground out a total of 511 to gain a lead of 177 runs.

In the aftermath of the series defeat, Stokes reflected that “we’re at an interesting place as a team. What we managed to achieve in the first two-and-a-half years was very good.

“We wanted to grow as a team and we wanted to be even more consistent. If anything, we’ve done the opposite. We've started losing more. When that is happening on a consistent basis … you need to look at the drawing board and make some adjustments to get you back on the path of success.”

This suggests an acceptance that there is a problem and that a revised strategy may be implemented in which a return to the basics of the game and an acceptance that the match situation needs to be better assessed might be expected.

It also suggests that Stokes is thinking along different lines to the coach, who has said that he is “open to progress, open to evolution and some nipping and tucking,” but wants “ultimately to be able to steer the ship.”

In the first innings on day two of the third Test at Adelaide, with England reeling on 71 for four, Stokes played an innings which was the antithesis of the team’s attacking strategy.

In 41 degrees Celsius, he was targeted relentlessly by Australia’s attack, taking blows to his body and head, scoring 45 from 151 by the close of play. The following day he was finally dismissed for 83 from 198 deliveries. It was as if he was saying to his fellow batters, there are times when it is acceptable to adopt a different approach, according to the circumstance of the match.

It remains to be seen if there will be a change of approach or personnel when England’s next Test series is played against New Zealand in June. The next action is the T20 World Cup in India and Sri Lanka, a format which demands attacking approaches.

A failed campaign will place even greater pressure on England’s management. They are low on credit, having left behind a feeling of disappointment and anti-climax in Australia, for whom injuries proved to be a blessing in disguise.