ISL: Super Goa delights home fans

Zico’s team outplays Delhi Dynamos 3-0 to advance to the summit clash

December 16, 2015 02:19 am | Updated March 24, 2016 10:15 am IST - MARGAO:

....AND MAKE THAT THREE! Dudu is joy unbridled, as teammate Leo Moura (background) also expresses his delight, after netting Goa's third goal in the second leg of the first semifinal on Tuesday.

....AND MAKE THAT THREE! Dudu is joy unbridled, as teammate Leo Moura (background) also expresses his delight, after netting Goa's third goal in the second leg of the first semifinal on Tuesday.

December is a season of festivities in Goa — Christmas, Sunburn music fest et al .

On Tuesday its much loved football side FC Goa, cheered on by over 19,000 fans who thronged the Jawaharlal Nehru Stadium in Fatorda, gave itself a chance to join in as well by reaching the Indian Super League final.

It beat Delhi Dynamos 3-0, with goals from Joffre, Rafael Coelho and Dudu, to overturn a 1-0 first leg deficit. In next Sunday’s final here it will meet either Chennaiyin FC or Atletico de Kolkata.

Dynamos fielded an unchanged side from the one which won at home, while Zico rang in five changes with Dudu, Rafael, Mandar Dessai, Bikramjit Singh and Romeo Fernandes all making the eleven.

Early domination

For close to a quarter of an hour, Dynamos didn’t even sniff the ball. Goa, as it has always done when on song, made full use of its midfield five and, in particular, the flanks manned by Romeo and Mandar on the right and left respectively.

After a period of sustained pressure, Prannoy Halder, from deep inside his half sent a ball straight to Joffre on the right flank, who, after running across the length of the defence, sent a low deflected shot in for the opening goal.

It took until the 20th minute for the Dynamos to even tread into the final third — an interchange of passes between Adil Nabi and Dos Santos that, however, caused little trouble.

From there on, the visitors saw the ball for a few minutes but it was also the period when Goa showed what it can do when not in possession. A searing counter on 27 minutes saw Mandar deliver an inch-perfect long ball to Rafael, who after evading two defenders, scored at the far post from the edge of the area.

By then the trio of Prannoy, Moura and Joffre had established such hegemony in the centre of the pitch that Roberto Carlos had to introduce midfielder Hans Mulder to replace John Arne Riise and stem the rot.

The move did relieve Florent Malouda of some of his defensive duties but apart from a spike in the possession stats, little changed.

Seven minutes into the second half, Romeo should have put the result beyond doubt when he tried to tap in a cross from Dudu on the left, but was thwarted by a great save by Antonio Santana.

Another chance went abegging when Joffre couldn’t convert from a superbly weighted through-ball by Moura in the 67th minute.

In between Dynamos did manage to fire a few shots on goal, but each one of them nestled safely in Laxmikant Kattimani’s hands.

Goa traced the home stretch pretty much the same way it started the match. A goal in the 84th minute by Dudu off a Romeo cut-back sealed the deal. It sent the Goa dugout into a tizzy with a couple of support staff even acrobatically jumping in front of the Dynamos bench.

Nabi, already substituted, was even sent off for remonstrating immediately after. In fact, the match overall saw plenty of fouls (eight yellow cards) and resultant protests. But from Carlos there was only a chuckle and a hand shake. It was that kind of a night — one on which he could do nothing.

The result:

FC Goa 3 (Joffre 11, Rafael 27, Dudu 84) bt Delhi Dynamos 0.

FC Goa wins 3-1 on aggregate to enter the final

0 / 0
Sign in to unlock member-only benefits!
  • Access 10 free stories every month
  • Save stories to read later
  • Access to comment on every story
  • Sign-up/manage your newsletter subscriptions with a single click
  • Get notified by email for early access to discounts & offers on our products
Sign in

Comments

Comments have to be in English, and in full sentences. They cannot be abusive or personal. Please abide by our community guidelines for posting your comments.

We have migrated to a new commenting platform. If you are already a registered user of The Hindu and logged in, you may continue to engage with our articles. If you do not have an account please register and login to post comments. Users can access their older comments by logging into their accounts on Vuukle.