PaleBlue
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- 11 Jun 2008
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- Man City
From F365:
Manchester City are on the brink of the UEFA Cup quarter-finals for the first time in 30 years after a 2-0 first leg victory over Aalborg. Such was the gulf in class between the two sides, it is difficult to see City's lead being overturned in Denmark.
Mark Hughes' men could have won by a huge margin. But in the end, the Blues had to settle for two, both coming in the first half, with Felipe Caicedo opening their account after just eight minutes before Shaun Wright-Phillips blasted home the second after half an hour.
It should be more than enough though, as City try to emerge from a difficult season by ending a trophy drought stretching back to 1976.
While City have been a model of inconsistency on the domestic front this season, Europe has tended to bring out their best form.
And so it proved again with a sumptuous performance that was far too good for an Aalborg side good enough to hold Manchester United at Old Trafford in the Champions League last December.
What a pity therefore that so many City fans have opted to turn their backs on the tournament.
The swathes of empty seats in a barely half-full stadium could be down to a number of factors, not least a third meeting against a Danish club in City's run to the last 16. But given England tends to provide UEFA with its most healthy crowds, clearly a change in format cannot come too soon.
Whether the Europa League is it remains debatable but Hughes has made it City's mission to be the UEFA Cup's last winners and on this evidence they could well emerge victorious in Turkey on May 20.
With record signing Robinho back from an ankle injury, Hughes had a joyous array of attacking weapons at his disposal, especially as in the absence of Vincent Kompany and Nigel de Jong, the Blues had more playmakers in the centre of the park than would normally be the case.
The contest was only eight minutes old when Caicedo opened their account.
The Ecuador striker has twice been tipped to leave City after failing to make much of an impact since arriving halfway through Sven-Goran Eriksson's brief reign.
But loan deals to Hertha Berlin and Fulham fell through during consecutive transfer windows and with so many forwards on the treatment table, Caicedo has proved a handy man to have around.
And there was certainly nothing shabby about his finish after he had collected Robinho's square ball and held off Michael Jakobsen before beating Karim Zaza.
If Caicedo is a relative newcomer in first-team circles, Wright-Phillips has been around for a long time.
Aalborg struggled to contain the England star from the first whistle and when Stephen Ireland provided the killer pass, Wright-Phillips left Patrick Kristensen for dead before beating Zaza with an almost languid strike that nevertheless had too much power to be prevented from ending up in the top corner.
Had referee Alain Hamer spotted a clear foul on Robinho by Michael Beauchamp, who had been flummoxed by half a dozen stepovers close to the six-yard line, the tie would have been over.
Not that it made much different to the Blues' attacking attitude as Nedum Onuoha was inches away from nodding home Elano's corner before a Robinho snap-shot brought the latest in a series of good saves out of Zaza, who had already bravely denied Micah Richards.
On home soil, against opponents incapable of exerting any pressure in the midfield area City might have been vulnerable, the hosts continued with their glowing brand of football, each individual producing a memorable moment to bring the fans lucky enough to witness it, to their feet.
Elano's influence was growing and the former Shakhtar Donetsk man provided Wright-Phillips with an excellent shooting opportunity when he split the Aalborg defence, only for the chance to be wasted as the winger fired wide.
Aalborg did manage one final flurry, during which Kasper Risgard floated a free-kick over and Caca screwed a decent opportunity badly wide.
But a goal at that stage would have been an injustice as City sense a place in the last eight.
Manchester City are on the brink of the UEFA Cup quarter-finals for the first time in 30 years after a 2-0 first leg victory over Aalborg. Such was the gulf in class between the two sides, it is difficult to see City's lead being overturned in Denmark.
Mark Hughes' men could have won by a huge margin. But in the end, the Blues had to settle for two, both coming in the first half, with Felipe Caicedo opening their account after just eight minutes before Shaun Wright-Phillips blasted home the second after half an hour.
It should be more than enough though, as City try to emerge from a difficult season by ending a trophy drought stretching back to 1976.
While City have been a model of inconsistency on the domestic front this season, Europe has tended to bring out their best form.
And so it proved again with a sumptuous performance that was far too good for an Aalborg side good enough to hold Manchester United at Old Trafford in the Champions League last December.
What a pity therefore that so many City fans have opted to turn their backs on the tournament.
The swathes of empty seats in a barely half-full stadium could be down to a number of factors, not least a third meeting against a Danish club in City's run to the last 16. But given England tends to provide UEFA with its most healthy crowds, clearly a change in format cannot come too soon.
Whether the Europa League is it remains debatable but Hughes has made it City's mission to be the UEFA Cup's last winners and on this evidence they could well emerge victorious in Turkey on May 20.
With record signing Robinho back from an ankle injury, Hughes had a joyous array of attacking weapons at his disposal, especially as in the absence of Vincent Kompany and Nigel de Jong, the Blues had more playmakers in the centre of the park than would normally be the case.
The contest was only eight minutes old when Caicedo opened their account.
The Ecuador striker has twice been tipped to leave City after failing to make much of an impact since arriving halfway through Sven-Goran Eriksson's brief reign.
But loan deals to Hertha Berlin and Fulham fell through during consecutive transfer windows and with so many forwards on the treatment table, Caicedo has proved a handy man to have around.
And there was certainly nothing shabby about his finish after he had collected Robinho's square ball and held off Michael Jakobsen before beating Karim Zaza.
If Caicedo is a relative newcomer in first-team circles, Wright-Phillips has been around for a long time.
Aalborg struggled to contain the England star from the first whistle and when Stephen Ireland provided the killer pass, Wright-Phillips left Patrick Kristensen for dead before beating Zaza with an almost languid strike that nevertheless had too much power to be prevented from ending up in the top corner.
Had referee Alain Hamer spotted a clear foul on Robinho by Michael Beauchamp, who had been flummoxed by half a dozen stepovers close to the six-yard line, the tie would have been over.
Not that it made much different to the Blues' attacking attitude as Nedum Onuoha was inches away from nodding home Elano's corner before a Robinho snap-shot brought the latest in a series of good saves out of Zaza, who had already bravely denied Micah Richards.
On home soil, against opponents incapable of exerting any pressure in the midfield area City might have been vulnerable, the hosts continued with their glowing brand of football, each individual producing a memorable moment to bring the fans lucky enough to witness it, to their feet.
Elano's influence was growing and the former Shakhtar Donetsk man provided Wright-Phillips with an excellent shooting opportunity when he split the Aalborg defence, only for the chance to be wasted as the winger fired wide.
Aalborg did manage one final flurry, during which Kasper Risgard floated a free-kick over and Caca screwed a decent opportunity badly wide.
But a goal at that stage would have been an injustice as City sense a place in the last eight.