Courtesy: LEN
Marseille caused the upset of Day 2
by crashing Jug in Dubrovnik. Title-holder Recco didn’t have any headaches
while manhandling Steaua and in the battle of the qualifiers OSC came up with a
convincing performance in Belgrade to claim its second win. The German derby
was the most thrilling clash, Spandau, leading by three before the last period,
needed a last-grasp goal to save the match against Hannover to a draw.
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Group B Jug Adriatic Osiguranje
Dubrovnik (CRO) v CN Marseille (FRA) 9-14, Crvena Zvezda (SRB) v OSC Budapest
(HUN) 8-11, Spandau 04 Berlin (GER) v Waspo 98 Hannover (GER) 11-11, Pro Recco
(ITA) v Steaua Bucharest (ROU) 23-5 Standings: 1. Recco 6, 2. OSC 6, 3.
Marseille 3, 4. Jug 3, 5. Zvezda 3, 6. Spandau 1, 7. Hannover 1, 8. Steaua 0
Marseille stunned Jug with a 0-4 rush
at the beginning and even though the Croats managed to recover from that and
levelled the score at 6-6 early in the third, the next assault from the French
was too much to handle. The rebuilding process needs some cooler heads on the
Croatians’ side as they let the ball fly from all corners of the pool, took 35
shots but could score only 9 while Marseille netted 14, out of 25 attempts.
Title-holder Recco enjoyed an
easy-cruise against Steaua at home, set a new scoring record for this season by
23 hits (Olympiacos netted 20 against Dinamo on Day 1), Hungarian leftie Gergo
Zalanki contributed 7 goals from 7 shots. After two rounds, besides the
Italians, only OSC could keep its perfect record. The Magyars showed some
quality at both ends of the pool in Belgrade while downing Crvena Zvezda – a
jump from 3-4 to 3-8 and an almost 12-minute shutout founded their valuable
away victory.
The German derby produced the most
balanced match – for three periods Spandau dominated and gained an 8-5 lead.
However, in the fourth, the home defence collapsed and at 9-10 Hannover sat in
the driving seat. At 10-11 the visitors missed a match-ball (a man-up), while
Nikola Dedovic converted the hosts’ last chance two seconds from time.
Recaps
Jug v Marseille 9-14 – Jug arrived at
the game a bit lately, at least mentally. They needed more than nine minutes to
get on the scoreboard, by then Marseille was already 0-4 up. The French scored
from a man-up early, then killed two man-downs and added back-to-back action
goals in 47 seconds towards the end of the first quarter, then their Croat Ante
Vukicevic kicked off the second with another fine action goal. Though Loren
Fatovic opened Jug’s account but Vukicevic replied immediately from a 6 on 5
for 1-5 and it still stood 2-6 with 4:24 to go till the break. The hosts
started to feel the rhythm, managed to hit two in a minute but later they missed
two man-ups so it was 4-6 at halftime.
Jug came back strong for the third
and Fatovic levelled the score in 41 seconds with a great action goal and from
a counter. But however hard they worked for this 6-6, soon the Croats lost
their momentum as leftie Ugo Crousillat put two man-ups away in succession
while Jug fell back in offence once more. Soon Romain Marion finished off a
counter for 6-9 and Jug had to restart the chasing game. They needed 35 seconds
to jump back to 8-9 but then they missed crucial 6 on 5 while Marseille put
away another one and converted a penalty to regain its three-goal lead before
the last break. It was decisive who hits the first in the fourth – and this
time Fatovic couldn’t help. After his missed shot Crousillat finished off the
ensuing counter for 8-12 – and for Jug that proved to be the killed blow.
Another 6 on 5 gone without a shot and Thomas Vernoux’s nice centre-action put
the game in bed even though it was still 4:23 to go. The Croats lacked
precision in front, even though they outshot the French 35-25 but the shots on
target were 20-20 and the number of saves (6-11) is also telling, not to
mention the man-ups: 2 for 12 versus 5 for 8, a real difference.
Zvezda v OSC 8-11 – It was 3:32 to
play in the fourth and OSC led 7-11 – a day ago Radnicki was in this same,
seemingly hopeless situation against Ferencvaros, then the Serbs made a miracle
to come back to 11-11. The second Serbian-Hungarian derby did not reproduce the
same scenario, though.
Indeed, OSC was clearly the better
side right from the beginning, they opened the encounter with a 0-2 period,
showing some tremendous defending. The hosts needed 9:07 minutes to score their
first, then started to find the back of the net, converting extras, but the
Magyars were up to the task too. They had some ups and downs, missed a 6 on 4
but after conceding three in the first four minutes of this quarter, they
tightened their defence again and shut out the Serbs for the following 11:27
minutes. And they used this period to build a massive 3-8 lead from some finely
tuned 6 on 5s and Balazs Harai also delivered his trademark centre-goals.
Veljko Tankosic netted an extra to halt the bad run of the home side but they
were still trailing by four before the last break.
Again, Zvezda managed to find the
right finishes in the fourth – altogether, they scored four goals, as many as
in the first three periods but OSC also kept its composure and twice regained
the five-goal lead, only to let two go in the last three and a half minutes.
Still, Zvezda didn’t have any realistic chance to stage a Radnicki-like
comeback. OSC’s goalie Marton Levai was the one of the keys in the Magyar’s win
as he posted 14 saves on 22 shots for a 63.5% percentage.
Spandau v Hannover 11-11 – The German
derby offered great thrills for four periods – for most of the time Spandau was
in front but at the end the Berliners had to dig deep to save the game to a
draw.
Spandau took a 4-2 lead deep into the
second, but their home arch-rivals came back to even in 51sec while shutting
out the hosts for 5:39 minutes in this period.
Dmitri Kholod’s two fine shots from
man-ups put Spandau ahead once more and even though fellow Russian Ivan Nagaev
pulled one back at the other end, Mateo Cuk’s double in a span of 40 seconds
gave an 8-5 lead for the home side before the last break.
However, Hannover wasn’t done, they
opened the last period with two action goals from as many possessions. Kholod
sent the ball home from another man-up but Hannover came up with two more
action goals, this time in 43 seconds and it was all even at 9-9 with 4:11 to
go. And after a killed mandown, Nagaev put Hannover ahead for the first time
after 0-1. Nikola Dedovic netted a 6 on 4 for 10-10, but Jan Winkelhorst also
buried a man-up for 10-11 with 1:25 from time. Soon Hannover had a golden
chance to secure the three points, but they missed their last 6 on 5 and that
cost them two – Spandau also earned a man-up 14 seconds before the end and
Dedovic found the back of the net 2 seconds before the buzzer.
Recco v Steaua 23-5 – The two sides
belong to different categories – and the difference is not just one level
between them. Recco basically did whatever it wished to, the Romanians tried to
put up some resistance but the titleholding Italian side was way too superior in
all aspects of the game. Steaua’s lonely brighter spell came at 6-1 when they
netted two for 6-3 – but Recco hit back with an 8-0 run.
Recco didn’t need a man-up in the
entire third period, still scored seven goals. Newly signed Magyar leftie Gergo
Zalanki enjoyed an exceptional evening as he went 7/7, a great feat even in a
game like this. Romanian national team goalie Marius-Florin Tic won’t keep this
match among his most treasured memories as he faced 27 shots and could put a
hand on only 4 – his teammates could target only 14 to Recco’s goal and Marco
del Luongo stopped 9 of those.
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