Showing posts with label Water Polo Reports - Men. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Water Polo Reports - Men. Show all posts

Thursday, August 6, 2015

Water Polo Reports - Men, Day 6 Kazan 2015 - Fina


CRO vs GRE ©Giorgio Perottino / Deepbluemedia / Insidefoto
Russell McKinnon, FINA Media Committee Member

Tantalising Croatia-Serbia gold-medal final in men’s water polo

Olympic champion Croatia will play World Cup and World League champion Serbia in the gold-medal final of men’s water polo on Saturday.

Croatia needed a penalty shootout to surpass the fast-finishing Greece, which twice did a Houdini trick to secure the penalty round following the quarterfinal win over Australia.

For Croatia it means Olympic qualification by making the final and gives it a chance to add World crown to its Olympic title.

Serbia bolted out of the gate against Italy, racing to a 4-0 quarter en route to a 10-6 victory in its rush for gold.

The winner of the bronze-medal match will gain the second Olympic berth from this tournament. Serbia, as World League champion, has already qualified so Croatia goes and one other.

In the round 5-8 semifinals, Montenegro beat Australia 11-8 after leading 5-1 early in the second quarter and Hungary rebounded from its loss to Italy by downing United States of America 13-8 in an entertaining match.

In the two classification matches, Canada beat Brazil 12-10 in a penalty shootout after the match for ninth was tied at 7-7 by fulltime and Kazakhstan, thanks to a tournament-high seven goals from Alexandr Axenov beat South Africa 11-7 for 11th.


August 8 Schedule

Classification 7-8

14:00, AUS v USA

Classification 5-6

15:30, MNE v HUN

Classification 3-4 (Bronze medal)

20:30, GRE v ITA

Classification 1-2 (Gold medal)

22:00, CRO v SRB


Match 44: 22:00, ITALY 6 SERBIA 10
Classification 1-4 Semifinal
Quarters: 0-4, 2-4, 2-1, 2-1
Referees: Boris Margeta (SLO), Radoslaw Koryzna (POL).
Extra Man: ITA: 2/12. SRB: 3/7.
Pens:  Nil.
Teams:
ITALY: Stefano Tempesti, Francesco di Fulvio (1), Alessandro Velotto, Pietro Figlioli, Alex Giorgetti (1), Andrea Fondelli (2), Massimo Giacoppo, Nicholas Presciutti, Niccolo Gitto, Stefano Luongo (1), Matteo Aicardi, Fabio Baraldi (1), Marco Del Lungo. Head coach: Alessandro Campagna.
SERBIA: Gojko Pijetlovic, Dusan Mandic (1), Zivko Gocic (1), Sava Randelovic, Milos Cuk (1), Dusko Pijetlovic (1), Slobodan Nikic, Milan Aleksic (1), Nikola Jaksic (1), Filip Filipovic, Andrija Prlainovic (1), Stefan Mitrovic (3), Branislav Mitrovic. Head Coach: Dejan Savic.
Match Report:
Serbia made sure of its trip to the gold-medal final and expunge the memory of 2013 when it could do no better than seventh. With a sparkling performance in the first quarter that left Italy in a flurry of whitewater and four goals in deficit, Serbia was THE team, the one to watch and from which to gain inspiration and stare in awe. The shock tactics proved useful in keeping Italy softened up throughout. Italy gained some respect in the second quarter, scoring the 1-4 and 2-6 goals before Serbia closed the half through and extra-man slap goal from Nikola Jaksic from point blank and then Stefan Mitrovic’s third goal on counter. As he lobbed, veteran goalkeeper Stefano Tempesti, Italy’s captain, followed through and touched Mitrovic, who left the pool. At 8-2 there was no way anyone could come back to Serbia, let alone the spirited Italians. Two of the earlier goals came on counter, so Serbia has the requirements in all parts of the field to arrest the opposition, convict them, jail them and throw away the key. Italy attempted a breakout with Andrea Fondelli from the top and Fabio Baraldi with a superb centre-forward catch and shoot for 4-9 at the start of the third period. Dusko Pijetlovic moments earlier showed Baraldi how to play that shot. Italy could not say it did not have chances. There were plenty of opportunities, but poor options and excellent blocking meant Serbia held the five-goal advantage to the final break. The jailer was still standing outside the cell and no food was being sent in. Milan Aleksic converted extra-man attack from the top to start the fourth period and 10-4 was such a hurdle. Italy continued to smash at the door and Fondelli, who had not scored before tonight, netted his second with a deft lob at 5:01. At 2:31, Stefano Luongo scored from deep left, just to say he could after four previous knocks. It was the close of scoring and sets up a mouth-watering final.
FLASH QUOTES:
Dejan Savic (SRB) — Head Coach
“It will be a great final, the two best teams in this championship. Today we started strong and produced a very good game in the first two periods. It was easy to make the result to the end. We are happy and congratulations on one more step to our goal.
Zivko Gocic (SRB) — Captain
''We played very, very good. I think the key was in that in the first two quarters we scored three or four goals from set plays. We knew the Italians would be tactically well prepared and that if we would go on to a man-up/man-down game, it would be good for them. But we managed to score the, let's say, normal-play goals and got up 0-4 and 2-8. That was the key.'' On Croatia in the final: ''Believe me, this will be a totally different match, because we are from the same school. But to get the gold medal you have to win every match and now we need just one more.''
Alex Giorgetti (ITA)
“I suppose it was a battle, a fight. Today Italy may have shown fear of Serbia. We had anger against Hungary with fire in our eyes. We are a young team and we don’t have any maturity. To have a great team you have to work a lot more. It was a catastrophe. In a semifinal it’s important not to see 8-2. Incredible. I was very angry, sad. So, I am one of the oldest players, also it is my fourth championship. I have to support my friends, play for third place and the bronze medal, also the Olympic Games qualification. We have to stand up and make a great match.”
Match 43: 20:30, CROATIA 15 GREECE 13 in penalty shootout (FT: 10-10. Pens: 5-3)

Classification 1-4 Semifinal

Quarters: 3-1, 2-3, 3-2, 2-4. Pens: 5-3

Referees: Adrian Alexandrescu (ROU), Daniel Flahive (AUS).

Extra Man: CRO: 4/14. GRE: 4/11

Pens: GRE: 1/1.

Teams:

CROATIA: Josip Pavic, Damir Buric, Antonio Petkovic (1), Luka Loncar (2), Maro Jokovic (2), Luka Bukic (1), Petar Muslim (3), Andro Buslje, Sandro Sukno (3), Fran Paskvalin, Andelo Setka (1), Paulo Obradovic (2), Marko Bijac. Head Coach: Ivica Tucak.

GREECE: Konstantinos Flegkas, Emmanouil Mylonakis (2), Georgios Dervisis, Konstantinos Genidounias, Ioannis Fountoulis (2), Kyriakos Pontiekas, Christos Afroudakis (2), Evangelos Delakas, Konstantinos Mourikis (1), Christodoulos Kolomvos, Alexandros Gounas (1), Angelos Vlacholopoulos (3), Stefanos Galanpoulos. Head Coach: Theodoros Vlachos.

Match Report:

Greece tried to sneak in through the back door for the second consecutive match, but Croatia shut the door instead in the penalty shootout. Croatia had the better of the first quarter with Luka Loncar  (centre forward) and Sandro Sukno (top) scoring for a 2-0 lead. The response came from Ioannis Fountoulis on penalty and the final strike from Luka Bukic, son of the famous Perica Bukic (deep left-hand catch), 26 seconds from the break. Greece outplayed Croatia in the second quarter with goals to Angelos Vlachopoulos (top), Konstantinos Mourikis (centre forward) and Fountoulis on extra. Paulo Obradovic (centre forward backhand) and Petar Muslim (extra) scored the 4-1 and 5-2 goals. The fact that Greece scored the last two goals had Croatia a little worried going into the main break. Goals were traded in the third with Croatia leading at 6-4 through Loncar’s second from the near-post position on extra, Vlachopoulos from the top, Muslim on extra from deep left and captain Christos Afroudakis on extra into the bottom right for 7-6 in favour of Croatia at 2:26. Afroudakis tried a backhander from six metres soon after only to be blocked. Maro Jokovic made the most of a foul outside five with five seconds remaining, scoring for an 8-6 advantage. In the fourth, Afroudakis shot from the top on extra, but Obradovic on extra had it out to two again. Vlachopoulos nailed his third from the top on extra for 9-8, the Sandro Sukno sent in one of the fastest shots seen from outside for 10-8. Emmanouil Mylonakis took a beautiful cross pass and scored for 9-10 at 1:42. The 2486 paying spectators were in raptures as Greece went to a timeout and came in for the equaliser through post man Christodoulos Kolomvos, who steered in a pass from Fountoulis with just 27 seconds left in the match. By now three Greeks and two Croatians were fouled from the match. Croatia had the ball stolen on its attack and this sent the match to a penalty shootout. Croatia was without Andro Buslje and Paulo Obradovic for the shootout. Greece had Konstantinos Genidounias, Kyriakos Pontikeas and Evangelos Delakas sidelined. Greece had come back for a shootout, like in the quarterfinal with Australia. Croatia had the clean sheet in shooting and it was, sadly, Fountoulis, the man who has given so much to Greece in Kazan, including 14 goals, who missed the second shot in the rotation. Croatia was through and, with it, an Olympic qualification spot for Rio de Janeiro.


FLASH QUOTES:

Josip Pavic (CRO) — Goalkeeper
''This is what we wanted to do this summer.
Take two medals and qualify for the 2016 Olympics. We succeeded and are extremely happy. From tomorrow onwards we'll start thinking about the final game. We played a tough game. We led most of the time, but couldn't beat Greece 'KO', because they're a great team. Unfortunately it went to penalties, but we had prepared these.''

Theodoros Vlachos (GRE) — Head Coach
“Not a good finish. Just one penalty away from historical moment for Greece water polo. This is life. We came to play the semifinals. I was very, very satisfied the way we played the tournament and we had a new game today we don’t normally play, the semifinal of the World Championship, but we found the solutions to finish equal.” On two consecutive shootouts after beating Australia in the quarterfinals: “Both teams, Australia and Greece, also Croatia and Greece deserved to be winners. The last game was more luck with better shots. You need to be lucky with the goalkeeper. This difficult finale not good for us, but good for Croatia.”

Christos Afroudakis (GRE) — Captain
“The sport is like this. You must be lucky in pursuit of penalties. In the beginning we were not so focused and nervous.”

Match 42: 17:00, HUNGARY 13 UNITED STATES OF AMERICA 9

Classification 5-8 Semifinal

Quarters: 4-2, 3-2, 2-2, 4-3

Referees: Massimiliano Caputi (ITA), Sergey Naumov (RUS).
Extra Man: HUN: 2/5. USA: 2/10.
Pens: Nil:

Teams:

HUNGARY: Viktor Nagy, Miklos Gor-Nagy, Norbert Madaras (1), Balazs Erdelyi (1), Marton Vamos, Norbert Hosnyanszky (2), Daniel Angyal, Marton Szivos, Daniel Varga (2), Denes Varga (3), Krisztian Bedo, Balazs Harai (4), Attila Decker. Head Coach: Tibor Benedek.

UNITED STATES OF AMERICA: Merrill Moses, Nikola Vavic, Alex Obert, Jackson Kimbell, Alex Roelse, Luca Cupido (1), Josh Samuels (1), Tony Azevedo (3), Alex Bowen, Bret Bonnani (3), Jesse Smith, John Mann (1), McQuin Baron. Head Coach: Dejan Udovicic.
Match Report:
Hungary, not used to fronting for early games at the sharp end of the tournament, made sure of a fifth-place berth against Montenegro with a solid showing against USA. The big story of the opening stanza was the centre-forward efforts of Balazs Harai, scoring three goals as Hungary went 5-2 to up early in the second quarter. The big two-metre man Harai flicked in a rebound for 1-0, scored a backhand for 4-2 and then turned at three metres and scored for 5-2. Daniel Varga rocketed in two goals and Denes Varga, one of the leading scorers, broke a five-quarter drought to score Hungary’s 7-4 goal in the last minute before halftime. Bret Bonanni, the highest goal-scorer at last year’s FINA World Cup in Almaty, Kazakhstan, scored at 3-2 and 6-4, continuing the multi-goal theme. USA was in touch of Hungary but, while the Magyars made their goals look easy, the north Americans had to work hard. Luca Cupido opened the second half with a bouncer from six metres and Bonanni netted on the next USA attack for 6-7. USA gained many defensive rewards, denying Hungary hot opportunities. Denes Varga caught the defence unawares with a sharp shot off the hand at top left for 8-6 at 2:40. Harai scored his third from exceptional play in front of goal off a cross pass for 9-6. Norbert Hosnyanszky from deep left and Azevedo from seven metres started the final quarter. It went to 11-7 through Denes Varga on extra, scoring his third for the match and 17th for the championship. Hosnyanszky surprised everyone, including his defender from very deep right, scoring off the right on an acute angle most coaches would decry. Azevedo for his third and Norbert Madaras for only his second of the tournament, progressed the score to 13-8. John Mann finally gained some reward for tireless work in front of goal, scoring his seventh in Kazan for 9-13, the final score.


HUN vs USA ©Giorgio Perottino / Deepbluemedia / Insidefoto
FLASH QUOTES:

Tibor Benedek (HUN) — Head Coach
“I think it is better.
When the US came back to one goal difference, we restarted the game (7-6 in third quarter). We shot better. From two days ago the difference was our action goals, making seven. In Hungary we always do nice actions goals. They came today, but not two days ago (quarterfinal against Italy).”

Dejan Udovicic (SRB) — USA Head Coach
“I am proud of my guys. This is the third tournament in a row and we are running out of energy. If you don’t have energy and power, you don’t have control. You need to be fresh. It is not easy to play. We are more than satisfied with our goals this year. We qualified to the Olympic Games, played good in the tournament at Bergamo (World League Super Final). We have one year in front of us to prepare well.”

Jackson Kimbell (USA)
“We wanted to go to the fifth play-off and finish on a high note. It’s better than 7-8. Our goal was solid team defence and offence, put shots on cage and make them block, not go over and stop their counter attack. We wanted to win five-man and six-man game; I don’t think we did that. Don’t give up natural goals or at centre.”

Match 41: 15:30, MONTENEGRO 11 AUSTRALIA 8
Classification 5-8 Semifinal
Quarters: 4-1, 1-1, 4-4, 2-2
Referees: Francesc Buch (ESP), Voijin Putnikovic (SRB).
Extra Man: MNE: 2/6. AUS: 3/12.
Pens: 2/3.
Teams:
MONTENEGRO: Dejan Lazovic, Drasko Brguljan (1), Vjekoslav Paskovic (1), Uros Cuckovic, Darko Brguljan (2), Aleksandar Radovic (2), Mladan Janovic (4), Aleksa Ukropina, Aleksandar Ivovic (1), Nikola Murisic, Filip Klikovac, Predrag Jokic, Milos Scepanovic. Head Coach: Ranko Perovic.
AUSTRALIA: James Stanton-French, Richard Campbell (2), George Ford, John Cotterill (2), Nathan Power, Jarrod Gilchrist, Aiden Roach (1), Aaron Younger (2), Joel Swift, Mitchell Emery, Rhys Howden, Tyler Martin (1), Joel Dennerley. Head Coach: Elvis Fatovic.


MNS vs AUS ©Andrea Staccioli Deepbluemedia/Insidefoto
Match report:
Montenegro had the stronger motivation from the beginning and used a great start to earn a play-off for fifth position on Saturday. Montenegro and the Brguljan brothers set the tone of the match with a terrific start that caught the Aussie Sharks unawares. They still looked shell-shocked from losing a penalty shootout against Greece two nights ago. It was Aleksandar Radovic who set the ball rolling with two long missiles either side of an Aidan Roach extra-man goal. Then Darko and Drasko Brguljan scored for 4-1 by the break. Darko scored again on the first attack of the second after Vjekoslav Paskovic won the sprint, denying Australian skipper Rhys Howden his 12th straight win and damaging his ranking as the top sprinter in Kazan. Aussie head coach Elvis Fatovic (CRO) switched his goalkeepers and it took four long minutes before the next goal came, from John Cotterill on extra at 3:05, the only other goal of the period. Richard Campbell, who has been having a quiet tournament, slotted two long shots on extra man for 4-5. Radovic had a chance on penalty, but Stanton-French blocked it. Mladan Janovic lobbed on counter and Aaron Younger scored the first of two goals in just over a minute, split by an Aleksandar Ivovic penalty conversion for 6-7. Younger’s second, and 17th for the tournament, was a rocket from eight metres off a cross pass, bouncing above the goalkeeper’s left arm. Janovic converted extra at 2:07 and Paskovic fired a chance shot to the bottom left when undefended and it popped up under Stanton-French’s arm into the goal for 9-6 at 0:47 to close the period’s scoring. Cotterill scored from the bottom left cross cage and Janovic responded next attack with a five-metre shot for his third of the match and 10th of the tournament. Two minutes later Tyler Martin accepted a centre forward pass and hit the goalkeeper with the shot, flicking in the rebound for 10-8 at 2:54. Both teams lost the ball on attack and then Montenegro gained a penalty, which Janovic converted for 11-8 to secure victory. 
FLASH QUOTES:
Drasko Brguljan (MNE)
“It’s not normal for us to start so fast as we were 4-0 down against Croatia. I think it was a very good match. We and Australia lost in the quarterfinals and it’s always very difficult. Australia led (in the quarters) and a last-minute goal sent them to penalties and lost. Australia is a very strong team and at the Olympic Games I hope we will not be in the group with them. “
James Stanton-French (AUS) — Goalkeeper
“The motivation was OK. We were struggling with the little things we had previously talked about, coming back on defence, the five-metre fouls and execution of fouls. We are getting a never-say-dies reputation. We get three behind and get back into it. The little things were wrong and we got punished for them. For the next game (play-off for seventh) we are not playing for a medal, but we have a reputation (to maintain) the way we want to be seen. We’ll give it everything we’ve got and finish the tournament with a win.”

Match 40: 12:10, CANADA 12 BRAZIL 10 in penalty shootout (FT: 7-7. Pens: 5-3)
Classification 9-10
Quarters: 2-2, 1-1, 2-3,2-1. Pens: 5-3
Referees: Mark Koganov (AZE), Viktor Salnichenko (KAZ).
Extra Man: CAN: 1/9. BRA: 1/8.
Pens: CAN: 1/1. BRA: 1/1.
Teams:
CANADA: Robin Randall, Con Kudaba (3), Oliver Vikalo, Nicolas Constantin-Bicari (2), Justin Boyd (2), David Lapins, Alec Taschereau, Kevin Graham, Matt Halajian, John Conway (3), George Torakis, Jarrod McElroy (2), Dusan Aleksic. Head Coach: Alexander Beslin.
BRAZIL: Vicinius Antonelli, Jonas Crivella, Guilherme Gomes, Ives Gonzalez, Paulo Salemi, Bernardo Gomes (1), Adrian Delgado (3), Felipe Silva, Bernardo Rocha, Felipe Perrone (2), Gustavo Guimaraes (2), Josip Vrlic (2). Head Coach: Ratko Rudic (CRO).
Match Report:
Canada came from two goals down to level the match with Brazil at 7-7 and go on to win a penalty shootout. The flawless display from the penalty line proved enough to end what was a long, hot summer for Brazil with so many tournaments. There was nothing in the match in the first half and the third also went goal for goal with Adrian Delgado scoring five seconds from the final break for 6-4 only to have Canada take a timeout and goalkeeper Robin Randall firing the ball the length of the pitch to Nicolas Constantin-Bicari to score on the buzzer. Justin Boyd levelled at 6-6 and Jarrod McElroy at 7-7 by 3:27 with plenty of action until the final minute. In that minute there was drama aplenty — firstly when after a timeout Canada fired the ball off the torso of the goalkeeper over the back line with 11 seconds left, both referees missed the contact and Brazil surged forward. Perrone took a 5m shot with just seconds left and he was pushed on the shot by a defender, but it was missed also. Brazilian head coach Ratko Rudic saw it and protested loudly, however, the match went to a penalty shootout. Guilherme Gomes was the unlucky shooter to have his shot blocked by Randall with everyone else scoring until 12-10. For Canada it was one placing off its finest hour, eighth in Rome in 2009. It was Brazil’s best finish at this level, two places higher than 12th in 1998 and 1986. Not surprisingly, former Spanish international Felipe Perrone ended his team’s highest scorer in Kazan with 13 goals, closely followed by former Croatian Josip Vrlic, the big centre forward, who scored 12. Perrone scored in the shootout, but these do not count towards the tournament’s highest goal-scorer competition. Canada’s best scorer in a team where the goals were well spread, was John Conway with 10, two of which came from the penalty line. He also scored the opening goal of the shootout.
FLASH QUOTES:
Alexander Beslin (CAN) — Head Coach
“The only thing I can say is that today we played Brazil and Kazakhstan (referring to the Kazakh referee). The interesting part is that in the first period we had a chance to finish the game we had so many counter attacks and chances and everything. To come from two goals down was excellent.” On being one place lower than Canada’s best at World Championships: “Definitely not satisfied as our goal was top eight. Being ninth is a small step backwards.”
Vinicius Antonelli (BRA) — Goalkeeper
“It’s very hard for me as I am the smallest goalkeeper in the championship, perhaps in the world (he laughs). To get the right side is hard. Twice I go right, but the ball slid under. The other goalkeeper he defended the first shot. It’s a little bit technique and a lot luck. I had hoped to help my team-mates. However, when we were two goals up we gave them presents. When the team (down) gets some scores they go more excited to the penalty shots.”

Match 39: 10:50, KAZAKHSTAN 11 SOUTH AFRICA 7

Classification 11-12

Quarters: 4-2, 1-2, 2-1, 4-2

Referees: Fabio Toffoli (BRA), Tadao Tahara (JPN).

Extra Man: KAZ: 3/11. RSA: 1/7.

Pens: RSA: 2/2.

Teams:

KAZAKHSTAN: Aleksandr Fedorov, Sergey Gubarev (1), Aleksandr Axenov (7), Roman Pilipenko, Vladimir Ushakov, Alexey Shmider (1), Murat Shakenov, Anton Koliadenko, Rustam Ukumanov (1), Yevgeniy Medvedev (1), Ravil Manafov, Branko Pekovich, Valeriy Shlemov. Head Coach: Sergey Drozdov.

SOUTH AFRICA: Dwayne Flatscher, Etienne Le Roux, Devon Card, Ignardus Badenhorst, Nicholas Hock, Joao De Carvalho (2), Dayne Jagga, Jared Wingate-Pearse, Dean Whyte, Pierre Le Roux (3), Nicholas Molyneux (2), Wesley Bohata, Julian Lewis. Head Coach: Paul Martin.


RSA vs KAZ ©Andrea Staccioli Deepbluemedia/Insidefoto
Match report:

Kazakhstan is on an upward trend at World Championships with its 11th place win over South Africa equalling its best finish — 11th in Perth in 1998.
In fact, Kazakhstan has improved one position in each of the last four editions starting with 14th in 2009. A busy first quarter and three goals to sharpshooter Alexandr Axenov, gave it a buffer that was trimmed in the second quarter. The third saw the swing go back to Kazakhstan and Axenov’s fifth goal in the fourth period, followed by left-hander and captain Sergey Gubarev’s goal, handed a 9-5 advantage at 6:32. Axenov blasted from the top for his sixth at 2:08 and seventh at 1:15 and South Africa’s fate was determined. Axenov, who started the match with 15 goals, the equal highest of the championship, took his tally to an almost unbeatable 22. The two teams clashed in the group stage with Kazakhstan winning 14-3, so it was a huge improvement by the African qualifier. It was South Africa’s highest finish at a World Championship, beating its best of 13th in Rome in 2009. South African captain Pierre Le Roux scored three and ended as his team’s top scorer with seven goals, five of them penalty conversions, including two today. South Africa scored twice in the final minute with Joao de Carvalho form in front and Nicholas Molyneux with his second from a 10m lob.
FLASH QUOTES:

Paul Martin (RSA) — Head Coach
“This was much better compared to the last time we played them (14-3). Our target for development was to get better game by game. Our game plan was to make sure he (Axenov) didn’t score. We tried too much on defence and made the wrong decisions. Man for man we have competed here , but (lack of) experience told. We are as physical as any team around, just inexperienced. It was our best result (at a World Championship) so I am very happy with that. Some scores might not reflect that, but we were competitive for two quarters in each game. We made the big guys play.”















COMPARTILHE ESTE POST E CONCORRA A UM KIT NATAÇÃO (TOUCA- SUNGA OU MAIO - ÓCULOS - TOALHA DE BANHO)

Monday, August 3, 2015

Water Polo Reports - Men, Day 4 Kazan Fina


Russell McKinnon, FINA Media Committee Member
Italy, USA Montenegro and Australia make quarterfinals

 Kazan, August 2.— Italy, USA Montenegro and Australia have won through to the quarterfinals of men’s water polo following fourth-day competition.

In the first of the critical matches, Italy made sure of victory, getting the better of Canada 8-2 after a slow start. Then United States of America held out Brazil 7-3 in a spirited American continental rumble that only broke out with two John Mann goals early in the fourth quarter. Montenegro had a tough nut to crack in Kazakhstan before pulling away in the third period and on to a 12-8 win. In the final match of the day, Australia defeated South Africa 17-1 in the Southern Hemisphere clash.

Earlier in the day, in the bracket 13-16, Russia and Japan have won through to Tuesday’s classification for 13th. Russia needed a penalty shootout to shake off China after finishing the match at 10-10. Russia scored four straight while China had two shots blocked. Russia led by two goals late in the match only for China’s Tao Dong scoring twice, the second just one second from time. Japan had little trouble in fending off Argentina 14-6 in a match that had a red card for each team awarded.


August 4 Schedule:

Classification 15-16

31. 09:30, CHN v ARG

Classification 13-14

32. 10:50, RUS v JPN

Classification 9-12 Semifinals

33. 12:10, CAN v KAZ

34. 13:30, BRA v RSA

Classification 1-8 Quarterfinals

35. 17:30, CRO v MNE

38. 18:50, GRE v AUS

36. 20:10, HUN v ITA

37. 21:30, SRB v USA

Match 30: 20:10, SOUTH AFRICA 1 AUSTRALIA 17
Quarters: 1-5, 0-6, 0-2, 0-4

Referees: Shi Wei Ni (CHN), German Moller (ARG).

Extra Man: RSA: 0/1. AUS: 4/5.

Pens: AUS: 1/1.

Teams:

SOUTH AFRICA: Dwayne Flatscher, Etienne Le Roux (1), Devon Card, Ignardus Badenhorst, Nicholas Hock, Joao De Carvalho, Dayne Jagga, Jared Wingate-Pearse, Dean Whyte, Pierre Le Roux, Nicholas Molyneux, Wesley Bohata, Julian Lewis. Head Coach: Paul Martin.

AUSTRALIA: James Stanton-French, Richard Campbell (1), George Ford (2), John Cotterill, Nathan Power, Jarrod Gilchrist (2), Aiden Roach (2), Aaron Younger (4), Joel Swift(1), Mitchell Emery (3), Rhys Howden, Tyler Martin (2), Joel Dennerley. Head Coach: Elvis Fatovic.

foto RSA vs AUS - Photo credit: Giorgio Scala/Deepbluemedia
Match Report:

Australia played as it intends to play against Greece in the quarterfinals on Tuesday — fast, hard and with plenty of accurate shooting. Head coach Elvis Fatovic (CRO) applied the pressure from the start and did not let up until after halftime. He used all his bench from the earliest minutes and they did not disappoint. South Africa looked better than its previous outing and worked tirelessly, but the Aussie Sharks have been well drilled and are hoping to progress to the medal rounds. Aaron Younger took his tally for the week to 12 with four goals and Mitchell Emery liked the long swims that finished with goals, doing it twice while landing another in his first scores of the tournament. South Africa’s lone success with Etienne Le Roux’s 1-3 score two seconds after the extra-man play. Nicholas Molyneux could have delivered a second, on penalty, for 2-10, but he hit the post.

FLASH QUOTES:

Aaron Younger (CRO) – Four Goals

“We had to keep our intensity up ahead of the quarterfinal with Greece. We can be an on and off team, so we had to take it in the first and go from there. Sure, there are more things to tweak and we have to shift our game around to suit our strengths. We’re really good to go (against Greece).”

Paul Martin (RSA) — Head Coach

“It was a lot better and we went through some good passages of play. We went out to try and cut down their counter attack. When we did, we set up to defend and it looked good. There were only two goals (against) in the third period and no goal until the final four minutes of the last when they threw in four. It showed the difference between a team that throws the ball around for fun as opposed to a team with funded systems. We play physically at times, but tonight we were bullied. It was a better performance than the Kazakhstan game. Against Kazakhstan we went in with the mindset of creating an upset. Tonight it was not to be an individual, but work for the team.”

Match 29: 18:50, KAZAKHSTAN 8 MONTENEGRO 12

Quarters: 3-2, 2-3, 1-5, 2-2

Referees: Joseph Peila (USA), Daniel Flahive (AUS).

Extra Man: KAZ: 1/4. MNE: 3/9.

Pens: MNE: 1/1.

Teams:

KAZAKHSTAN: Aleksandr Fedorov, Sergey Gubarev (3), Aleksandr Axenov (2), Roman Pilipenko, Vladimir Ushakov (1), Alexey Shmider, Murat Shakenov, Anton Koliadenko, Rustam Ukumanov (2), Yevgeniy Medvedev, Ravil Manafov, Branko Pekovich, Valeriy Shlemov. Head Coach: Sergey Drozdov.

MONTENEGRO: Dejan Lazovic, Drasko Brguljan, Vjekoslav Paskovic (1), Uros Cuckovic, Darko Brguljan (3), Aleksandar Radovic (2), Mladan Janovic (3), Aleksa Ukropina, Aleksandar Ivovic (2), Nikola Murisic, Filip Klikovac, Predrag Jokic (1), Milos Scepanovic. Head coach: Ranko Perovic.

foto KAZ vs MNE - Photo credit: Giorgio Scala/Deepbluemedia
Match report:

Montenegro booked a quarterfinal clash with Olympic champion Croatia on Tuesday with a belated showing against Kazakhstan, which at one time had a two-goal lead. Kazakhstan opened with two shots from the top (captain Sergey Gubarev) and with a seven-metre lob Alexandr Axenov and Montenegro responded with strikes from Aleksandar Radovic and Mladan Janovic. The parochial crowd went ballistic when Gubarev sent in a long shot to the bottom right for 3-2 and the quarter lead. Axenov increased the intensity in the temporary stadium with the 4-2 goal at 2:56 in the second period. Then Montenegro dulled the crowd’s enthusiasm with a close-in conversion of extra by Darko Brguljan; a penalty goal from Janovic and a short drive from captain Predrag Jokic for 5-4 at 0:15. A pop pass in the last seconds high into centre forward was plucked from the air by Rustam Ukumanov to score for 5-5 and an excellent halftime scoreline, if you are from Kazakhstan. Radovic and Gubarev traded goals at the top of the third period and then Montenegro decided to get serious with thoughts of a possible medal-round match on the horizon. Darko Brguljan on extra, Aleksandar Ivovic on a short drive; Brguljan again on extra and Janovic with a spectacular show of control from the five-metre mark, turning his man, moving forward and shooting for 10-6 just seconds from the final break. Kazakhstan kept the dream alive through Vladimir Ushakov on extra early in the fourth period and then a four-on-three counter finished by Ukumanov for 8-10 at 4:34. Ivovic exploded the hopes of many when his eight-metre rocket nearly tore a hole in the netting at 4:06 for 11-8. The final goal came from Montenegro with Vjekoslav Paskovic catching and scoring from a cross pass at two metres, 18 seconds from time.

FLASH QUOTES:

Drasko Brguljan (MNE)

''In the first half we had offensive problems. We were not finishing counter attacks and they (Kazakhstan) did score a couple of goals. But in the end we played much better in defence and that is very important to us as we have lost offensive power, missing three important players (Nikola Janovic, Antonio Petrovic and Sasa Misic). And as we also swam much, much faster in the second half we knew that they were probably getting tired in the end. Now Croatia in the quarterfinals. Maybe that's even good for us. Croatia's game is much more like ours. I think it suits us better than Australia or Kazakhstan for instance. And we know each other very well. But obviously we will come in more tired and our rotation is smaller than theirs since we have three very young players who don't play so much. But we will have to find a way and I hope we can take that one more step and get into the semifinals.''

Sergey Drozdov (KAZ) — Head Coach

“I’m not happy with the result. We played a good game, but in the third quarter the players were tired and made a lot of defensive mistakes that gave the game to Montenegro. Also we hit the crossbar many times. Montenegro is a very strong team and there was a lot of wrestling. We played just eight-nine players. We are making progress in this tournament (over the four matches).”
Match 28: 17:30, BRAZIL 3 UNITED STATES OF AMERICA 7

Quarters: 0-2, 1-1, 1-1, 1-3

Referees: Boris Margeta (SLO), Adrian Alexandrescu (ROU).

Extra Man: BRA: 0/4. USA: 1/5.

Pens: USA: 1/1.

Teams:

BRAZIL: Vicinius Antonelli, Jonas Crivella, Guilherme Gomes, Ives Gonzalez, Paulo Salemi, Bernardo Gomes (1), Adrian Delgado, Felipe Silva, Bernardo Rocha, Felipe Perrone (1), Gustavo Guimaraes (1), Josip Vrlic. Head coach: Ratko Rudic (CRO).

UNITED STATES OF AMERICA: Merrill Moses, Nikola Vavic, Alex Obert, Jackson Kimbell, Alex Roelse, Luca Cupido (2), Josh Samuels, Tony Azevedo, Alex Bowen, Bret Bonnani (2), Jesse Smith, John Mann (3), McQuin Baron. Head coach: Dejan Udovicic (USA).

foto BRA vs USA - Photo credit: Giorgio Scala/Deepbluemedia
Match Report:

In what was an extremely tight and sometimes heated match between two teams who know each other well having played against or seen each other at Intercontinental Tournament, World League Super Final and Pan Am Games this year alone. They now what it takes to win. Luca Cupido (USA) scored twice early in the match down the left side and then it was more than eight minutes later before another goal came, courtesy of Brazil’s Bernardo Gomes on counter attack. Bret Bonnani replied on the next attack with a five-metre shot that was protested by the defender for moving too far forward, allegedly. Bonnani scored his second on penalty at 5:12 in the third with Brazil coming back quickly thanks to a Gustavo Guimaraes shot down the left for 2-4. Both teams took timeouts to no effect as they looked tired from too many attacks with no benefits. One of the survivors from the London Olympics, John Mann, converted a cross-pass to the near post on extra for 5-2 at the start of the final period. He followed up on the next attack with a trademark centre –forward shot from the four-metre line. All of a sudden the match had blown out to 6-2. Felipe Perrone narrowed it with a blast from deep left at 2:20. Soon after mayhem hit the pool when Brazilian head coach Ratko Rudic (CRO) protested a something and he received a yellow card for advancing down the pool. Both assistant coaches marched down and one was red-carded. With less than 20 seconds remaining, Tony Azevedo stole the ball at five metres and fired it down the pool to Mann at the five-metre line, who turned and scored for 7-3 at 0:17. Despite a Brazilian timeout, that was the final score.

FLASH QUOTES:

Dejan Udovicic (SRB) — USA Head Coach

“The level was not the highest tonight. We are in the same situation. It is our first competition since a month (Pan Ams) and we are exhausted. We were the worst team. We found the courage and strain in the last quarter.”

Merrill Moses (USA) — Goalkeeper

''Our coaching staff had a great tactical plan. We played strong team defence; the team listened to my defensive calls. We knew that we would win this game with defence. Of course we know them well having played each other a couple of times in the last month, but kudos to my coaching staff. This team's going to do something special. We're a team to watch out for.''

Felipe Perrone (BRA) — Captain

“We played World League and Pan Americans and now here. It was a good game, but we missed a lot of shots. It is an important step to the Olympics (2016 Rio). USA was very, very tough and they worked a lot. If we beat South Africa in two days it will be the best result in Brazil’s history. We are trying to do the best we can as fast as we can.”
Match 27: 13:30, CANADA 2 ITALY 8
Quarters: 0-2, 1-1, 1-2, 0-3, 
Referees: Mark Koganov (AZE), Francesc Buch (ESP).
Extra Man: CAN: 1/9. ITA: 3/8.
Pens: CAN: 0/2.
Teams:
CANADA: Robin Randall, Con Kudaba (1), Oliver Vikalo, Nicolas Constantin-Bicari, Justin Boyd, David Lapins, Alec Taschereau, Kevin Graham, Matt Halajian, John Conway, George Torakis (1), Jerry McElroy, Dusan Aleksic. Head coach: Alexander Beslin.
ITALY: Stefano Tempesti, Francesco di Fulvio, Alessandro Velotto (1), Pietro Figlioli (1), Alex Giorgetti (2), Andrea Fondelli, Massimo Giacoppo, Nicholas Presciutti, Niccolo Gitto (2), Stefano Luongo, Matteo Aicardi (1), Fabio Baraldi (1), Marco Del Lungo. Head coach: Alessandro Campagna.


foto CAN vs ITA  ©Pasquale Mesiano / Deepbluemedia / Insidefoto 

Match report:
Italy dispensed with Canada 8-2 and immediately had thoughts of its quarterfinal opponent, world champion Hungary.  Not that Canada was a walk in the park as the opening quarters suggest. However, Italy managed to get systems working and scored twice either side of the final break to have a confidence-building 7-2 lead heading into the final five minutes. Italy took opportunities when presented and scored twice from its centre forwards with backhands. Canada missed two penalty attempts, the first early in the second quarter that could have been 1-2 and then at 4:56 in the last when five behind. All credit to Canada for playing hard and accepting the challenge in a match where Italy was expected to win.
FLASH QUOTES:
Alessandro Campagna (ITA) — Head Coach
“No match is easy. It was not easy against Russia (won 9-6) or Greece when we lost (10-11). We are a young team; there are seven players for the first time at a World Championships. There was too much emotion early in the tournament. The players need to play strong matches, mentally and try hard.” On playing Hungary in the quarterfinals: “What we have done in the past (in Kazan) is zero. Hungary is a great team, world champion. We have to prepare tactics, psychology and we must win.”
Alex Giorgetti (ITA)
“We made a great match. Canada was good and fast and played well with the physical aspect. The referees perhaps leaned to the lesser team, but the final result was right. Our defence was very strong. Defence is the most important part of things.”
Robin Randall (CAN) — Goalkeeper
“When you only score two goals there must be a problem on offence. The guys had plenty of energy and worked their a***s off. There were a few mis-cues and that hurt, but we had a lot of heat and played the whole way through.”
Nicolas Constantin-Bicari (CAN)
''It was a good game with a lot of intensity. The main difference was that Italy were simply better at key moments. I don't think we're that far from this team, but with their experience and plays at the key moments, they were better today. Personally it was a tough game. Italy's defence dropped back a lot, so it was hard for me to get some balls. I think their game plan was to shut me down.''

Match 26: 12:10, ARGENTINA 6 JAPAN 14
Quarters: 0-4, 2-2, 2-4, 2-4
Referees: Viktor Salnichenko (KAZ), Hatem Gabor (EGY).
Extra Man: ARG: 1/7. JPN: 3/9.
Pens: Nil
Teams:
ARGENTINA: Diego Malnero, Ramiro Veich, Tomas Galimberti, Andreas Monutti, Emanuel Lopez, Tomas Bulgheroni, Juan Pablo Montane, Esteban Corsi, Ivan Carabantes (3), Julian Daszczyk, Franco Demarchi (3), German Yanez, Franco Testa. Head coach: Nahuel Alfonso.
JAPAN: Katsuyuki Tanamura, Seiya Adachi (1), Atsushi Arai, Mitsuaki Shiga (2), Akira Yanase (1), Atsuto Iida (2), Yusuke Shimizu (1), Yuki Kadono, Koji Takei (4), Kenya Yasuda (1), Keigo Okawa (1), Shota Hazui (1), Tomoyoshi Fukushima. Head coach: Yoji Omoto.


foto ARG vs JPN ©Pasquale Mesiano / Deepbluemedia / Insidefoto 

Match Report:
Probably the most exciting team at the championships, Japan, brought plenty of fresh play to the clash with Argentina. Japan has speed, panache and everlasting stamina. Japan finished fourth in a tough group that contained Serbia, Montenegro and Australia. Japan’s skills have been evident even against such tough opposition. There was control all over the pool and the exclusion of Argentina’s top goal-scorer, German Yanez (7), did help Japan and robbed the match of a star player. Later in the match a second red card was issued when Japan’s Keigo Okawa was sent for allegedly elbowing an opponent. This came at 3:27 when Japan appeared to call a timeout. However, the exclusion was given and Argentina took the timeout instead. By now the match was fully in favour of Japan at 9-3.  The skills of Koji Takei were also evident, especially with his nine-metre shot at the start of the fourth period. His next goal was soon after from six metres. For Japan, honed by three matches in a tough group, it was not too hard and sets it up for a play-off against Russia in front of what will be a hostile crowd.
FLASH QUOTES:
Yusuke Shimizu (JPN) — Captain
“Unfortunately we came from the same group as Serbia, Montenegro and Australia so find ourselves in this bracket. But we have shown our ability and strengths and will use these against Russia in two days’ time.” On rising to the occasion today: “This was, of course, a must-win match. We played them in the World League earlier this year and were ready for them. Our goal is to qualify for Rio (Olympics) as the Asian champion (qualification tournament in December).”
Nahuel Alfonzo (ARG) — Head Coach
“We couldn’t stop the Japanese contra attack. We lost a very good player (German Yanez) in the first quarter and the possibility of not winning increased a lot. The referee said it was for kicking. The second quarter was the best for us. We controlled the attack and made only two mistakes and tied the period with them.”

Match 25: 10:50, CHINA 11 RUSSIA 14 in penalty shootout (FT: 10-10. Pens: 1-4)

Quarters: 1-2, 4-4, 2-1, 3-3. Pens: 1-4

Referees: Stanko Ivanovski (MNE), Masoud Rezvani (IRI).

Extra Man: CHN: 3/7. RUS: 6/10.

Pens: RUS: 1/1.

Teams:

CHINA: Honghui Wu, Feihu Tan (4), Zhangxin Hu, Tao Dong (3), Wenhui Lu (1), Li Li (2), Zhongxian Chen, Lun Li, Zekai Xie, Jinghao Chen, Chufeng Zhang (1), Nianxiang Liang, Zhiwei Liang. Head coach: Paolo Malara.

RUSSIA: Anton Antonov, Alexey Bugaychuk (1), Artem Odintsov (2), Igor Bychkov, Albert Zinnatullin, Artem Ashaev, Vladislav Timakov (1), Ivan Nagaev (2), Konstantin Stepaniuk (3), Dmitrii Kholod (3), Sergey Lisunov (2), Lev Magomalev, Victor Ivanov. Head coach: Erkin Shagaev.


foto CHN vs RUS ©Pasquale Mesiano / Deepbluemedia / Insidefoto 

Match report:

What a spectacular match to start the day. The host team, which attracted a huge crowd, was playing so well and was never headed all match. Russia even held a two-goal advantage from 2:18 until 1:31. Then Tao Dong made his presence known and tore the heart out of Russian players and spectators alike. He had the last three shots in the match, scoring from a five-metre shot that hit goalkeeper Anton Antov’s arm and spun back across the line. He took a shot that rebounded for China in the last half minute and then scored a goal on extra man from the top with just one second remaining to force the penalty shootout at 10-10.  Russia led 4-1 early in the second quarter, but it was that two-goal margin at the end that seemed the best. The shootout had the near-capacity crowd roused and Russia did not disappoint with four straight goals. Russia switched goalkeepers for the shootout, bringing in Victor Ivanov. His immense presence proved what was needed and he blocked Dong’s shot — China’s second attempt — and then that of captain Chufeng Zhang. Alexey Bugaychuk made sure of victory. China played excellently and the best goal of the day came from veteran Feihi Tan who gained the ball on his line, swam up the right side of the pool, moved across to centre forward, always keeping his defender at bay, surged into four metres and then shot past Antonov for 8-8 at 6:04 in the final period. It was the second time China had levelled — 7-7 just two seconds from three-quarter time when Tan was also the magician, scoring from halfway with the ball being deflected into goal by a defender. It was a great way to start the day’s programme.

FLASH QUOTES:

Erkin Shagaev (CHN) — Head Coach

“It was one of those games where the inexperience of my players showed. Russia must play more of these tough matches. Russia has been absent too long from top international competition not to feel its effects.”

Paolo Malara (ITA) — China Head Coach

“China played very good. It was important to play this match and was very similar against Brazil. We lose (against China), but 10-10 and 9-9 with Brazil. It was important for me for the future. I am happy after the blackout against Croatia (1-17).”













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