one-goal lead often carries the prefix ‘precarious’. It is indeed so, forever in danger of being wiped out.
If
it is to be evidenced, one need not go too far. In the league stage’s
last match, Delhi Dynamos led FC Goa by not one but two goals, only to
be run over in a matter of minutes.
On Tuesday, when
the same two sides clash at the Jawaharlal Nehru Stadium in Fatorda in
the second leg of the Indian Super League semifinal, Dynamos will
certainly know how wafer-thin the margin is.
“I
cannot say they had supremacy,” Goa’s chief coach Zico said of the first
leg which his side lost 1-0. “Both teams had chances. They took one, we
didn’t.”
The first leg was, in fact, stereotyped as a
battle between two contrasting sides — between a Dynamos outfit relying
on defensive solidity and a Goa side full of flair. It didn’t
necessarily turn out that way. Instead Goa — in what was certainly not a
departure from the past — played on the counter while Dynamos showed
how a repetitively honed passing game built from the back (defence) can
hurt.
If anything, it is the second leg which might
well fit into that stereotype. Frenchman Florent Malouda, one among
Dynamos’ stand-out performers, hinted as much even as coach Roberto
Carlos conceded that it was quite un-Brazilian to be considered more
defensive than offensive, and that his side would “always attack”. “When
you build a team, you build it from the back,” Malouda said. “It
provides solid foundation. The possession, the movement, and the control
— everything is better. We’re also creating more. We missed some but we
create. We have to keep repeating it game after game.”
When
asked if his team would not be averse to “parking the bus”, the former
Chelsea player smilingly said: “If at the end we have to defend, we can
park the bus, or even the plane in front of the goal. Our goalkeeper
will be more than happy.” Much will depend on how Goa’s midfield
talisman Leo Moura plays. The Brazilian’s ability to play in multiple
positions across the midfield is what gives the team its versatility.
The counter to that might lie in how, the engine in Malouda, who has so
far expertly bridged the attack with defence, marshals his side. Goa
will miss the services of Reinaldo, scorer of seven goals, and Raju
Gaekwad, both of who picked up injuries in Delhi.
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