Petr Jiracek and
Vaclav Pilar scored in the first six minutes to give the Czech Republic a
2-1 win over Greece, while Poland kept their chances of a
quarter-finals berth alive after drawing 1-1 with Russia at the European
Championship.
Jiracek
shot the ball past Greece goalkeeper Costas Chalkias in the third
minute after a pass from Tomas Hubschmann sliced through the Greek
defense. Three minutes later, Pilar scored his second goal of the
tournament, beating Greek defenders to a ball sent across the goal by
Czech Republic defender Theodor Gebre Selassie.
Substitute
Fanis Gekas pulled one back for Greece in 53rd minute with a tap in
after Chelsea goalkeeper Petr Cech spilled the ball and bumped into
defender Tomas Sivok.
The
Greeks, who played the Group A match without two key central defenders,
nearly scored another in the 41st, but the header from Giorgos Fotakis
was called back for offside.
The
Greeks recovered well after their disastrous start, but lost another
player when Chalkias limped off the field in the 23rd minute. He was
replaced by Michalis Sifakis.
Despite
the defensive problems, Greece coach Fernando Santos stuck with his
attacking lineup of three forwards. The strategy helped the Greeks
dominate the second half.
Czech Republic captain Tomas Rosicky came off with a foot injury in the second half.
The
Czech fans booed coach Michal Bilek at the start of the match, but the
team rebounded from its opening 4-1 loss to Russia in Group A. The
Czechs also avenged their semifinal loss to Greece at Euro 2004.
Poland hold Russia to stay in Euro hunt
The
Poles, needing to take at least a point from the Group A match in the
wake of their 1-1 tournament opener against Greece on Friday, were
keenly aware of Russia's high-octane 4-1 performance against the Czech
Republic the same night.
A
goal by Alan Dzagoev yesterday in the first-half - his third of the
tournament - was cancelled out in spectacular fashion in the second-half
by Polish captain Kuba Blaszczykowski.
Dutch coach Dick Advocaat praised Poland for their performance but added he was happy with the point.
"Poland
played very well tonight being under the risk of losing the chance to
win a place in the last eight if they lost," he said.
"Meanwhile, we allowed them to create too many chances in attack.
"That
means we still need to strengthen our defence. We also played well and
scored before the break and had many chances in the second but we missed
them all. In general, I'd say the draw is a good result for us," said
the 64-year-old Dutchman.
Russian
captain Andrei Arshavin said that while the point was welcome they only
had themselves to blame for allowing the Poles back into the game.
"We
started well and took the lead but after the break we played too
loosely allowing Poland to reply on dangerous counter-attacks," he said.
Poland coach Franciszek Smuda was happy with the result but above all
with the way his players had stuck to their gameplan - he won't be so
happy with the angry manner in which Ludovic Obraniak shurgged him aside
on being taken off in the final minute. "We are a young side, and we are going to get ever better.
"I am above all happy with the players because they played to the gameplan from the first to last minute."
In
what may be the most politically-charged fixture of the tournament,
Poland looked the hungrier team in the first half, launching a series of
convincing attacks on the Russian goal.
Hard
work appeared to have paid off when Eugen Polanski moved onto a through
ball from lone striker Robert Lewandowski and fired past Vyacheslav
Malafeev. But fans and the Polish bench swung from ecstasy to misery when his 18th-minute shot was ruled offside.
A
resurgent Russia picked up the pace, with Arshavin crossing in the 25th
minute to Aleksandr Kerzhakov, only for him to miss the target.
Polish
keeper Przeymslaw Tyton - whose penalty-saving heroics after he came on
as a substitute for red-carded first choice Wojciech Szczesny helped
avoid a Polish defeat to Greece - saved a free kick from Arshavin a
minute later.
Russia's
efforts bore fruit in the 37th minute when rising star Dzagoev, who
notched a double against the Czechs, latched onto an inswinging Arshavin
free kick to open the scoring.
The
Poles appeared tired, but battled hard, and finally equalised in the
57th minute when Blaszczykowski picked up a cross from Obraniak and
fired home a left-footed piledriver.
There
were nervous moments for both sides in the remainder of the half, with
the noise levels rising in Warsaw's brand-new National Stadium.
Sporting
encounters between Poland and Russia are often high pressure, as they
feed into centuries of antipathy between the two nations, and the
rivalry in the stadium's terraces was palpable from the start of the
match.
Tensions
had risen in Warsaw beforehand, as police made dozens of arrests and
used water canons to halt brawls between fans from both camps.
With
the Czech Republic having beaten Greece 2-1 earlier on Tuesday, Russia
top Group A on four points after two amtches with the Czechs second on
three points, Poland third on two and Greece fourth on one.
Russia wrap up their group matches against Greece on Saturday, when Poland face the Czechs.
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