/ 28 April 2006

‘No clear favourite’ in Uefa Cup final

Middlesbrough and Sevilla reached their first Uefa Cup final on Thursday.

English club Middlesbrough staged a remarkable comeback at their Riverside Stadium to beat Steaua Bucharest 4-2 and advance 4-3 on aggregate with substitute striker Massimo Maccarone scoring twice.

Steaua had won the first leg 1-0 in Bucharest, Romania, last week on striker Nicolae Dica’s goal.

In Spain, Sevilla needed an extra-time goal from reserve midfielder Antonio Puerta to beat 1997 champion Schalke 1-0 on aggregate after they were 0-0 in last week’s first leg in Germany.

The May 10 final in Eindhoven, The Netherlands, will be the first European final for both clubs. There will be another Spain vs England match-up a week later when FC Barcelona play Arsenal for the Champions League title.

The 101-year-old Sevilla won their only Spanish championship 60 years ago. Middlesbrough’s only title in their 131-year history was the 2004 League Cup, the second-tier English club knockout competition.

”There’s no clear favourite,” Sevilla coach Juande Ramos said.

On Thursday, Middlesbrough went 2-0 down after 24 minutes and needed to score four goals and not concede again. They did — Maccarone scoring either side of goals by striker Mark Viduka and defender Chris Riggott.

”It’s unbelievable,” Middlesbrough striker Jimmy Floyd Hasselbaink said. ”We are in the final and we have to go for it in the final. We had to do it the hard way.”

Steaua took the lead in the 17th when Petre Marin’s shot was parried by Middlesbrough goalkeeper Brad Jones and Dica scored on the rebound.

Dorin Goian made it 2-0 when his header was palmed away by Jones — but Goian netted the rebound.

That prompted Middlesbrough manager Steve McClaren — a candidate to succeed Sven-Goran Eriksson as England coach — to bring Maccarone on for captain and defender Gareth Southgate.

Maccarone’s 34th-minute goal sparked Middlesbrough’s revival.

”Unfortunately, we believed too early that we were through to the final,” said Steaua coach Cosmin Olaroiu. ”The first goal we allowed scared us a little and we took a step back. We made foolish mistakes, caused by our lack of experience at this level.”

It’s the second time Maccarone has proved the difference for ‘Boro in the last minute this season.

The Italian scored to complete a 4-1 victory over Swiss team FC Basel that gave Middlesbrough a 4-3 win on aggregate in the Uefa Cup quarterfinals on April 7.

Sevilla advanced through Puerta’s goal in the 101st minute.

Puerta, a 77th-minute replacement for Adriano Correia, rifled his shot home from the left side of the goal at Sevilla’s Ramon Sanchez Pizjuan stadium.

The final whistle was greeted by a firework display just outside the stadium, while thousands of delighted Sevilla supporters invaded the field to celebrate.

”It’s been a perfect night. To win the game and reach the final and for it to be our first is a great prize. But you can’t advance without hard work,” Ramos said.

Roared on by a capacity 45 000-strong crowd that set off firecrackers and red flares before the game, Sevilla began brightly with strikers Luis Fabiano and Javier Saviola each shooting narrowly wide.

Sevilla goalkeeper Andres Palop saved Gerald Asamoah’s low shot in the 61st minute, and he then deprived Kevin Kuranyi of a shooting chance six minutes later.

Schalke midfielder Fabian Ernst shot just over the bar in the 87th in the last chance of regular time.

”It was a very hard-fought game which was going to be decided by a goal,” Schalke coach Mirko Slomka said. ”We tried to equalise and had several chances, but in the end we were eliminated.” — Sapa-AP