Portugal 2-0 Turkey

Portugal’s Euro 2008 campaign opened in impressive fashion with victory over Turkey in Geneva.

Pepe opened the scoring after 61 minutes, surging from defence to beat Turkey keeper Volkan Demirel after a slick exchange with Nuno Gomes.

Portugal deserved their win, with Cristiano Ronaldo hitting the post from a first-half free-kick and Gomes twice denied by the woodwork after the break.

And Raul Meireles slid home the second in injury time after a flowing move.

Portugal were runners-up in their own country to Greece four years ago, but this vibrant performance was a clear statement that they intend to go one better this time around.

Turkey, with former Sheffield United midfield man Colin Kazim-Richards prominent, were always in the game but lacked a crucial cutting edge.

Portugal coach Luiz Felipe Scolari and Ronaldo were finally able to put the speculation that has provided the backdrop to their Euro 2008 build-up behind them and get on with the action.

Scolari continues to be linked with the vacancy at Chelsea, despite his insistence that he will not discuss his long-term future until after the tournament.

And Ronaldo’s Manchester United future continues to be the subject of daily debate as Real Madrid maintain their pursuit of the man who played a pivotal role in the Premier League and Champions League to Old Trafford.

Portugal dominated a lively opening 45 minutes in which they were unlucky not to take the lead.

They thought they had taken the lead in the 16th minute when Pepe powered a header past Turkey keeper Volkan Demirel from Simao Sabrosa’s cross, but the celebrations were cut short by a linesman’s flag.

Ronaldo had been quiet in the early stages, but he burst into life on the half-hour with a trademark run that ended with a shot that was pulled disappointingly wide.

He came within inches of giving Portugal the lead eight minutes before the interval, but a dipping 25-yard free-kick from an angle was brilliantly turned on to the post by Volkan.

The woodwork denied Portugal again four minutes after the break when referee Herbert Fandel played an excellent advantage when Gokhan Zan flattened Simao, but Gomes flicked the loose ball against the post.

Ronaldo then tested the excellent Volkan again with a precise low finish after escaping the attentions of Hamit Altintop, but the Turkey keeper was once more equal to the task.

Turkey had shown great resilience, but they were broken after 61 minutes thanks to a moment of real adventure from central defender Pepe.

He surged forward and played a slick exchange with Gomes before sliding a finish past the onrushing Volkan from 12 yards.

Portugal had played some wonderful flowing football - but fortune was against them again as they almost doubled their lead three minutes after Pepe’s strike.

Ronaldo curved in an inviting cross from the left, and Gomes rose only to see his header bounce off the bar to safety.

It was his final contribution of the game as he was quickly replaced by the more youthful figure of Manchester United winger Nani.

Turkey had battled manfully, but they had shown little as an attacking force, although Portugal keeper Ricardo had to be alert to come off his line and deny Middlesbrough’s Tuncay as he tried to get in on the end of Nihat Kahveci’s cross.

Substitute Emre Asik wasted Turkey’s best chance with nine minutes left, heading Nihat’s corner wide when unmarked only eight yards out.

And as Turkey pushed forward, Portugal broke to add a second in the dying seconds as Ronaldo found Joao Moutinho, who set up substitute Meireles for a side-footed finish.

Portugal: Ricardo, Bosingwa, Pepe, Carvalho, Ferreira, Petit, Joao Moutinho, Ronaldo, Deco (Fernando Meira 90), Simao (Raul Meireles 82), Nuno Gomes (Nani 68).
Subs Not Used: Rui Patricio, Bruno Alves, Hugo Almeida, Miguel, Jorge Ribeiro, Quaresma, Veloso, Postiga, Quim.

Goals: Pepe 61, Raul Meireles 90.

Turkey: Demirel, Altintop (Senturk 76), Cetin, Zan (Asik 55), Balta, Kazim-Richards, Emre, Aurelio, Erding (Sarioglu 46), Sanli, Nihat.
Subs Not Used: Rustu, Zengin, Topal, Karadeniz, Metin, Gungor, Turan, Boral, Akman.

Booked: Kazim-Richards, Zan, Sarioglu.

Att: 31,000

Ref: Herbert Fandel (Germany).

Ref From BBC SPORT

Swiss skipper Frei out of Euros

Switzerland’s influential captain Alexander Frei has been ruled out of the rest of Euro 2008 with the knee injury he suffered in the opening game.

Frei, 28, limped off in tears during the 1-0 defeat against the Czech Republic on Saturday.

Swiss team doctor Cuno Wetzel told a news conference on Sunday that Frei would be out for six weeks with a partially ruptured, left knee ligament.

“He was an important player. He was a goal-getter.” said coach Koebi Kuhn.

“But he’s out. We have to move forward.”

Wetzel added: “Alex Frei knew immediately that he had been hurt badly.”

The doctor said Frei would speak publicly on Monday, but now wanted “to have some time to himself”.

The Borussia Dortmund forward missed much of the Bundesliga season because of injuries.

He has had a hip operation, two muscle tears and a calf injury in the last 13 months, but had battled back to full fitness in recent weeks.

Petr Cech admits his side had some luck against the Swiss
Frei suffered the injury in a challenge with Czech defender Zdenek Grygera shortly before half-time in the opening game of the tournament.

After the game he was sent to hospital for a scan and Kuhn said: “It is a shock, a disaster to lose our captain in the first game - I can only hope it is not too serious.”

Frei became Switzerland’s all-time top goalscorer last week when he scored his 35th goal in 59 internationals, and was seen as vital to the team’s chances of getting out of a tough group that includes Portugal and Turkey.

“He’s our best striker, we need him back in the team,” defender Johan Djourou said after the match.

“We will take a lot of confidence from the way we played against the Czechs, especially in the first half, but if we lose Alex it will be very difficult to get back into the tournament.”

Meanwhile, Kuhn said his team should be proud of their display, despite the defeat.

“I told them they can leave the stadium with their heads held high,” stated Kuhn, who will step down as coach at the end of the tournament.

“Now we have to forget about this game and concentrate on the next match, against Turkey.”

Kuhn added: “Our chances of going through have certainly not increased but we still believe.

“Everything is still possible and we are not going to give up. We must build on what we did here today.

“We had the chances to at least have drawn the match, and we could easily have won it but that is football, it is not about justice. This game is over for us now but not the Euros.”

Ref From BBC SPORT

Euro 2008: Poland and Germany go to war again

The picture managed to top even the worst excesses of British soccer-related Hun bashing: the sports section of the Warsaw daily tabloid Super Express depicted Poland’s national football coach, Leo Beenhakker, with a warlike scowl. In each hand was a recently severed head, both dripping blood on to the foot of the page.

The heads belonged to Michael Ballack, Germany’s team captain and Joachim Löw, the side’s trainer. In the middle of the photomontage a giant headline etched out in the Polish national colours of red and white urged Beenhakker, who happens to be Dutch, to " Give us their heads!"

The gory image, published in Poland on Wednesday, was merely the latest round in a protracted tabloid war that has been raging in Polish and German mass-circulation papers for more than a week. The mud-slinging reaches a climax tomorrow when Poland meets Germany in the Euro 2008 football championships in the Austrian city of Klagenfurt.

The German media has been tormenting the Poles with football jibes. It has featured items such as a joke anti-Polish video clip which shows German fans stepping out of a bus to relieve themselves during a long trip on the autobahn, only to find that their vehicle has been stolen by Polish thieves while they were having a pee.

But the war really started in earnest when Poland’s biggest-selling daily newspaper, Fakt, retaliated on Tuesday with a picture of Ballack wearing a Prussian spiked helmet, waiting to be decapitated by Beenhakker wielding a massive battle sword. This time the paper implored the Dutch trainer to "Repeat Grunwald", which was a reference to the 15th-century battle of the same name in which a combined force of Poles and Lithuanians inflicted an ignominious defeat on the German order of Teutonic knights. The victory is almost the Polish equivalent of the Battle of Trafalgar.

The Germans are used to being insulted in the British press, especially over football. For decades, Germany’s teams have not walked but "marched" on to the pitch in the pages of London tabloids. The Germans have not been amused by this sort of ritual ribbing. Successive German ambassadors to London have made it their business to complain about such treatment. In 1996, Piers Morgan, then editor of the Daily Mirror, was even forced to apologise after his paper ran the headline "Achtung Surrender!" and declared a "Football war on Germany".

But Germany’s sporting elite is clearly not used to being treated by their next-door neighbour Poland in this way. Peter Danckert, the chairman of the German parliament’s sports commission, called the severed head picture an "absolute scandal"and "absolutely below the belt". He added: " I hope that the Polish government will react to it in an appropriate manner."

The Polish government’s reaction was mute, but Beenhakker swiftly delivered an apology to the Germans, describing the newspaper’s antics as "mad, dirty and sick". He added: "We want to say sorry to the German people."

For a Dutchman this was perhaps no small gesture. The Dutch love to make fun of the Germans, especially when it comes to football. During the 2006 World Cup, a Dutch company hit the headlines after it manufactured thousands of mock Second World War German helmets made from orange plastic. The hats were eagerly snapped up by Dutch fans who wore them at the tournament to taunt German supporters.

Yet so far nobody has offered a plausible explanation for the sudden upsurge in Polish-German football animosity. Hopes that it would subside after Wednesday’s severed heads incident were scotched yesterday after Fakt came out with a fresh story which accused the Germans and the Austrians of conspiring to fix the results of matches and force the Poles out of the tournament. Bild complained to its readers: "Will this never stop? Why is the atmosphere being poisoned before our Euro debut?"

One of the reasons may be linked to the ownership of the papers blamed for starting the war. Bild and its Polish counterpart Fakt are owned by Germany’s Axel Springer publishing house. Fakt was set up by Springer after the collapse of Communism and was specifically designed to become the Polish equivalent of Bild. It has since become the country’s biggest-selling daily. There has been intense speculation in Germany that the tabloid football war is simply a Springer-orchestrated spat to boost sales in both countries. Of course, no editor would admit to such tactics. Hence the response by Alfred Draxler, Bild’s deputy editor, who insisted on Wednesday that his paper was "journalistically completely independent" and therefore had no difficulty attacking its Polish sister paper for its anti-German stance.

The other reasons are manifold and in today’s post-Iron Curtain Europe, they still remain largely unaddressed. Perhaps only the Israelis have more justification than the Poles to dislike and mistrust the Germans.

The relationship between the two countries has been likened to that of England and Ireland. It has its roots in Protestant Prussia’s partitioning and subjugation of Catholic Poland in the 18th century, the enforced teaching of German in Polish schools and presence of powerful German landowners presiding over workforces of Polish peasant farmers.

No other European Union state suffered as much as Poland at the hands of the Germans during the Second World War. Hitler’s annexation of the country in 1939 was followed by the Warsaw ghetto, Auschwitz and the razing of Warsaw during the closing stages of the conflict to avenge the Warsaw uprising. Millions of Poles were slave labourers for the Nazis.

The relationship between both sides hardly recovered during the Cold War after tracts of eastern Germany were annexed to Poland on Stalin’s orders and Poland was forced to cede vast areas of its eastern territories to Russia. A pseudo-friendship between the Communist governments of Poland and East Germany existed during this period, but the peoples of each country treated each other with suspicion. The East Germans blamed the Poles for buying up their hard-won provisions when they visited. The East Germans were not allowed to visit Poland during the 1980s because their government was worried that its citizens would be infected by the values of the free trade union movement, Solidarity.

West Germany’s citizens may have deluged Poles with care packets at this time, but its government was nervous that the Solidarity uprising would destabilise the post-war status quo in Europe and remained reluctant to back the movement to the hilt. Many Poles have not forgotten this.

Attempts to normalise relations between the two countries have been badly hampered since the collapse of communism in 1990, by German expellee organisations trying to reclaim their former properties in old eastern German territories that now belong to Poland. Germany’s Expellee Association has more than two million members whose support is crucial to Chancellor Angela Merkel’s conservative Christian Democrats. As a result, her party, while not supporting claims for property restitution, has been sympathetic to many of the expellees’ concerns.

In 2003, the issue boiled over, when proposals for a permanent exhibition explaining the plight of Germany’s expellees were unveiled by Erika Steinbach, a German conservative MP who is head of the Expellees Association. Poland accused the Germans of trying to whitewash its Second World War crimes. The Polish magazine Wprost produced a front cover which depicted Mrs Steinbach in Gestapo uniform riding on the back of the then German Chancellor Gerhard Schröder. "The German Trojan Horse" was the headline.

Mr Schröder, who had no sympathy for the expellees, annoyed Poland by insisting that a moratorium should be imposed on Poles who wished to live and work in Germany, although their country had been declared a full EU member. One of the consequences has been that Poles have chosen to flock to Britain instead.

Polish-German animosity deepened in 2005 when the right-wing conservative Polish twin brothers Lech and Jaroslav Kaczynski were elected to become their country’s president and prime minister respectively. Both disliked the Germans and elevated Hun-bashing to national politics.

Mercifully for the Germans, Poland ousted the Kaczynski government in a general election last year. Although Lech remains President, his popularity rating is below 30 per cent. Donald Tusk, Poland’s liberal-minded Prime Minister, has declared that one of his main priorities is the normalisation of Polish-German relations.

He will meet Ms Merkel in the Polish seaport of Gdansk this month. The city was once called by the German name of Danzig and was shared by Germans and Poles. Hitler’s seizure of the "Polish corridor" near Danzig in 1930 started the Second World War.

With a history like that, it is not surprising that many Germans and Poles have found it hard to make fun of each other in public ever since. The outbreak of a cross-border tabloid football war is perhaps a step towards some badly needed normality.

Ref From belfasttelegraph..co.uk