Thursday, August 18, 2011

Naga-PPCFC in race for league title


Easy for Naga

Naga line up before their game against Chhlam Samuth 
The curtain-raiser for the Phnom Penh Crown and Army clash yesterday afternoon was the replay of the Naga v Chhlam Samuth game that was abandoned at half-time due to a torrential downpour last Sunday. As expected, Naga ran out easy 5-0 winners but were given quite a scare for much of the 1st half. If the former Navy team had more composure they could've made it very uncomfortable for the 2nd-placed team but they didn't and Naga went onto win by a country mile. Needing a win to maintain any hope of pipping Crown for the Metfone C-League title, Naga were lucky to survive a 14th minute double fright when San Thydeth and then Sunday Ayodele should've done better with close range efforts for Chhlam Samuth. Phorn Ratana in the Naga goal stood firm for both and then used his legs to deny Ros Samoeurn before Naga, and of course, Julius Oiboh took the lead five minutes before the break. The lanky powerhouse striker netted his 25th goal of the season when Chhim Bunsan missed his defensive header leaving Oiboh with a simple finish. Two minutes into time added on, Naga scored a 2nd and the game was over as a contest. Chin Chom, or is it Chum, found space on the left, took Oiboh's pass in his stride and finished with ease. Two minutes after the restart and Naga netted a third when Chom pulled back a bye-line center and San Thydeth turned it into his own net. Oiboh showed he is human when he missed an absolute sitter from three yards out with the goal at his mercy before Chom got his second, volleying in Teab Vathanak's inch-perfect cross. With keeper Sam Chamroeun being kept busy, Chhlam Samuth managed to stem the tide of Naga attacks until two minutes from the end, when Chom was left with a simple headed tap-in from Meas Channa's deflected cross to complete his hat-trick and a five-goal whitewash.
Chhlam Samuth gave a good account of themselves in the 1st half 
This is the Army starting line-up for their match against Phnom Penh Crown 

The big difference

Goalscorer Kouch Sokumpheak (right) and Sun Sovannrithy take a rest after the 1-0 win over Army 
Crown line-up v Army. Back Row LtoR: Sovannrithy, Tiny, Ota, Obadin, Sopanha, Bunchhay. Front Row: Sokumpheak, Njoku, Narith, Chaya, Sothearith 
Kouch Sokumpheak was one of the big differences betweenPhnom Penh Crown and their military opponents from the Army in yesterday's Metfone C-League clash. Not only did he score the game's only goal but he played like a man possessed, covering every blade of grass on the pitch and getting his foot in the way when the Army had their best, and only real chance of the game, twenty minutes from the end. Crown keeper Peng Bunchhay and Tieng Tiny had collided when going for a high ball and Sokumpheak spotted the danger, closing down and blocking Phuong Soksana's goal-bound effort eight yards out. His goal, on 27 minutes, was the perfect execution of a training ground routine that the team had worked on, in coach David Booth's words, "a million times." A foul on Kingsley Njoku, 25 yards from goal, looked a certain shooting opportunity for Sun Sopanha. I thought it and so did the Army defenders. Sopanha disguised his run up perfectly but instead of going for goal, he played a short pass to Njoku, who in turn flipped the ball to Sokumpheak, who'd peeled off the end of the defensive wall. In on goal, Sokumpheak took a touch before firing past Sou Yaty for what turned out to be the match-winner. The same player scored the only goal of the game when the two teams met in June. The Army will be glad to see the back of him. In truth, Crown dominated much of the game, particularly in the first-half. They started brightly and continued until the interval, pressing when Army had the ball and using their passing game to good effect, whilst the military team were content to hoof the long ball. Without their keeper Sou Yaty in great form, the Army would've been out of the game before the break.

Tieng Tiny's 50-yard lob that only just cleared the bar, signalled Crown's intentions after just forty seconds on the clock. On ten minutes, Sokumpheak's nod put in Takahito Ota but his whipped shot struck the outside of the upright. A minute later, Chan Chaya screwed a chance across the face of the goal and then it was Njoku's turn to miskick badly when set up by Chaya. A neat one-two between Sopanha and Sun Sovannrithy saw the rampant full-back in on goal, only to be denied by Yaty's stop. Sokumpheak finished off the text-book free-kick move on 27 minutes to put Crown's noses in front, but it was no more than they deserved for piling on the pressure. Yaty was being kept a busy man, holding onto a long distance effort from Njoku and then finger-tipping a Chaya header over the top from Sokumpheak's cross. The Crown marksman fizzed an effort just wide from the edge of the box before Yaty had the final say, a minute into added on time, when he again got his fingers to a Njoku blast to keep his team in the match. After the break, Crown remained in control but produced fewer goal-bound efforts though Yaty was again in the thick of it when he acrobatically tipped over a rasping free-kick from Sopanha and late on, stood firm when Hong Ratana fired an effort on target from an acute angle. I counted five excellent saves from the Army stopper who must've impressed the national team coach enough to warrant a starting spot in the forthcoming SEA Games squad.

Crown's victory was the 7th successive success since David Booth took over as coach. "I'm very pleased with my team in the 1st half, we pressed, we won the ball and we created chances. I was also very happy with our free-kick that worked a treat. It's great when things like that come off. But we needed more goals and after half-time we stopped doing what we did well in the 1st half. The result was the most important thing today but I also want us to play well for 90 minutes." The team now have an 11-day break until they meet Preah Khan Reach in their penultimate game of the league season. Another win will clinch the title for the reigning champions.
Crown line-up: Bunchhay, Sovannrithy, Sothearith, Tiny, Obadin, Narith, Ota (Ratana 68), Sopanha (Dara 87), Chaya, Njoku (S Pheng 56), Sokumpheak. Subs not used: Visokra, Vanthan Sovan, Sophat, Sophanal, Sochivorn, Rathanak, H Pheng. Bookings: Sovannrithy, Sothearith.

Crown president Rithy Samnang and coach David Booth discuss the game 
Thul Sothearith leads out his Crown teammates 
The pre-match huddle for the Crown team and coach 
Crown line-up for pre-match handshakes 
Referee Tuy Vichhika with the two captains for the toss-up 
Crown coach David Booth with Khim Borey, who Booth signed when he was at Sisaket

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