numerically inferior, Monaco resists and brings Marseille to a draw

Vitinha will probably have some nightmares about it. The Portuguese striker from Olympique de Marseille will dwell for a long time on this huge missed opportunity in the last minute of the match against Monaco, Saturday January 27, on behalf of the 19e day of Ligue 1. Alone two meters from the empty goal, the Marseille number 9 poorly took a cross from the right, allowing the Monegasque goalkeeper, Philipp Köhn, to return to catch the ball in front of his line and preserve the draw ( 2-2).

“The opportunity Vitinha missed at the last minute is part of football. We can’t say anything, it’s like when you miss a penalty, it happens.”explained Marseille coach Gennaro Gattuso, trying to protect his Portuguese striker.

This failure and the litany of blunders which accompanied his performance of the evening will not, however, help Vitinha’s popularity rating in the wings of the Stade Vélodrome which saw OM concede a third draw in a row in the championship.

Marked by the deployment of rebellious banners against the owner and management, the pre-match showed that the Marseille public had not yet given up on their team. But the game ended under the whistles and the balance remains precarious for Gennaro Gattuso and his troops.

Despite thirteen absentees, a team of odds and ends and a bench that screams misery − the fault of injuries and the departures of players at the CAN −, Marseille nevertheless had enough to snatch the decision, in a match played very largely in numerical superiority .

Read also | Coupe de France: Stade Rennais beats Olympique de Marseille on penalties

Jonathan Clauss goes out injured

After Monaco’s quick opening score, with a clear Golovine-Ben Yedder move (1-0, 7e), the Vélodrome pushed its team, and saw the Monegasque Guillermo Maripan get excluded from the 11e minute. The Chilean defender received a harsh red card for a foul for which he paid both his spectacular slowness and Vitinha’s unusual vice.

Without being breathtaking, OM were then dangerous and were rewarded by the equalizer signed Aubameyang, initially signaled offside after a slightly missed recovery from Vitinha – already – and a good overflow from Luis Henrique (1-1, 38e).

Marseillais Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang (white jersey) tackled by Monegasque Mohammed Salisu, at the Stade Vélodrome, in Marseille, January 27, 2024.

Just before, the injury to Jonathan Clauss was a reminder that Marseille is really dark at the moment, and just after, the second Monegasque goal confirmed that the Marseillais also knew how to get into difficulty on their own. As the added time of the first period dragged on quietly, Aubameyang played an offensive action casually, offering a counter to Monaco, carried out by the duo Ben Yedder-Maghnes Akliouche, with the complicity of Leonardo Balerdi, lost in space, and goalkeeper Pau Lopez, passive (2-1, 45+3).

But the Argentinian defender made up for it with a nice dry strike at ground level, which quickly brought Marseille back up to par after the break (2-2, 50e).

Relief and frustration for Monaco

Then, Marseille pushed, wasting some good cartridges, because of the lack of spontaneity of Joaquin Correa or the terrible clumsiness of poor Vitinha (69e and especially the famous 94e minute) whose name was chanted by… the Monegasque supporters.

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“Before the match, everyone was sure we were going to lose. But we did what we had to. Of course, we had the advantage of playing eleven against ten, we also missed things. But I saw a team alive, that could win. I can’t blame them for anything.”estimated Gennaro Gattuso, follower of the Coué method.

The ASM, which has not been particularly dashing lately, defended and tried to attack on the counter, even after a second red card, that of Denis Zakaria excluded in the 87the minute. Ultimately, this drawn result sounds like a relief for Monaco after a very turbulent week in the Principality, marked by the announcement by the Russian owner, Dmitry Rybolovlev, of a possible sale and the death at the age of 74 of a figure of the club, Jean Petit.

Read also | Jean Petit, former player and coach of AS Monaco, has died

“We of course deserved this draw”, judged Monegasque coach Adi Hütter. “ Everyone saw that we were better at the start. We deserved the opener. After the red, we remained aggressive, with high pressure. We also deserved the second goal. At 2-2, we still had a great opportunity. With certain decisions, it was hard to win here tonight”he also estimated, frustrated, referring to the red cards distributed to his team.

Nice consolidates its second place

For its part, already eliminated in the Coupe de France by Rennes, Marseille, sixth, 5 points behind fourth-placed Monaco, still remains behind in the race for the Champions League while Nice consolidated its second place, behind the Parisian leader, by beating Metz (1-0) in the afternoon.

In the minimalist style that has made it successful this season, the Gym settled for a small goal on a very contentious penalty converted by Evann Guessand. Enough to make the situation perilous for the Messins (15e), who suffered their sixth consecutive loss in L1. The Niçois are now five points behind PSG, who host Brest, surprising third, on Sunday at the Parc des Princes.

Read also | Ligue 1: Rennes continues its recovery by winning (3-2) at Lyon, which is sinking

The World with AFP

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