Date: Thursday, 1st November 2001.
Venue: Stade de l’Aube,
Troyes, France.
Competition: UEFA
Cup, Second Round, Second Leg.
Score: Troyes 3 Leeds
United 2.
Scorers: Troyes: Amzine,
Matteo (o.g.), Rothen. Leeds
United: Viduka, Keane.
Attendance:
15,079.
Teams:
Troyes: Huertebis; Danjou, Bradja (Adam), Thomas, Hamed; Tourenne, Amzine, Boutal; Loko (Djukic), Rothon, Saifi (Gousse). Unused Subs: Jbari, Leroy,
Niang, Sekli.
Leeds United: Martyn, Mills, Duberry, Matteo, Harte; Batty, Bakke,
Dacourt, Kewell (Wilcox);
Keane, Viduka. Unused Subs: Kelly, McPhail,
Smith, Butrns, Robinson.
Referee: Massimo de Santis (Italy).
Robbed of Rio Ferdinand by injury and Jonathan Woodgate and
Lee Bowyer by the on-going court case United travelled to France
to play the second leg of their UEFA Cup tie against Troyes, who were urged on by their
fanatical supporters to an almost famous victory. United had spurned so many
chances in the first leg, conceded a vital late goal, and they were almost left
to rue their generousity. Luckily they survived after
almost going out on the away goal rule. An early goal had the home fans
believing a shock victory was a strong possibility. Mark Viduka
kept up his recent goal-scoring form to equalize on the night and then United
had a period of dominance without being able to take the lead, as Harry Kewell volleyed a screamer, only for the referee to
disallow it for an infringement by Robbie Keane in the build up. It was Troyes who took the lead after
just seven minutes as the ball was deflected into his own net by Dominic Matteo following a free-kick from forty yards out. The out
of touch Harry Kewell was substituted after picking
up a calf injury and now United were lacking both first choice central
defenders and wingers. Their plight was obvious as Michael Duberry
was left pedestrian as Troyes
got their third on the night and went in front, on away goals, on aggregate. Troyes showed they were just as
generous as United and fluffed several chances to go 4-1 up. United thanked their
luck and produced a perfectly executed goal which David Batty started forty
yards out with a perfect through ball for Mark Viduka,
who sent another perfect left-foot cross for Robbie Keane to head into an empty
net. There was a brilliant save by Nigel Martyn as he
risked life and limb to smother the ball at the feet of an onrushing Troyes attacker. Thankfully no
extra-time was needed and United progressed to the next round, albeit very
fortunately.
Every good
side needs a bit of luck and god knows Leeds were handed their fair share in their visit to
Troyes. Manager David O'Leary had warned
until he was blue in the face that this tie was not going to be easy, yet there
was doubt that even he expected his side to go quite so close to being knocked
out. French side Troyes could have been finished off a
fortnight previous when a rampant Leeds banged in four at Elland Road that should have had more. They
were almost made to pay for their missed chances as Troyes, backed by a fanatical French
crowd, went in search of a glorious victory. Patrice Loko's
double strike in the Elland Road leg had given them
hope a real shock was on the cards and until Robbie Keane nodded home a late
second goal for the visitors it looked very much like United's
European excursions had been over for another year.
To their
credit, Leeds were a side who would never lay down and they summoned up all
that battling spirit just when it was required to pull the game out of the
fire. Without Rio Ferdinand, Jonathan Woodgate and
Lee Bowyer, it was a seriously depleted Leeds side that took the field. United never seemed
to play well without Lee Bowyer, he was such an integral part of their game
plan, and once again he was sorely missed on the night. Eirik
Bakke did recover well enough from a knee injury, but
it was touch and go as both he and Rio Ferdinand's replacement, Michael Duberry, had to pass late fitness tests.
Troyes manager Alain Perrin had described
the match in his programme notes as his team's
Everest, and the players almost responded in the perfect way by scaling the
mountain they had left themselves to climb. They may have not been one of the
bigger French clubs, they were only formed in 1986, but they had heart and
enough quality to give United a real heart-stopping night. The first
palpitations were felt as early as the seventh minute when Patrice Loko's short corner found Gharib Amzine twenty-five yards from goal and he struck a pearler which swerved away from Nigel Martyn's
left hand and into the top corner. It was a stunning effort from the Moroccan,
sending the home fans into a frenzy and giving the Troyes players a belief Leeds could in fact be beat.
Nigel Martyn then had to be alert to save an effort from Jerome Rothen before Gharib Amzine again tried his luck from range only to see the
effort flash wide. United, as in their ill-fated trip to Maritimo
in the opening round, had started slowly, but the travel-sickness soon wore off
and they were on level terms again within minutes. Ian Harte
saw a twenty-five-yard free-kick saved by Troyes keeper Tony Heurtebis
before swinging in a corner that the keeper flapped at. Eirik
Bakke touched the ball back to David Batty and he
clipped the ball over for Mark Viduka to head in,
after fifteen minutes. The Aussie certainly loved European competition and was
on fire at that moment, it was his fifth goal in six games.
Mark Viduka almost earned United the lead with twenty-four
minutes on the clock as he charged down a clearance from Olivier Thomas and
managed to get a decent cross to the far post only for Mahamed
Bradja to jump in ahead of Robbie Keane and bundle
the ball against the post. A minute later Robbie Keane again had the chance to
net, but this time his low curling effort was frantically palmed away by the
home keeper. It was United's best spell of the match
and when Harry Kewell fired in a volley off the
underside of the crossbar it seemed as though it would have reaped its reward.
However, referee Massimo de Santis made the first of
many odd decisions by ruling it out and judging Robbie Keane had fouled Carl Tourenne in the build-up.
The
official was hardly popular with the Leeds contingent when he then awarded a free-kick
against stand-in skipper Olivier Dacourt when he had
seemingly tackled Patrice Loko fairly. The decision was
a crucial one as on the thirty-eight minute mark David Hamed
then delivered another thunderbolt out of the blue for the home side. From
fully forty yards his shot seemed to be causing little harm as it scuttled
towards goal, but it took a wicked deflection off Dominic Matteo's
shin and nestled into the bottom corner. The home tails were pricked once again
and Samuel Boutal tested Nigel Martyn
with a good effort the England stopper managed to tip over the
bar. United's problems continued as calf-injury victim
Harry Kewell was replaced by Jason Wilcox at the
break. It meant O'Leary's men were now without their choice wingers or central
defender and Troyes were intent on making the most of
their chance.
Danny Mills
almost put the ball into his own net shortly after the restart as Patrice Loko's fierce drive across goal deflected off his knee and
dropped just wide. But the host’s third goal was expected and it came just
before the hour as Rafik Saifi's
trickery was far too good for Michael Duberry on the
left byline and his pull back was met by Jerome Rothen's
sweet left foot drive. It should have been 4-1 minutes later as a devastatingly
quick break from the home side caught United cold.
David Hamed fed Jerome Rothen
out on the left and as he played the ball into Patrice Loko,
the former French international was all alone with only Nigel Martyn to beat. However, he took too long in his
deliberations and when he did finally pull the trigger he ballooned the chance
over the bar. It was a huge let-off for United and they are experienced enough
in Europe to know such chances do not come
along often.
Irish
sharp-shooter Robbie Keane spared United’s blushes
with a goal he did not realize his team urgently needed. United were trailing
3-1 with just fourteen minutes left to go, which made the aggregate 5-5, but Troyes had the advantage because of their
two away goals. Just before his priceless strike he had asked his midfield man Eirik Bakke, “Do we need another
one?” Fortunately the Norwegians
mathematics were more attuned to the situation and the twenty-one year-old
Irishman duly obliged when he timed his run to perfection to nip behind the Troyes defence and head the ball
home. “I looked at the linesman straight away to make sure I was not off-side,
and luckily the flag stayed down.” said Keane, of his most important strike
since arriving from Inter-Milan.
David Batty
it was who seized on it, picking up a rogue clearance forty yards from goal and
clipping it into the path of Mark Viduka. The Aussie
guided the ball across goal for Robbie Keane to nod into an empty net in the
seventy-seventh minute. Even then it was not finished as Gharib
Amzine again crashed an effort just wide and Nigel Martyn needed to pull off the save of the night, diving at
the feet of Nicolas Gousse in the closing minutes.
Extra-time would have been too much to bear, as it was the 6-5 aggregate
victory was enough excitement for one round.
Match Action:
Mark Viduka climbs to
head the first goal and applauds the Leeds fans
Danny Mills beats Carl Tourenne
to the ball
Eirik Bakke fights for the ball
Mark Viduka brushes
aside Carl Tourenne Jason Wilcox, Eirik Bakke and Robbie Keane
celebrate victory
Players:
Mark Viduka and
Robbie Keane scored for Leeds
Michael Duberry was
pressed into service after a late test
Gharib
Amzine, a Dominic Matteo
own goal and Jerome Rothen scored for Troyes
Rio Ferdinand, Jonathan Woodgate
and Lee Bowyer were all missing Olivier Dacourt was
Ian Harte’s freekick
stand-in skipper was saved
Harry Kewell hit the
bar but was replaced by Jason Wilcox
Nigel Martyn made several fine saves
David Batty found Mark Eirik Bakke played after a late test Danny Mills almost own goaled Nordin Jbari was an unused
Viduka to start the move
substitute
for the second goal
Carl Tourenne and Rafik Saifi came into the
starting team
Frederic Adam came on as a
substitute