Five Things We Learned From European Football This Weekend
8th April 2019
AFP Sport takes a look back at some of the main talking points from across the continent
- The title race is now effectively over in Spain after Barcelona beat Atletico Madrid on Saturday, but it's back on in Germany while Paris Saint-Germain contrived to squander the chance to clinch the French crown
- A surprise signing back in August destined to be a back-up to Paris Saint-Germain's all-star attack, injuries have given Eric Maxim Choupo-Moting a run in the team
- Carlo Ancelotti said he was alarmed by the performance of his Napoli side in a 1-1 draw against Genoa before their Europa League quarter-final, first-leg trip to Arsenal
PARIS, France-
The title race is now effectively over in Spain after Barcelona beat Atletico
Madrid on Saturday, but it's back on in Germany while Paris Saint-Germain contrived
to squander the chance to clinch the French crown.
AFP Sport takes a
look back at some of the main talking points from across the continent:
- All over for Atletico -
Any lingering hopes
Atletico Madrid had of turning the final seven games of La Liga into a title
race were dashed as Barcelona beat them 2-0 to move 11 points clear at the top
of the table.
Atletico coach Diego
Simeone had admitted winning at the Camp Nou was the "only option" to
revive their stuttering challenge but the task was made harder after Diego
Costa was sent off in the 28th minute for insulting referee Gil Manzano.
Even with 10 men,
Atleti almost held on for a point, only for Luis Suarez to break their
resistance with five minutes left, a brilliant curling shot nestling in the
corner. Lionel Messi added a second a minute later to round off the victory,
and leave Barca with one hand on the league trophy.
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- Choupo-Moting will go down in PSG legend -
A surprise signing
back in August destined to be a back-up to Paris Saint-Germain's all-star
attack, injuries have given Eric Maxim Choupo-Moting a run in the team.
The Cameroon
international has become something of a cult hero at the Parc des Princes and
put his side ahead in Sunday's game against Strasbourg with his third league
goal of the season.
But his
extraordinary miss later on, turning a net-bound Christopher Nkunku shot onto
the post while standing on the line, saw jaws hit the floor in the stadium.
It proved crucial in
denying PSG the chance to wrap up the Ligue 1 title. The score was 1-1 at the
time, and Thomas Tuchel's side -- needing a win to be crowned champions --
ended up drawing 2-2.
"Sorry about
that," Choupo-Moting said later.
One thing is for
sure though -- Choupo-Moting will now never be forgotten in Paris.
- Kovac can jump for joy -
Bayern Munich's
bombastic return to the top of the Bundesliga table had coach Niko Kovac understandably
jumping for joy on Saturday.
Kovac has been under
pressure in recent weeks, but is now back on course to win the title in his
first season after Bayern thrashed title rivals Borussia Dortmund 5-0.
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Usually a cool
character, Kovac could not hide his relief. He celebrated Bayern's third goal
by leaping into the air on the touchline, earning him comparisons with both
Michael Jordan and Jurgen Klopp.
"I had no idea
Niko Kovac could jump that high," Dortmund CEO Hans-Joachim Watzke told
Sky the following day.
Despite Bayern's
thumping win, the Bundesliga title race remains on a knife-edge, with just a
single point separating the two teams.
- Ancelotti alarm before Arsenal -
Carlo Ancelotti said
he was alarmed by the performance of his Napoli side in a 1-1 draw against
Genoa before their Europa League quarter-final, first-leg trip to Arsenal.
The draw against
Genoa, who played for an hour a man down, came days after a 2-1 defeat against
lowly Empoli.
Ancelotti insisted
his side were not neglecting Serie A with the focus on their only chance of a
trophy in the Europa League.
"I don't think
the players were distracted, because we haven't talked about Arsenal at
all," he said.
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"It's an alarm
bell, certainly, because if we play like this in London, then we're in
trouble."
- 'Scudetto' might be slipping away from Milan -
Gennaro Gattuso
believes AC Milan are still on track to achieve a Champions League return for
the first time since 2013/14 despite his side falling to their third defeat in
four games in a 2-1 loss against Juventus.
"We have to
achieve our Scudetto, which is Champions League qualification, at any
cost," said coach Gattuso, who won the trophy twice with Milan as a player.
Milan occupy the
final Champions League spot of fourth place, but Atalanta, Roma, Lazio and
Torino are all within touching distance.