Manchester, London and El Clasico: Three of football’s great derbies

By O Golfan / Roar Rookie

Regardless of league position or a potential gulf in quality between the adversaries, football fans know that derbies have an intense rivalry like nothing else in sport.

In a wonderful week to be a football fan, we have being treated to three of football’s great derbies. Adding extra spice to an already boiling pot, all three matches had a decisive impact on the destiny of their respective league titles.

London, Chelsea 6 versus 0 Arsenal
Chelsea have displayed the ability to counter-attack at breakneck speed on numerous occasions this season.

Arsene Wenger seemed to ignore this obvious fact and employed a suicidal starting XI with no less than four attacking midfielders – Tomas Rosicky, Santi Cazorla, Alex Oxlade-Chamberlain and Lukas Podolski. Arsenal left Mikael Arteta, hardly an enforcer, as the only deep-lying midfielder.

These are players with limited expertise when it comes to tracking back and providing defensive cover.

Chelsea exploited Arsenal to no end. Excellent finishing from Samuel Eto’o and Andre Shurrle, followed by a bizarre handball in the box by Oxlade-Chamberlain, for which the referee mistakenly sent off Kieran Gibbs, and Chelsea were 3-0 up after 15 minutes.

Oxlade-Chamberlain pleaded with the referee that the wrong player had been sent off, and that he should be the one to leave the pitch. Perhaps the whole Arsenal team should have walked off! As a contest, the match was over after the first quarter of an hour.

In the shrewd Eto’o, Chelsea have finally found a striker who provides a true goal-scoring threat. Eto’o has rediscovered his finishing touch, and is now up to 11 goals this season. Most importantly, he looks a lot more interested in playing than Chelsea’s other striking option, Fernando Torres.

Chelsea continue to fight on brightly in this season’s title race. For Arsenal fans, they might have to wait quite a few seasons before getting the better of their London rivals in the Premier League pecking order.

El Clasico, Madrid, Real Madrid 3 versus 4 Barcelona
While not technically a derby in the true geographical sense, El Clasico is arguably the single contest that football fans worldwide most look forward to. For pure footballing quality and theatre, El Clasico is unmatched.

In a game that had it all, Di Maria shone. Adept on both feet, with excellent control and lightning speed, he cut the Barcelona defence to shreds on numerous occasions.

Real Madrid can thank Di Maria for their two first half goals as he twice placed the ball on a platter for Karim Benzema to find the back of the net.

However, Real Madrid insisted on being offensive in defence. Applying pressure well up the pitch provided Barcelona added space when they played through Real Madrid at pace.

Quick movement from Barcelona on two occasions allowed the accomplished Andreas Iniesta and Lionel Messi to provide the finishing touch. El Clasico was wonderfully poised at 2-2 after a riveting first half.

With stars of such superb skill on the pitch, careful defending in the penalty box can be quite a proposition! It proved the case in the second half when Cristiano Ronaldo, Neymar and Iniesta all cleverly won penalties for their team.

The penalty won by Neymar proved pivotal – it was accompanied by a red card for Sergio Ramos who denied Neymar a clear goal scoring opportunity.

Messi finished as the hero of El Clasico with a hat-trick in the battle of football’s best players. His ability with and without the ball is unparalleled, and his capacity to involve his teammates is an art form to behold.

Barcelona’s 4-3 El Clasico win brought a new team to the summit of La Liga – Atletico Madrid. This is a title race that football fans can be enthusiastic about!

Manchester, Manchester United 0 versus 3 Manchester City
How times have changed in the battle for Manchester! City are no longer noisy neighbours, rather, they are annually among the title favourites.

Meanwhile, David Moyes’ unconvincing first season as United manager has meant that he faces intense scrutiny from the media and United fans whenever he moves a muscle.

It took no time at all for City’s stellar midfielders to magically appear goal side of the United defence! After 44 seconds, David Silva and Samir Nasri had fired shots dangerously at the United goal. The duo’s incisive play presented a hungry Eden Dzeko with a simple tap-in.

In the opening ten minutes City were able find space in the United penalty area with distinct ease. Yet, the score remained at just 1-0. City didn’t play with killer instinct in the way that helped Chelsea destroy Arsenal in the opening stages of the London derby.

So many City players found space in the attacking penalty area that the game was bound to open up for United. Sadly for them, they are totally incoherent going forward. Star signing Juan Mata saw plenty of the ball, but hardly posed a threat. Head down at times, Mata casts a frustrated figure.

Second half City goals to Dzeko and the prolific Yaya Toure ensured a comfortable Manchester derby victory.

Recently, City had lost their striking mojo as Dzeko, Sergio Aguero and Alvaro Negredo went on a run of 19 combined appearances without a goal. In that time, City were knocked out of both the Champions League and FA Cup.

However, Dzeko has scored three times in his last two games. Can he be the striker to drive City towards the Premier League title?

The Crowd Says:

2014-04-01T10:10:29+00:00

Dan

Guest


Would love to attend a Bundesliga derby. Always been an underrated league (probably not so much now after Bayern and Dortmunds CL success last year)

2014-04-01T10:06:09+00:00

Dan

Guest


I think it's just the fact that there are so many 'London derbies' they seem a bit insignificant. I support West Ham and I love it when we beat the London teams (actually any win lately makes me happy)

2014-03-30T08:25:56+00:00

Freddie

Guest


Not at all. I don't necessarily like the fact that money talks, but the gap was widening to enormous levels through the Champs Lge cash. What other choice did they have? FFP is financial doping to assist the "big" clubs, maintain the status quo. Platini admitted as much in an interview last year. Protectionism of the worst kind, and ex United CEO David gill is leading the charge. Keep on thinking you're on the side of the righteous though. Delusional.

2014-03-29T22:03:11+00:00

fadida

Guest


The money was acquired through success, on and off field as you yourself admit (CL money). You had to be top 4 to make the CL. Keep telling yourself that PSG, City, Chelski haven't been financially doped

2014-03-29T17:19:36+00:00

Freddie

Guest


Nothing to do with the champs league millions that were rolling in? Or having chairman like Martin Edwards pushing for changes in the rules to change the distribution of gate money so the home clubs could keep all of it? Remember Peter Kenyon during his time at United saying some smaller clubs would have to go the wall because the bigger clubs couldn't keep subsidising them? You keep telling yourself United are the bastion of old-fashioned goodness. The rest of us know its bollocks.

2014-03-29T14:03:20+00:00

AZ_RBB

Guest


Watched each of the 3 matches mentioned. Clasico was an incredible encounter as it almost always is. The other two not so much this time around. But I also watched the Ruhr Derby last week between Dortmund and Schalke. Only 1 point separated the two teams vying for a distant second spot in the Bundesliga. The last derby was controversial for clashes between the two sets of fans. But there was none of that rubbish this time around. Instead it was a deafening wall of noise for 90mins, creating an atmosphere far superior to anything else in any of the other top leagues in Europe. Really amazing stuff. Wasn't the most entertaining game but the soundtrack created by the 80 000 inside the stadium more than compensated.

2014-03-29T12:40:09+00:00

fadida

Guest


Back in the days of old clubs made money through the turnstiles, merchandising and by being successful, thus increasing profile and profits. This money was then spent in Veron et al. Others had a rich bast&$@ take over and gave them 200 mill to spend in a transfer window, having spent the previous decades mired in mediocrity and not having two cents to rub together.

2014-03-29T11:43:30+00:00

Freddie

Guest


Always raises a smile to hear United fans whingeing about financial doping. How quickly they forget the 28mil on Veron, the 30mil on Ferdinand. It'll be interesting to see if United respond to this seasons woe by going out and spending big in the off-season. Without Champs League riches, they'll be at huge risk of falling foul of the Financial Fair Play thingie. Oh, the irony.

2014-03-29T11:15:54+00:00

Adam3000

Guest


Cleverly won penalties? The foul on Robaldo was incorrectly given when contact happened outside the box. Neymar went down with the slightest of touches, although without contact probably 99% to round the keeper and score

2014-03-29T10:08:41+00:00

Brian

Guest


Biggest derby always used to be milan. Now I would say Madrid followed by Manchester and Dortmund v Schalke. Arsenal v Tottenham big but Arsenal v Chelsea more just a big game.

2014-03-29T02:28:25+00:00

Football United

Guest


Agree, they're big teams and it's a big game to them but it isn't a big derby.

2014-03-29T01:12:37+00:00

fadida

Guest


As a United man (Moyes out btw ;) ), Liverpool is still the big one. Up until City's financial doping (and better choice of managers) the derby was like Barca/Espanyol, powerful big brothers swatting away a pesky little brother, generally with ease. Defeats to City were a pain in the bum simply and only because they could cost United crucial title chasing points (and spare City the drop again)

2014-03-28T23:28:05+00:00

Steve

Guest


"In a game that had it all, Di Maria shone. Adept on both feet, with excellent control and lightning speed, he cut the Barcelona defence to shreds on numerous occasions." Agree with all of this except "adept on both feet". Di Maria is a magnificent player, one of my favourites, but he is one of the most one-footed players I've ever seen. It doesn't seem to matter when his left is so good though. He also provided a platter to Benzema 4 times in the first half, and the Frenchman was only able to convert 2. Di Maria and Messi (and Aguero) will go a long way to deciding WC 14' (like the three R's in 02'). In fact, there are a lot of parallels between the Brazil 02' side and the Argentina 14' side. Can you name the midfielders and centre backs for both teams? All about their attacks (of course Brazil also had Roberto Carlos and Cafu). The future "derby" (in the Clasico sense) in the Premier League will surely be Chelsea vs City. Very evenly matched, both with expensively assembled squads, and these will be the two clubs vying for the league every season for a little while. Arsenal are not good enough against the other big clubs anymore to really warrant big 'derby' status. If Moyes stays at United, then they too will become increasingly irrelevant (big IF obviously).

2014-03-28T22:43:40+00:00

ciudadmarron

Guest


I don't think the Arsenal Chelsea derby is one that deserves... well, anything really. The proximity in the league is all this one was about.

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