Showing posts with label Bolivia national team. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Bolivia national team. Show all posts

Group A Copa América 2011

Match reports and highlights from Group A of the 2011 Copa América tournament.

Standings

TeamPldWDLGFGAGDPts
 Colombia321030+37
 Argentina312031+35
 Costa Rica310224-23
 Bolivia301215-41

Results


01-07-11
Argentina 1-1 Bolivia
02-07-11
Colombia 1-0 Costa Rica
06-07-11
Argentina 0-0 Colombia
07-07-11
Bolivia 0-2 Costa Rica
10-07-11
Colombia 2-0 Bolivia
11-07-11
Argentina 3-0 Costa Rica

Match reports

Copa América 2011 kicked off with great fanfare on 1 July 2011 in La Plata. After the completion of the opening ceremony the first game featured the hosts Argentina against a Bolivia side thet had not won in 9 games and had not experienced victory outside their own borders for 19 games.

The game was a real disappointment for the star studded Argentine team, they failed to score in the first half and then went a goal behind after Edvaldo Rojas put the visitors ahead in the early minutes of the second half when his flick managed to dribble slowly past Ever Banega and goalkeeper Sergio Romero. Argentina huffed and puffed but couldn't find an equaliser until five minutes after the introduction of substitute Sergio Agüero, who scored with a thumping volley on 76'. Argentina didn't really come close to scoring a winner in the remaining minutes. A 1-1 draw against such humble opponents could only be seen as a disastrous start to the tournament for the hosts. As for Bolivia their Argentine manager Gustavo Quinteros can be rightly proud of his players, their hard work and tactical discipline earned them a share of the points in a game against the host nation and favourites.

In the next game Colombia recorded a narrow 1-0 victory against an inexperienced Costa Rica side. In my predictions for the tournament I expressed concerns that Costa Rica would take a mauling in this game, however they looked robust for most of the first half, even after Randall Brenes got himself sent off after 28 minutes. Adrian Ramos scored Colombia's goal seconds before half-time after a defence splitting pass from Fredy Guarín, one of the few times that Colombia managed to show up the inexperience of the Costa Rica back line.

Argentina's status as tournament favourites was further diminished after they could only manage a tepid 0-0 draw with Colombia. The second highly disappointing result for the home side has got Sergio Batista's many critics riled up and it is no surprise given the incoherent and inept display his team put on. Argentina looked out of ideas up front and relied on goalkeeper Sergio Romero to make a number of vital saves at the back. This criticism of Argentina shouldn't detract from Colombia's achievements so far, they were in far from scintilating form in their opening two games and this draw hardly compares to Colombia's finest ever result on Argentine soil back in 1993 but they have secured a couple of good results and put themselves on the brink of qualifying for the knockout stages of a senior international tournament for the first time since they reached the Copa América semi-finals in 2004 as defending champions.

After their solid and disciplined display to earn apoint against Argentina Bolivia crashed to a 0-2 defeat against a highly inexperienced Costa Rica side. This was Bolivia's 20th successive game without a win on foreign soil and leaves them needing nothing short of a win against Colombia in their final group game if they intend to reach the second round. The first half was fairly evenly matched with 19 year old striker Joel Campbell standing out with his pace and ball control he was involved in the best of Costa Rica's play for the remainder of the match. Costa Rica's Argentine coach Ricardo Lavolpe must have been glowing with pride as his young team took control of the game in the second half, especially given the fact that only two of his players were over the age of 22, (27 year old defenders Heiner Mora & Johnny Acosta). Josue Martínez opened the scoring in the 59th minute after fine work from Joel Campbell in the buildup. Campbell then hit the crossbar with a cracking free kick before Bolivia were reduced to 10 men in the 71st minute as Ronald Rivero was sent off for blocking a goalbound shot with his arm. Substitute Allen Guevara missed the penalty but Bolivia's indiscipline cost them again on 76' when Walter Flores was sent off for kicking out at Joel Campbell. In the 79th minute Campbell scored the goal that his performance so richly deserved. The result leaves hosts Argentina in third place and dependent on beating Costa Rica in their final match to ensure qualification.

Colombia secured their progression to the quarter-finals with a comfortable 2-0 victory against Bolivia, Radamel Falcao scored both of their goals in the first half. The result ensured that Colombia topped the group and completed a group stage without conceding a single goal, the only other time they achieved this was in 2001 when they won the tournament.

Argentina went into their final group game with Costa Rica knowing that anything other than a win would lead to almost certain elimination. The hosts won the game 3-0, Sergio Agüero established a one goal lead just before half-time tapping in after a goalkeeper error.  Agüero scored his second early in the second half after a perfectly weighted assist from Lionel Messi. Then in the 63rd minute Messi set up Ángel Di María for the third with an even better pass. The result meant that Argentina qualified automatically as group runner-up and that Costa Rica would have to wait to find out if they would qualify as one of the two best third placed teams, however with only three points and a goal difference of minus three, they were dependent on an unlikely sequence of results.

Golazo: Roberto Palacios, Peru vs Bolivia, Copa América 2004





6 July 2004: Legendary Peruvian striker Roberto Palacios marked his record breaking 106th appearance for the Peru national team with this wonderful goal. It came in an entertaining 2-2 draw against Bolivia in the group stage of the 2004 Copa América tournament hosted by Peru.

This goal could be seen as the highlight of the tournament for the hosts, they were eliminated in the quarter finals after a 0-1 defeat to Argentina, Carlos Tévez scoring the only goal of the game with a superb free kick.

Part of the Golazo series.

What ever happened to? Jaime Moreno

Jaime Moreno in the
Middlesbrough away strip.
When Bryan Robson took over as Middlesbrough manager in 1994 one of his earliest signings was Bolivian striker Jaime Moreno from Bolivian side Blooming. Moreno was the first Bolivian to play professional football in the UK, back in the era when the influx of foreign footballers to English football was only a steady trickle.

He played 20 league games for Middlesbrough in the 1994-95 season scoring one goal, which came in a 1-1 draw against Barnsley on 11 March 1995. He did not have a good goal scoring record for Middlesbrough but he is fondly remembered as one of the squad that won the 1994-95 division one championship and promotion to the Premier league.

It was during his time in the North-East that Jaime met his wife Louise. She went with him to live in the US, they have had five children.

In 1996 he left the Boro to join MLS "soccer" side DC United. His first few years with the team were a great success, he helped them to win the MLS Cup in 1996 and 1997, the US Open Cup in 1996 and he won the MLS Golden Boot with 16 goals in 1997 .

He was a key player for the Bolivia national team during the 1997 Copa América where they reached the final only to lose out 2-0 against Brazil, easily their best performance in the competition since they won it for the one and only time in 1963.

In 1997 he was loaned back to Middlesbrough where he scored a single goal in his five appearances, an 80th minute winner against Stoke City on 1 February 1998.

Moreno became an iconic player
for MLS side DC United.
Back at DC United in 1998 he was part of the team that won the international CONCACAF Champions League and then the last ever edition of the Copa Interamericana (Interamerican Cup) beating Brazilian side Vasco da Gama 2-1 on aggregate. That season he was runner up in the MLS MVP (most valuable player) to fellow Bolivian team mate Marco Etcheverry.

In 1999 he helped DC United to another MLS Cup scoring the winning goal in the final, he then played in his fourth Copa América tournament for Bolivia. In the early 2000s his form began to slip and he put on weight. He was dropped from the Bolivia national team in 2000, missed most of the 2001 season due to injury and most of the 2002 season due to a fall out with coach Ray Hudson. In 2003 he was traded to New York MetroStars where he scored 2 goals in 11 games, including one against DC United.

In 2004 he returned to United and began to regain his form, helping United to their 4th MLS Cup and earning another nomination for the MVP award at the end of the season. In 2005 he was named in the MLS all Time Best XI along with fellow South Americans Marco Etcheverry and Carlos Valderrama.

Jaime Moreno played 75 times for the Bolivia national team.
In 2007 Moreno made a surprise return to the Bolivia national team in a friendly against Ireland, ending nearly seven years of international exile. He did enough to earn himself a place in the Copa América 2007 squad, but there was no repeat of the 1997 success with Bolivia eliminated in the first round in his fifth and last appearance in the tournament. He made his 75th and last appearance for Bolivia on 22 October 2008 in a 2-0 defeat to El Salvador, making him the 9th most capped player in the history of the Bolivia national team.

In 2010 Jaime and his wife launched their charity called 99 Dreams, One Heart Foundation, which has the twin objectives of supporting youth development in soccer and funding research into Lyme disease (his wife and two of his children are sufferers).

By the time Moreno announced his imminent retirement from professional football on 12 August 2010 he had set the all time goalscoring record in the MLS currently 132, became the only player to achieve 100 goals and 100 assists in the league, had been picked in 5 MLS Best XIs and the All Time Best XI and is one of only two players to have played in all of the15 MLS seasons along with Jesse Marsch.
 

When Moreno moved to the US he intended to stay a couple of years then move back to European football, but as it went his family settled there and he became a club legend and a record breaking player in American soccer. The Boro faithful that saw Moreno playing game after game without scoring back in in 1994 may find it hard to believe that he has had all of this success since leaving the club, but I'm fairly sure that none of them begrudge him it.

See also




Part of the What ever happened to? series.