Russia beat Switzerland. Euroleague Beach Soccer

The Russian beach soccer team is one step away from winning the home stage of the Euroleague. And the ending of the match with Poland was outstanding.

The Russian beach soccer team began the home stage of the Euroleague with a confident victory over Azerbaijan with a score of 8:3. In another match of our group, Poland snatched victory from Switzerland with a score of 6:5. The Poles eagerly promised to give battle to Russia and noted that they were preparing for victory. Mikhail Likhachev's team approached this meeting as favorites, but this status needed to be confirmed in order to defend the title of the strongest team in Europe.

Master class from Romanov and Krasheninnikov

The game scenario was basically predicted before it started. Russia held the ball more, and the Poles chose defensive tactics. Why not, because at the World Championships big football This is exactly the tactic that worked in most cases. In the second minute, Artur Fern had a chance to open the scoring in this match, but the opposing goalkeeper played great. It should also be noted that coaching staff The Russian national team was left with only seven field players for the rest of the Euroleague. The fact is that Boris Nikonorov received a knee injury and was out for an indefinite period.

There were many spectators in the stands; the Yantar stadium in Strogino was almost completely filled. What can I say, we love beach soccer. And the location chosen for the tournament is excellent; nearby there is a well-maintained beach with a pond, a place for walking and active recreation. Meanwhile, Likhachev’s charges continued to look for ways to the Poles’ goal. Dmitry Shishin and Alexey Makarov were close to the goal, but four and a half minutes before the end of the first period the scoreboard showed zeros.

Some were putting pressure, but others had the best chance to distinguish themselves. The Polish national team forward picked up the rebound near Maxim Chuzhkov's goal and headed it into the empty goal. The crossbar saved Russia. And yet, at the end of the period, luck smiled on Likhachev’s charges. Kirill Romanov, while falling, intercepted his partners' pass with his head and raised the fans to their feet. Not even a minute had passed before the Russians doubled their lead. Yuri Krasheninnikov completed the cool combination with a precise strike. A difficult start for the Russian team, but how wonderful the plays were at the end of the first period. It was a real master class.

Calm before the storm?

The Russian team was on a roll after a great ending to the first period and started the second 12 minutes with dangerous attacks. Fern and Shishin could have created an even more comfortable start for the hosts, but it didn’t work out. The game calmed down completely for a while. Both teams seemed to be practicing overhead shots, but almost no one hit the target. Apparently, Likhachev asked his guys to play a little more carefully and carefully so as not to allow the opponent to take the initiative. The Russians were not shy about playing through the goalkeeper, and Chuzhkov touched the ball more often than some players from the Polish national team.

Apparently, the Russian coaching staff thought that Chuzhkov had already played enough and replaced him with Ivan Ostrovsky, who played great against Azerbaijan. At the end of the second period, the debutant of the Russian national team Ostap Fedorov had several excellent chances to score, but acted uncertainly in the final stage. As a result, a rare event for beach soccer happened - the period ended with the score 0:0.

Performance at the end

Surprisingly, the beginning of the third period was very calm. And this despite the fact that the Polish team had to win back two goals. However, things didn’t come to any dangerous moments at Ostrovsky’s goal. But Likhachev’s team created two great chances through Makarov’s efforts and, in theory, could have finished the game, but the Polish goalkeeper was fine. Meanwhile, there were only six minutes left until the end of the match. And yet Makarov scored his goal! First he earned a dangerous free-kick, and then fired a great shot from the bottom left corner. Anything can happen in beach soccer, but it is almost impossible to overcome three goals from the Russian national team in five minutes. Moreover, Shishin soon made the score 4:0 in favor of the Russians.

Poland eventually won one goal back from the penalty spot for a foul by Krasheninnikov, who also received a yellow card for his violation. And a couple of minutes later, Polish national team forward Pavel Frischkemut reduced his team’s gap to two goals with a biscuit strike - 2:4. Obviously, the teams have opened a portal to spectacular and productive football. Artur Fernip placed the ball right into the top corner of Maciej Marciniak's goal. Immediately the goalkeeper of the Polish national team scored a beautiful shot and made the score 3:5. The guests could have scored and aggravated the situation in the match to the limit, but right there Dmitry Shishin scored a double and put an end to the game - 6:3 in favor of the Russian team. Tomorrow at 18:30 Moscow time, Likhachev’s team will play with Switzerland.

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Euro Beach Soccer League 2017

Euroleague Beach Soccer 2017

Traditionally, the Beach Soccer Euroleague in 2017 will consist of five stages, after which the Superfinal will be played, in which the 7 best beach soccer teams based on the results of all five stages will take part, plus the host country of the Superfinal, which is the Italian national team in 2017 , reports newsli.ru.

Euroleague Beach Soccer Schedule 2017:

Division A

First stage

Group 1: Russia, Spain, Germany, France

Germany - Spain

· Russia - France

Germany - Russia

· Spain - France

Germany - France

· Russia - Spain

Second stage

Group 1: Ukraine, Spain, Poland, Greece

Group 2: Portugal, Italy, Switzerland, France

· Ukraine - Spain

· Poland - Greece

· Ukraine - Poland

· Spain - Greece

· Greece - Ukraine

· Spain - Poland

· Italy - Portugal

· France - Switzerland

· Italy - France

· Portugal - Switzerland

· Italy - Switzerland

· Portugal - France

Third stage

Group 1: Russia, Belarus, Switzerland, Greece

· Belarus - Greece

· Russia - Switzerland

· Belarus - Russia

· Switzerland - Greece

· Belarus - Switzerland

· Russia - Greece

Fourth stage

Group 1: Portugal, Belarus, Poland, Azerbaijan

· Azerbaijan - Belarus

· Poland - Portugal

· Azerbaijan - Poland

· Belarus - Portugal

· Azerbaijan - Portugal

· Belarus - Poland

Fifth stage

Group 1: Ukraine, Italy, Germany, Azerbaijan

· Azerbaijan - Germany

· Ukraine - Italy

· Azerbaijan - Italy

Germany - Ukraine

· Azerbaijan - Ukraine

Germany - Italy

Super final

Participants: host country + 7 best teams based on the results of five stages.

www.newsli.ru

Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

  • FIBA Euroleague 1999-2000

ushakov.academic.ru

Euroleague beach soccer is... What is Euroleague beach soccer?

 Euroleague Beach Soccer This term has other meanings, see Euroleague.

The European Beach Soccer League (EBSL, abbreviated as Euro Beach Soccer League) is an annual competition among European beach soccer teams. Previously called the European Pro Beach Soccer League. The league has two divisions - A and B.

Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

  • FIBA Euroleague 1999-2000
  • TRC "Europe" (metrotram station)

See what “Euro Beach Soccer League” is in other dictionaries:

biograf.academic.ru

Euroleague Beach Soccer 2014 - WiKi

Euro Beach Soccer League 2014 (EBSL) is an annual European tournament beach soccer. The competition involves beach soccer teams who play during the summer months. Each season ends with a Super Final, which determines the winner of the tournament.

Euroleague Beach Soccer 2014 Tournament detailsDate Teams Places PrizesChampion Second place Third place Fourth place Tournament statisticsMatches played Goals scored Scorer(s)
2014 Euro Beach Soccer League
Official logo

24 (from 1 confederation)

5 (in 5 host cities)

Russia (4th title)

662 (7.7 per match)

Noel Ott (21 goals)

This season, twelve teams in two divisions will take part, which at each stage will compete with each other in a round-robin system. Division A consists of the top 12 teams in the European BSWW rankings. Division B consists of 12 teams at the bottom of the rankings and new teams. Each division has its own rules and competition format.

Each Division A team will play in two preliminary stages, in order to earn points, and Division B one. The top eight teams from Division A (including the stage winners and host country Spain) will play in the Super Final in Torredembarra, Spain from 14 to 17 August. The first seven teams of Division B (including stage winners), and last command Division A will play in the Promo Final to try to secure a place in Division A next year.

This tournament is a qualifier for the European Games 2015. The top six teams are Division A and one best team Division B will take part in the 2015 European Games. Azerbaijan has qualified as the host country.

Teams from Division A will compete for the EuroLeague Beach Soccer title, while teams from Division B will compete to compete in Division A next year.

Due to the refusal of the Romanian national team to participate in the tournament, they were replaced by the best team in Division B - Greece. The place of Greece was taken by the Kazakhstan team.

Participating teams

Division A

Group 1
Command I B B+ P GZ GP +/- O
3 3 0 0 11 5 +6 9
3 1 0 2 10 8 +2 3
3 1 0 2 9 12 −3 3
3 1 0 2 9 14 −5 3
Group 2

Schedule and results

Start times for all matches are based on Catania local time (UTC+02:00).

Individual awards

MVP: Noel Ott Top scorer: Noel Ott (11 goals) Best goalkeeper: Sacha Penke

Total number of goals per stage

87 goals were scored, an average of 7.25 goals per match.

ru-wiki.org

Euroleague Beach Soccer - Gpedia, Your Encyclopedia

The current version of the page has not yet been verified by experienced participants and may differ significantly from the version verified on June 22, 2013; checks require 27 edits. The current version of the page has not yet been verified by experienced participants and may differ significantly from the version verified on June 22, 2013; checks require 27 edits. Skip to navigation Skip to search This term has other meanings, see Euroleague.

The European Beach Soccer League (EBSL, abbreviated as Euro Beach Soccer League) is an annual competition among European beach soccer teams. Previously called the European Pro Beach Soccer League. The league has two divisions - A and B.

Wards Mikhail Likhachev confidently dealt with the teams of Azerbaijan and Poland, scoring 14 goals in two matches. The victory over the Swiss team in the final match allowed the Russians to win the home stage of the Euroleague. In certain situations, even a defeat left Russia a chance to win the stage, but the team was definitely not going to think about it. Yes and for overall standings It was important for the Euroleague to score maximum points in Moscow. Moreover, fans once again filled the stands of the Yantar stadium in Strogino almost to capacity.

Beach beauty. Russia successfully begins the defense of the Euroleague title

Time passes, but the Russian national team still plays beach soccer well. Ours started the Euroleague confident victory over Azerbaijan.

A difficult start

The teams know each other well. Usually matches between the Russian and Swiss national teams are extremely productive. This time the opponents started the game very calmly. It seemed that no one was in a hurry to attack, but the apparent calm was broken by the Swiss players. Noel Ott took him by surprise with an excellent shot into the bottom corner Maxim Chuzhkova. For the first time at this stage of the Euroleague, the Russian team had to win back. The spectators understood that Likhachev’s charges needed support, and began to actively chant “Russia-Russia”. The players heard the fans and performed a cool combination, which was completed by Kirill Romanov, but the ball hit the post.

The Russian goalkeeper Chuzhkov tried to throw the ball into the top corner of his counterpart’s goal, but he was ready for this. The Swiss dug in on the defensive and completely stopped controlling the ball. Russia pressed more and more powerfully. Beats Shkarina And Krasheninnikova could have scored goals, but in the end the best scorer in the history of domestic beach soccer scored Dmitry Shishin. A fully deserved goal from Likhachev's team. At the end of the first period, the Russians could well have taken the lead, but by some miracle the ball did not hit the Swiss goal after Chuzhkov’s shot.


We had a blast. Russia defeated Poland and entertained the crowd

The Russian beach soccer team is one step away from winning the home stage of the Euroleague. And the ending of the match with Poland was outstanding.

Russian-Swiss swing

At the beginning of the second period Alexey Makarov came into a shooting position, but shot just to the right of the bottom corner of the opponent’s goal. It is unlikely that Mikhail Likhachev will be satisfied with the percentage of scoring chances his players converted in the first half of the meeting. The score could easily have become 3:1 or 4:1 by the third minute of the second twelve minutes. After a couple of minutes, the guests created their best moment in the second period. The Swiss top scorer, Ott, miraculously avoided blocking his partner's cross with his head. This moment was supposed to encourage the wards Angelo Shirinzi, but it turned out just the opposite. Arthur Fern with the help of a small rebound, he brought the Russian team ahead in this meeting.

Unfortunately, the hosts did not lead for long. Glenn Hodle A few minutes later he went one-on-one with Chuzhkov and confidently beat the Russian goalkeeper. I had to start all over again. Switzerland could have regained the lead in the score, but the blow Michael Mitsev Chuzhkov repelled with a brilliant jump, drawing applause from the audience. Before the break, the score did not change, which left the intrigue open before the final segment of the match.

Decisive blow by Krasheninnikov

At the end of the second period, Likhachev changed the goalkeeper. Substituted for Maxim Chuzhkov Ivan Ostrovsky. The Russian coaching staff used the same move in the game with Poland. Russia clearly did not want to bring the matter to extra time, so at the beginning of the third period they rushed to the attack. And she ran into an attack from the Swiss. Philip Borer was left alone in front of Ostrovsky's goal, but the Russian national team goalkeeper made the most spectacular save of the match, maintaining parity on the scoreboard. Towards the end of normal time, Ostrovsky made another miraculous save, pulling the ball out from under the crossbar after an overhead kick from Mitsev.

Regular time ended in a draw with the score 2:2. The Russian national team, in any case, has already become the winner of the home stage of the Euroleague, but for the overall standings of the tournament I wanted to win two points for winning in overtime or at least a point for winning in a penalty shootout. Yuri Krasheninnikov He didn’t put things off and put Russia ahead in the second second of overtime. Likhachev's team managed to hold on to the winning score until the end of extra time and registered a third victory in the third Euroleague match. Everything is going according to plan.