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European glory for Spain
By Greg Demetriou at the CEZ Arena

All-conquering Spain have won the 2005 UEFA European
Futsal Championship but were made to work hard for the
victory by Russia.
World crown
The triumph comes little more than two months after
Javier Lozano's men won the FIFA Futsal World
Championship title in Chinese Taipei, and confirms their
status as the finest Futsal nation on the planet. Spain
previously won the UEFA title in 2001, having lost out
in the inaugural final in 1999 to today's opponents,
going down 4-2 on penalties after a 3-3 draw.
Andreu opener
Neither Lozano or his Russian counterpart Oleg Ivanov
had wanted to dwell on that previous meeting ahead of
today's contest in Ostrava, with only Spain's Andreu and
Russia's Mikhail Markin surviving from four years ago.
It was Andreu who scored Spain's first, breaking the
deadlock with a splendid ninth-minute goal, before
Alberto Cogorro's crucial second early in the second
half.
Bright start
Spain began the livelier with their opponents content to
sit back and strike quickly on the counterattack. Fran
Serrejón thought he had found a way through for Spain on
six minutes after being found unmarked by an oustanding
pass from Javi Rodríguez. The No4 could only hit the
crossbar when it seemed easier to score, although it did
come to him quickly.
Good support
The game continued in a similar vein with the Spanish
piling on the pressure from corners. The goal would
eventually come from such a set-piece with Andreu
gleefully converting for his third goal at these finals.
The thousands packed inside the arena leapt to their
feet.
Zouev inspired
Spain looked to quickly make it two when a superb
one-two move finished with Kike in front of Sergei Zouev,
but the Russian goalkeeper won the battle. Russia had
been trying their luck from long range, notably through
Vladislav Shayakhmetov but he was not to add to his five
goals at this competition.
Great move
With two minutes left in the half, a delightful pass
from Shayakhmetov found Sergei Ivanov in space. The No9
flicked the ball with the outside of his foot but his
effort spun just past the post. Russia knew they had a
chance but they were caught out a minute after the
restart. Again Kike was involved, as his fierce shot
ricocheted off the crossbar and fell invitingly for
Cogorro to score on the rebound.
Russian goal
Spain were to get more chances but Zouev was proving
inspired - enying Daniel with an outstanding stop. Amado
also had to be alert at the other end. However, the
Spain No1 had to pick the ball out of the net in the
31st minute when Konstantin Douchkevitch unleashed a
ten-metre drive into his bottom right-hand corner.
Kike close
Andreu could have extended Spain's lead again seconds
later but could not keep a difficult volley on target
when well-placed to score. Russia were proving just as
menacing, but knew they had to be careful in the last
five minutes after passing the five-foul mark. They were
certainly warned a minute later when Kike again hit the
frame of the goal.
Five attackers
Douchkevitch did his utmost to draw Russia level,
sending Amado sprawling. Frustrated by such dogged
defending, Russia sent Markin on as an extra outfield
player but their five attackers could not find a way
through. A last-gasp shot from Sergei Malyshev was the
best they could muster. Spain had stood firm in the face
of a resilient Russia and no one could dispute Julio's
right to hold the trophy aloft at the end.
For more details visit also:
http://www.uefa.com
http://www.futsalplanet.com/agenda/agenda-01.asp?id=4178
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