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regular-article-logo Monday, 23 December 2024

Real Madrid flash early warning

David Alaba and Karim Benzema on target as the Men in White lifts Uefa Super Cup, beating Eintracht Frankfurt

AP/PTI Helsinki Published 12.08.22, 03:26 AM
Real Madrid’s Karim Benzema lifts the trophy as he celebrates with teammates after winning the Super Cup in Helsinki on Wednesday.

Real Madrid’s Karim Benzema lifts the trophy as he celebrates with teammates after winning the Super Cup in Helsinki on Wednesday. Twitter

This time, there were only two goals. David Alaba and Karim Benzema scored in each half for Real Madrid to win the Uefa Super Cup with a 2-0 victory over Eintracht Frankfurt on Wednesday.

Alaba prodded the opener home from close range in the 37th minute when Casemiro cushioned Benzema’s header back after a corner.

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The French star then sealed Madrid’s record-equaling fifth Super Cup title in the 65th thanks to an assist from the lively Vinícius Junior. It was Benzema’s 324th goal for Madrid, overtaking club legend Raul.

Only Cristiano Ronaldo has more — 450 goals for the club between 2009 and 2018. Benzema, who had also joined Madrid in 2009, lifted the trophy for Madrid, his first as captain after taking over from Marcelo.

Barcelona and AC Milan are the only other clubs to have won the cup five times. Madrid coach Carlo Ancelotti became the first to win the Super Cup four times. He is also the first manager to win the Champions League four times and grab league title in each of Europe’s top-five leagues.

But the game between the Champions League winners, Madrid, and Europa champions, Frankfurt, failed to match the spectacle of their previous meeting.

Their only other competitive game was the 1960 European Cup final, when Alfredo Di Stefano scored three goals and Ferenc Puskas chipped in with four to give Madrid a 7-3 win and fifth consecutive European crown.

Frankfurt goalscorer Erwin Stein and teammate Dieter Stinka were in Helsinki for the rematch 62 years later, but it was the 93-year-old Jose Santamaria — the only remaining Madrid player from that final in Glasgow — who celebrated another win.

Frankfurt were keen to make amends for a 6-1 rout at home to Bayern Munich in the Bundesliga opening game last Friday.

Frankfurt’s Jesper Lindstrom drew a save from Thibaut Courtois early on, though the flag went up for offside, giving the Danish midfielder the distinction of being the first in a European club competition to force Uefa’s new semi-automated offside technology into action.

Lindstrom then set up Daichi Kamada, who was onside, before Courtois blocked his effort. They were to be Frankfurt’s only real chances. Frankfurt keeper Kevin Trapp produced a fine save to stop the next Vinicius effort in the 37th, but Madrid scored from the resultant corner when Benzema and Casemiro combined to give Alaba an easy finish.

Benzema went close shortly afterward as Madrid ended the first half in the ascendancy, and Vinícius tested Trapp again early in the second. The Brazilian cut inside to set up Benzema’s goal, when the French forward let fly with a direct shot past Trapp.

Comforted by the two-goal cushion, the Spanish champions began turning on the style with intricate passing combinations — albeit without adding to their tally.

“We didn’t play a spectacular game, but we were really solid. Our usual,” Ancelotti said.

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