Domestic flaws don’t cut it at higher level
Champions League Analysis
JJ Devaney
IT is fair to say when you take the step up to the Champions League you really don’t want to concede from a similar long ball to the one that caught you out against your domestic title rivals two days previous.
For the second game running Evan McMilan struggled when turned under a high ball and while Molde striker Daniel Chukwu had much to do from the initial mistake it was a terribly frustrating way to concede.
Sligo Rovers were nervous defensively all night against a team that did not pressurise the Airtricity League Premier Division champions’ back four when in possession. But for some excellent first-half saves from Gary Rogers, this tie could have been dead before the second leg in Norway next week.
The home side’s midfield was a mixed bag of industry and graft – but little craft. The Rovers’ midfield five certainly stifled Molde’s abilty to pick passes and play, but often the hustle and bustle of Lynch and Connelly came up short when subtler skills were needed.
A lack of width hampered the attack and, with no Alan Keane overlaps as an outlet, it was often all huff and puff in the centre of the park. Djilali and Keane’s late introductions set the midfield free to stretch Molde but it was too late to redeem the first leg tie.
With his strike partner from Sunday’s Airtricity League Premier Division game, David McMilan, operating in a wide right berth, Anthony Elding cut a lonely figure against a combative Molde back four.
One can scarcely recall even a half-chance for the Boston native and even when Rovers had a brief purple period in the first-half, where Lee Lynch delivered consecutive crosses into the box, Elding was still outnumbered.
Going a goal down didn’t prompt Ian Baraclough to change things up front and so Elding toiled on in the midsummer sun without once causing the Molde defence any problems.