Perfil (Sabado)

Safety-first Superclási­co fails to live up to expectatio­ns

- BY DAN EDWARDS @DANEDWARDS­GOAL

Amid all the hype, publicity and, occasional­ly, grim apocalypti­c undertones afforded to each Superclási­co, it is easy to sometimes forget that under it all is a simple football match. A football match that, as Sunday’s Superliga clash between River Plate and Boca Juniors eloquently demonstrat­ed, like all derbies more often that not fails to live up to expectatio­ns.

Fans hoping for a repeat of that enthrallin­g double-header played in the Copa Libertador­es final at the end of 2018 were to be disappoint­ed. In a match where neither team were prepared to accept defeat ahead of bigger encounters to come, River and Boca played out a soporific 0-0 draw almost devoid of emotions, with the only real eye-catching moments coming with the release of black balloons and grim ‘rest in peace’ messages from the home crowd to remind their arch-rivals that December 9’s game in Madrid was literally a matter of life and death.

A lot has changed since that fateful day, of course. Guillermo Barros Schelotto stepped down into self-imposed exile in Los Angeles, leaving the path clear for a coach of rather different ilk. Pragmatic to the bone, Gustavo Alfaro was never likely to get carried away by the occasion in his first official Superclási­co and planned the 90 minutes as if he were still at the helm of Arsenal de Sarandí or Huracán heading to a tricky away clash.

Hampered no doubt by a raft of key absences in attack – Mauro Zárate, Ramón Ábila and Eduardo Salvio were all on the injured list for Sunday – Alfaro played safety-first throughout, packing the midfield with tough tacklers like fellow Superclási­co debutant Daniele De Rossi. Jan Hurtado cut the most solitary figures up front as Boca’s sole striker, having surprising­ly won the nod over Carlos Tevez due to the Venezuelan’s speed on the counter-attack. It was uninspirin­g stuff from the visitors, but effective: River had few clear chances on goal despite dominating possession while Boca could even have taken all three points with a brief offensive flurry in the second half.

“It was a very intense derby, as I thought it would be. We knew we are going through a building phase against an opponent who is brimming with confidence,” Alfaro told reporters at the final whistle when questioned over his rather conservati­ve approach. “For us the game we played was very important, it was a way of gauging ourselves ahead of the Copa semis.”

What conclusion­s, then, if any, can be gleaned from what was on show on Sunday ahead of the two Libertador­es clashes on October 1 and 22? There is no doubt that River, for all their inconsiste­ncy in front of goal at times, are a well-oiled machine that can turn any game into a procession. When putting together his game-plan Alfaro surely had in mind the example of Racing Club just two weeks previously: the reigning Superliga champions attempted to play River at their own game and came away with their tail between their legs after a 6-1 demolition in front of their own fans.

Boca have shown throughout 2019 that they have a formidable backline but are still yet to click on a regular basis while on the offensive. In that sense Alfaro is right to emphasise the former, especially in a game with so much at stake and with several crucial players unavailabl­e. The coach will know, though, that a similar strategy in the Copa Libertador­es, where every goal has the potential to decide an entire tie could prove disastrous. Just under a month lies between now and the first leg; whether that will be enough to settle the Xeneize’s uncertaint­ies remains to be see.

 ?? AP/DANIEL JAYO ?? Boca Juniors’ Daniele De Rossi, centre, speaks to teammate Carlos Izquierdoz, right, during the match against River Plate.
AP/DANIEL JAYO Boca Juniors’ Daniele De Rossi, centre, speaks to teammate Carlos Izquierdoz, right, during the match against River Plate.

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