Jerome Pugmire, Associated Press, Marseille, France | Thu, 02/23/2012 6:14 AM
Victory: Marseille's Cameroonian defender Nicolas NKoulou, left, French midfielder Morgan Amalfitano, center right, Senegalese defender Souleymane Diawara, right, react after Ghanaian forward Andre Ayew, not in the picture, scores against Inter Milan's Brazilian goalkepper Julio Cesar Soares de Espindola, center, during their Champions League, round of 16, first leg soccer match, against Inter Milan, at the Velodrome stadium, Marseille Wednesday (Thursday Jakarta time). (AP/Claude Paris)
Andre Ayew rose to head home a corner deep into injury time Wednesday
as Marseille beat Inter Milan 1-0 in the first leg of their Champions League
last-16 matchup.
Inter's latest defeat, the sixth in seven games, piles even more
pressure on its beleaguered coach Claudio Ranieri.
Inter, the 2010 champion, grew in confidence as the second half wore
on, but struggled to carve out clear chances against a well-organized Marseille
team that lacked invention and a cutting edge up front.
Ranieri's team looked to have done enough to secure a draw, but Ayew
timed his run perfectly in the third minute of added time to head the ball
firmly past goalkeeper Julio Cesar's outstretched hand.
Diego Forlan had Inter's best opportunity early in the match when he
forced goalkeeper Steve Mandanda to tip the ball over the crossbar from close
range.
The return leg is at Inter on March 13, and Ranieri must motivate his
team to turn around a difficult situation amid what is likely to be more harsh
criticism of his tactical choices.
Ranieri, who was roundly jeered by Inter fans last weekend, did not
seem interested in going for an away win as he left striker Diego Milito on the
bench in a dull second half.
Milito, who is by a long way Inter's top scorer with 12 league goals,
is the only player to have scored for the struggling club in its miserable
seven-game spell.
Marseille, meanwhile, extended its unbeaten run to 16 games.
Ayew's superb fitness allowed him to keep making runs as Inter's aging
defense tired, and the Ghana winger connected perfectly with Mathieu Valbuena's
corner from the left to stun Inter's traveling support at Stade Velodrome.
Marseille was without top scorer Loic Remy with a thigh injury, but
midfielder Alou Diarra started after shaking off a toe problem. Brazilian
Brandao took up a lone striker's role with Mathieu Valbuena behind him as
playmaker.
Both sides started with a near-identical shape in a 4-2-3-1 formation.
Ranieri gave Forlan his European debut for the club - the Uruguay
striker was ineligible for the group stage - and he was supported by Wesley
Sneijder in a revamped attack. Giampaolo Pazzini joined Milito on the bench.
Marseille attacked aggressively from the outset, keen to test a
defense that had leaked 15 goals in the last six games, five of which were
defeats, and midfielder Benoit Cheyrou saw his speculative shot deflected for a
corner.
Inter tried to sit back and soak up pressure, happy to hit the French
side on the break, but veteran midfielder Dejan Stankovic betrayed his side's
early nerves when he hit a routine short pass into touch, rather than to
teammate Mauro Zarate standing five yards away from him.
Despite Marseille's bright start, Inter had the first shot on target
in the 11th minute when Forlan forced goalkeeper Steve Mandanda into an
excellent reflex save after running onto Esteban Cambiasso's pinpoint cross
from the left.
Marseille remained in control, however, and midway through the first
half Valbuena caught Lucio napping as he tried to casually dribble out of
defense. Valbuena stole the ball off Lucio's toe, but then just failed to get
it over to Brandao.
Valbuena often dropped deep or shuffled wide to support wingers Ayew
and Morgan Amalfitano, making it increasingly hard for Inter's defense to
predict his runs.
Marseille should have scored in the 30th. Center half Nicolas N'Koulou
ran onto Valbuena's curling freekick and clipped the ball straight onto the leg
of teammate Souleymane Diawara, rather than toward goal.
Inter almost punished Marseille for that wasted chance just moments
later, when Cambiasso pulled the ball back to the unmarked Zarate, but his shot
lacked power and was comfortably smothered by Mandanda.
Marseille right back Cesar Azpilicueta tested keeper Julio Cesar with
a dipping shot from 15 yards early in the second half, but Inter pushed up more
and Marseille found itself trying to launch attacks from deep.
Ranieri seemed increasingly content to settle for a draw, replacing
Zarate with Joel Obi midway through the second half, even though Zarate was
Inter's most lively player along with Cambiasso.
With both sides hitting stray passes, the play became scrappier with
players from both teams overlooking simple passes as they tried to make the
difference themselves.
Forlan embarked on a swerving run that saw him skip past four
Marseille players, turn back on himself and lose the ball, while Marseille
midfielder Benoit Cheyrou's ambitious chipped pass into the box was easily
headed away, with Ayew screaming for a pass right next to him.
Stankovic then scuffed a weak shot straight at Mandanda from close
range in the 74th after Sneijder curled a dangerous free kick into the box.
And it got worse for Inter in injury time when Ayew, who had gone
close with two headers shortly before, won the match for Marseille and gave his
team a slim advantage heading into the second leg.