
New Saints exit Champions League after late extra time goal
An evenly contested first leg at Park Hall a week earlier had ended goalless with striker Ben Wilson missing Saints' best chance.Craig Harrison made one change from the one that started the first leg with Kade Craig replacing Leo Smith, ruled out for 10 months with a ruptured cruciate ligament.Shkendija's side included 38-year-old Besart Ibraimi who scored four goals in a 5-0 win the last time the sides had met at the same venue in the same competition in 2018.Saints had an early let off when Liridon Latifi hit the woodwork inside the opening three minutes at the Todor Proeski National Arena in Skopje.Nathan Shepperd made two excellent saves, the second to deny the influential Ibraimi as the hosts dominated.Saints thought they had taken the lead but Wilson's effort was ruled offside and it was the who went ahead five minutes later.Ibraimi's low effort across the face of goal was palmed away by Shepperd but only as far as Tamba on the far post, who fired home,Captain Ibrahmi chipped an effort that flew past the post but Saints settled and against the run of play they levelled eight minutes before the break.Dan Williams' long range shot was deflected by Imran Fetai into the path of Jordan Williams, who scored.
Danny Redmond flashed a long range effort wide of the post after picking up Ryan Brobbel's short corner on the hour markThe second half was a tighter affair but a well worked Saints move released substitute Ben Clark, who could not get the ball under control and hit it over the bar.Ibrahimi glanced a header wide of the post from a dangerous in-swinging corner as both teams looked to settle the tie without the need for extra time.With eight minutes remaining the hosts were awarded a penalty when Imran Fetai fell in the box.But VAR ruled that Fetai had been in offside position and the penalty decision was overturned to the relief of the Welsh side.The game went into extra time but not before goalscorer Tamba had a speculative effort in stoppage time.
Saints defender Harrison McGahey made a crucial touch to divert a dangerous cross from Ronaldo Webster during the first period of extra time.Shkendija wasted a glorious opportunity in the second period when Vane Krstevski missed the target from close range after a dangerous Fiton Ademi cross.But the hosts made the breakthrough with penalties looming with a Trumçi scoring with a tap in after Saints failed to clear.Shekendija will now face FCSB of Romania – European Cup winners in 1986 - in the second qualifying round.Saints drop into the Conference League and will face Differdange of Luxembourg.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Daily Mail
26 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
Will Norwich and Olympiacos give us a pre-season THRILLER? Championship club and Evangelos Marinakis' side are 10/1 to provide us with over 5.5 goals!
Norwich City are adding more continental flavour to their pre-season diet as they take on Greek champions Olympiacos in the Netherlands. Having beaten Northampton Town (not so continental) 3-1, then drawn 1-1 with Volendam and Zulte Waregem, Liam Manning's men now add some Champions League ilk to their schedule. The Championship side will hope to catch Evangelos Marinakis' club on an off day when they meet at 11am on Friday. Sky Bet are offering various odds for under/over a certain amount of goals in the game. If you reckon there will be 5.5 or more, then they cater to that fancy with a 10/1 offer. At the other end of the scale, if you think there will be fewer than 0.5 goals - which sounds like a 0-0 to you and me - then the odds are 14/1. For 3.5 goals or more, you're looking at 15/8, but if you're predicting under that, the odds will be 2/5. Sky Bet odds for Norwich vs Olympiacos - match over/under goals 0.5 goals - over 1/50, under 14/1 1.5 goals - over 1/5, under 10/3 2.5 goals - over 8/11, under 1/1 3.5 goals - over 15/8, under 2/5 4.5 - over 9/2, under 1/7 5.5 goals - over 10/1, under 1/25


Belfast Telegraph
28 minutes ago
- Belfast Telegraph
Linfield slapped with hefty fine after crowd misbehaviour during Champions League duel with Shelbourne
Linfield have been hit with a 12,000 euro (£10,446) fine by Uefa for two incidents in their Champions League qualifier with Shelbourne at Windsor Park. The Blues have been handed a 10,000 euro fine for "racist and/or discriminatory behaviour of its supporters".


Daily Mail
29 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
THE HARD WORK STARTS NOW! Teenage hero Findlay Curtis will know that he's achieved nothing yet, warns Rangers legend Ian Durrant
For any aspiring footballer, climbing the mountain is never the hardest part. It's staying up there. Six months after navigating the foothills by making his Rangers ' debut against Fraserburgh, Findlay Curtis breathed the rarefied air of Champions League football on Tuesday against Panathinaikos. A first senior goal not only changed the complexion of the tie. At a stroke, the 19-year-old's world turned upside down. He's no longer another face in the crowd. He now enjoys a public profile. The trade-off for that euphoric moment is that a level of expectation now follows. Many have discovered this pressure to be suffocating. Long is the list of those who flew too close to the sun. Ian Durrant remembers the day his own dreams were first realised like it was yesterday. Coming off the field after a 3-0 win at Cappielow on April 20, 1985, the then 18-year-old's first thought was to ensure his first game for his boyhood heroes wasn't his last. 'Morton away,' he smiled. 'Coisty got a hat-trick. Any more?' There was actually. Durrant had all the talent in the world. Yet he counts himself fortunate that the club's financial position 40 years ago necessitated the promotion of young players. The door was open and he walked through it. 'I think what helped me then was the club was redeveloping at the stadium,' he recalled. 'So myself, Derek Ferguson, Robert Fleck and Hugh Burns were given the opportunity because there wasn't a lot of money to spend on players. 'We never really had the academy. We were more apprentices. 'I didn't think for a minute I'd be a Jock Wallace player as he liked ones who were six-foot plus and could head the ball further than I could kick it. 'But he came across on Friday and he just gave me two complimentary tickets. 'He just said: 'Right, you're playing tomorrow'. There was no time to think about it. 'That was it. Just get a good night's sleep. Cheers, gaffer. And you just go and play.' Much has changed in football and society in the past 40 years, yet Durrant's experience back then still carries echoes of what Findlay is going through at the moment. Now 58, Durrant simply looked upon the pressure to become a first-team regular as a privilege. He was a nailed-on starter by the time Graeme Souness arrived with an open cheque book in 1986. While he can't walk in Findlay's shoes for him, he can tell him what's non-negotiable. 'You can't just kind of go: 'Okay, I've achieved something',' he warned. 'Findlay will be flying just now in terms of getting a goal in the Champions League qualifier. 'But he knows it will be a rocky road. Now it's a question of how he goes about it. 'That's when your manager and coaches have to see things. Just give him enough to feed him. But, if he performs like that, he'll be a starter. 'The young players, they're up down. The manager will know that. It's hard work all the time. If you don't put the hard work in, you'll not get it back.' Thankfully, there appears to be no complacency in Curtis. Self-assured yet grounded as he spoke on Tuesday, the importance of his nearest and dearest shone through. 'Families play a big part,' said Durrant. 'I know for a fact he's still living with his parents. They'll give him the guidance. 'But also the manager and the coaches, they see him every day. You're a big fish in a small pond here. 'It's a different beat now. I was lucky enough when I made my debut that there were no mobile phones so you could get away with it a wee bit. 'They're consummate professionals now in terms of diet and everything. Everything gets monitored. He'll know how to cope with it.' Durrant had more than a hunch that Curtis would be throw in this midweek. Last week, together with Lee McCulloch and John Brown, he broke bread with Russell Martin at the club's training centre. While it's nothing new to hear managers talk about promoting youth, Durrant left the get-together believing the new man at the helm meant all he said. 'He said if they're good enough, no matter the age, they'll get a game,' he said. 'I think the manager here can go and get players. He's taken, I wouldn't say a gamble, but he's got a good understanding of his best youth players. He's integrated them into training.' It's all a delicate balancing act, of course, and incumbent on Martin to judge when to play his teenagers and when to rest them. Every side also needs experienced heads to educate the new boys. 'You're in a tunnel,' Durrant recalled of his formative years. 'I'm standing next to Graeme Souness. I lived a mile down the road and I'm playing with one of the finest Scottish midfielders. Ibrox rose as one to salute the 19-year-old after he gave Russell Martin's team a precious lead 'I'm playing with an England captain (Terry Butcher), Chris Woods, Ray Wilkins, Trevor Francis. I lived the dream playing with David Cooper. 'Later on, Walter (Smith) had John Brown, Goughy, the Goalie (Andy Goram). Sometimes, we'd just police our own dressing room. If we knew it wasn't going right, we'd fix it.' This is a different era with different faces, yet the level of expectation hasn't changed. When Martin took the opportunity to ask questions of Durrant, McCulloch and Brown at Auchenhowie, the answers were short and to the point. 'We told him - you just need to win,' Durrant said. 'That's the be all and end all. Get the proper players, get your recruitment right. 'He was good, just the way he outlined the way he wants to go. 'He wants his team so fit. He said that. the way he plays, it might take the last 10-15 minutes to break teams down, but the only way they're going to break them down is if they're fitter than the other teams.'