Top 100: Greatest matches 60-51

Eurosport - Tue, 06 Oct 09:00:00 2009

Our daily countdown of the best matches ever played continues with a Ronaldo masterclass for Real Madrid at Old Trafford.

2003 Manchester United-Real Madrid Ronaldo - 0

51. Champions League 2003 - Manchester United 4-3 Real Madrid (5-6 aggregate)

This game is rightly remembered as one of Ronaldo's finest moments. Forget the scoreline - Real outclassed United over both legs of this quarter-final tie. Leading 3-1 from the first leg in the Bernabeu, the Galacticos virtually finished the tie in the 12th minute when Guti found Ronaldo, who smashed a low shot inside Fabien Barthez's near post. Ruud van Nistelrooy scored his 39th goal of the season just before the break, but Ronaldo restored Real's cushion with a close-range finish after the visitors sliced through United just after the break. An Ivan Helguera own-goal made it 2-2, but Ronaldo completed his hat-trick with a stunning 25-yarder, before departing the Old Trafford pitch to a standing ovation from the United fans. David Beckham, controversially dropped, came off the bench to score a free-kick and a tap-in but it was too little, too late. Months later Beckham was a Real player, and United replaced him with one Cristiano Ronaldo.

52. Premier League 1994 - Everton 3-2 Wimbledon

Let us take you back to a time when Wimbledon were an established top-flight side - finishing sixth in 1993/94 - and Everton were scrapping desperately against relegation. The Toffees needed a win at Goodison Park on the final day to preserve their Premier League status and suffered the worst possible start when Anders Limpar handballed in the third minute and Dean Holdsworth scored from the penalty spot to put Wimbledon in front. On 20 it was two, as Dave Watson and David Unsworth collided and Gary Ablett sliced a wild clearance into his own net. Everton got a foothold in the game when Limpar won a questionable penalty and Graham Stuart scored to reduce the arrears going into half-time. Wimbledon were denied a penalty when Stuart appeared to handball, the Barry Horne rammed in a 30-yard screamer to make it two-all. Everton surged forward in search of a winner and, nine minutes from time, they got it from Stuart, whose weak shot somehow sqeezed past Hans Segers. Cue pandemonium as survival was guaranteed, and - not for the last time in their history - Sheffield United were relegated feeling more than a little hard done by.

53. Euro 2000 - Yugoslavia 3-3 Slovenia

This Balkan derby was always going to have some spice, but the 15,000 who turned up to the Stade du Pays de Charleroi for this Group C game were treated to a remarkable quickfire comeback from the Yugoslavs - Serbia and Montenegro by another name. Slovenia, inspired by their brilliant captain Zlatko Zahovic, made a superb start to their first European Championship game when Zahovic headed in an Amir Karic free-kick on 23 minutes. Zahovic curled a free-kick onto the head of Miran Pavlin on 52 for 2-0, then five minutes made it three slotting calmly home after dispossessing Sinisa Mihajlovic - who was then sent off. Back came 10-man Yugoslavia though, with three goals in six amazing minutes. Savo Milosevic bundled in the first, Ljubinko Drulovic drilled the second and Milosevic poached his second from close range. Both sides came close to a winner in the final 17 minutes, but it finished with honours even. The Yugoslavs were involved in an even more amazing game eight days later when they lost 4-3 to Spain, but qualified from the group thanks to the draw between Slovenia and Norway.

54. FA Cup final 1979 - Arsenal 3-2 Manchester United

If the 1979 Cup final had ended after 85 minutes, it wouldn't be anywhere near our top 100; in fact, it would be floating around the half-million mark. Arsenal had taken a 2-0 half-time lead thanks to a close-range Brain Talbot finish and Frank Stapleton header, and with time ticking away, the Manchester United fans were already packing up their flasks and rattles when Gordon McQueen stuck the ball away for 2-1. That was in the 86th minute and no more than two later the Red Devils were level, the dribbling Sammy McIlroy stabbing into the corner as Pat Jennings came diving out of his goal. Bu the 'five-minute final' was not over: United surged upfield and at the death Graham Rix delivered a fabulous cross for Alan Sunderland to slide at the far post and convert.

55. UEFA Cup 1985 - Real Madrid 4-0 Borussia Moenchengladbach

The 1985/86 Real Madrid side boasted perhaps the worst away form of any side to win a European trophy. The Spanish giants lost five away games out of six, yet their performances in the Bernabeu just about carried them through. Never was their Jekyll and Hyde nature more apparent than in the third round, where they lost 5-1 to Borussia Moenchengladbach in Germany before turning things around to go through on away goals. Having dispensed with Gladbach, Los Merengues proceeded nearly to chuck away a three-goal advantage by losing 2-0 at Neuchatel Xamax, then came from 3-1 down to beat Internazionale 6-4 on aggregate in the semis. In the days of two-legged finals, Real knew they would need to give themselves a sizeable advantage at home against Cologne and did just that, taking a 5-1 lead that a 2-0 reverse in Germany could not threaten. Real ended the campaign with a home goals for-and-against tally of 24-3 at home, 2-13 on their travels.

56. Premier League 1996-97 - Newcastle United 5-0 Manchester United

Five months after blowing a 12-point lead and surrendering the Premier League title, Kevin Keegan's Newcastle gained a measure of revenge with a thumping win against Alex Ferguson's Manchester United. Darren Peacock opened the scoring with a disputed header that may or may not have crossed the line, but there was no doubt about the second, a thunderbolt from David Ginola. Les Ferdinand headed in off the bar before record signing Alan Shearer - who famously rejected a move to Old Trafford - poached a fourth. The visitors' humiliation was completed on 83 minutes, when Philippe Albert beat Peter Schmeichel (pictured) with an exquisite chip. The result sent the champions into a tailspin as they lost four straight in league and Champions League - including an infamous 6-3 drubbing against Southampton. It didn't last. By January, Keegan was gone, and Fergie's side won the title by seven points.

57. Scottish League Cup final 1957 - Celtic 7-1 Rangers

This final has been dubbed 'Hampden in the sun', a name still heard in chants and songs to this day. League champions Rangers went into the match as favourites, but were ruthlessly taken apart by the Bhoys in front of more than 80,000 fans. After hitting the woodwork twice early on, Sammy Wilson broke the deadlock midway through the first half before Neil Mochan motored down the wing to blast in Celtic's second just before the break. Billy McPhail extended Celtic's lead soon after before Billy Simpson pulled one back for Rangers on the hour mark. That only spurred Celtic on, however, and Mochan scored another and McPhail completed his hat-trick before winning a late penalty which Willie Fernie converted. The result remains Celtic's biggest win over their arch rivals and is still the biggest ever domestic cup final victory in British football. Things got even worse for Rangers a month later when they were humbled 4-1 by Milan at Ibrox in the first round of the European Cup.

58. Second Division play-off 1999 - Gillingham 2-2 Manchester City (City win 3-1 on pens)

Incredible last-minute comebacks by Manchester sides were not the sole preserve of United in 1999, as neighbours City experienced plenty of drama themselves. A largely stale Wembley showpiece burst into life in the final 10 minutes when Carl Asaba fired into the top corner to give the Gills the lead. Asaba then turned provider as he set Bob Taylor free to bear down on goal and drill past Nicky Weaver and seemingly shatter City's dreams. Joe Royle's side were not downhearted, however, and threw everything they could at Gillingham. Their efforts paid off when, after Kevin Horlock fired through a crowd of players to score on 89 minutes, Paul Dickov scored one of the most iconic goals in the club's history in injury time to force a further 30 minutes. With no goals added in extra time it went to penalties, and with City 3-1 up in the shootout Weaver saved Paul Smith's spot-kick to send City back into the second tier.

59. Champions League semi-final 2008-09 - Chelsea 1-1 Barcelona (Barcelona win on away goals)

This pulsating match will probably be remembered best for Didier Drogba's pithy assessment of referee Tom Henning Ovrebo's refereeing performance, yelling at a TV camera: "It's a f****** disgrace!" The Ivorian had a point. Ovrebo enraged the home crowd by denying Chelsea a succession of seemingly clear-cut penalties, most obviously for a Gerard Pique handball, although he also harshly sent off Barcelona's Eric Abidal. However, the bungling referee's performance hardly excused the deranged reaction of Drogba and several other Chelsea players. The uproar obscured a heck of a game. After a goalless first leg, Michael Essien's outrageous left-foot volley gave Chelsea the lead, before Andres Iniesta sent Barca through on away goals with a brilliant stoppage time effort from the edge of the box. Some screamed conspiracy, as if the Anglophobe Michel Platini could somehow have orchestrated Iniesta's last-gasp magic; nonsense. Manchester United fans sniggering at their rivals' misfortune were soon put in their place - Barca walloped United in the final.

60. FA Cup final 2005-06 Liverpool 3-3 West Ham United (Liverpool win 3-1 on pens)

The curtain was brought down on the Millennium Stadium's six-year tenure as FA Cup final venue in spectacular fashion. Liverpool completed another dramatic cup final comeback, a year after their exploits in Istanbul which won them their fifth European Cup. West Ham boss Alan Pardew could scarcely believe his luck when a Jamie Carragher own goal and Dean Ashton's strike had his team 2-0 up after half an hour. Djibril Cisse and Steven Gerrard got Liverpool back on terms but when Paul Konchesky's looping cross caught Pepe Reina off guard and dropped in the Hammers looked destined for their first major trophy in 25 years. However, Gerrard again proved why he is such an inspiration for Kopites when, in stoppage time, he thundered a strike from 35 yards that gave Shaka Hislop no chance. Both sides went close in extra time, but it went to a shootout in which Reina made up for his earlier errors with three crucial saves that won Rafael Benitez his second trophy in two years at Liverpool.

Eurosport

Comment 5 - 24 of 24

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  1. What about Australia beating England 3-1 in 2003 and­ before that Australia beating Scotland I think 2-0.­ They were the best matches I have ever seen

    From plyoung, on Mon 12 Oct 3:30AM
  2. Italy Vs West Germany in Mexico 1970 World Cup Semi­ Final and then again in the
    Semi Final when the World­ Cup was played in Germany and the host nation were no­ longer called West Germany just Germany by this time. ­ Both of these matches could easily be included.
    In­ saying this I never saw Australia Vs Italy but some­ pundits say there was a dispute and Australia should­ have won. I don't think Australia would have beat­ Germany though one never knows.

    From rblackhurst2004, on Fri 9 Oct 4:57PM
  3. One game I hope will be up there is France v Portugal­ in Euro 84 it was an amazing game. Those who were too­ young to remember do a search on the Internet

    From preetam_bhoobun, on Wed 7 Oct 1:42PM
  4. 18 - Omar F:

    The Chelsea - barca in 2005 should be up­ there with the rest of them. That was a classic.­ I'll never forget the look on Rijkaard's face­ after 25 minutes and 3-0.

    From Bogdan G, on Wed 7 Oct 1:00PM
  5. roykeane99:

    92 was another football, another style of­ playing. Manchester played classic English football­ then. They still played good, but nowhere near the last­ three years.
    Thing is, Man UTd always had the firepower­ and fight in them.
    99 they had the best cole and yorke,­ which is still think better than 2003, with all van­ nistelrooy's goals.
    truth is, i stuck with chelsea­ in the Moscow final and i expected UTD to play better.­ It's a shame Drogba and Terry were the only to­ blame for a UTD victory. They should have done more.­ Fergie did a lot of great stuff for Utd, but Fletcher,­ O'Shea and Scholes will not win you a Champions­ LEague ever again. They need to change their style.­ I'd say the first half of '09, Manchester­ played their best posession game ever: putting real­ pressure on all teams. too bad fergie got the tactics­ all wrong in Rome.

    From Bogdan G, on Wed 7 Oct 12:58PM
  6. #9 Bogdan G.
    It is as if you were watching a different­ game.

    I am proud of this match.
    Yes of course we had­ Keano and this is perhaps the reason that we came from­ behind even after losing 3:2, it was evident that we­ don't go through and yet we battled, which is smth­ I doubt Real would do at that time or any other.

    As­ for galacticos - yes of course any team with Zidane,­ Figo, Ronaldo, Roberto Carlos, and for me especially­ Pedro Munitis - all being a top form physically and at­ top motivation is lightyears ahead of any other­ team.

    But I disagree that Manchester 2008 is stronger­ than any other Manchester United team.
    I've been to­ CL Final at Moscow.
    For me the best team is still the­ class of '92 and Ole Gunnar Solskjaer on top form.

    From Roy, on Wed 7 Oct 12:31PM
  7. How the hell is the chelsea-barca game better than the­ arsenal liverpool; can someone fukin tell me??? huh­ eurosport???? wtf

    From Omar F, on Wed 7 Oct 1:46AM
  8. And to Solly the bised united fan...the aggregate was­ 6-5 in favour of Madrid after 2 legs...read the article­ again...

    From kevenprovencal, on Tue 6 Oct 11:48PM
  9. this top 100 is some utterly disgusting @#$%! If one­ takes this seriously, he'd think 3/4 of the 100­ best matches of all time were played in England(lol!),­ wich is quite definitely not the case!!

    From kevenprovencal, on Tue 6 Oct 11:41PM
  10. he did all the possible damage in 60-70 mins that he­ played.
    Had he played full game, he would have scored­ 5. That's how good he was and still is.

    From Bogdan G, on Tue 6 Oct 7:00PM
  11. ronaldo destroys united ? he ended up on the losing­ side that night,yes madrid lost 4-3, over the two legs­ there was 1 goal between the teams yes 5-6, so dumb f­ ucks, nobody "destroyed" united

    From Solly, on Tue 6 Oct 4:29PM
  12. This game should have definitely scored better than­ 51st place.
    Too many Fergie fans.

    From Bogdan G, on Tue 6 Oct 3:59PM
  13. rivaldos hatrick in game against valencia in packed out­ nou camp - last game of season - euro honours at stake­ - it must surely make list . romania v argentina in usa­ 94' was great game aswell . just thought i'd­ mention as they might not be included like the obvious­ ones like italy v brazil in 82' or liverpool in­ instanbul.

    From niallism, on Tue 6 Oct 3:57PM
  14. for me ronaldo is the best ever striker and player to­ set foot on a football field,the guy is just amazing,i­ don't have the words to describe him really

    From Emir, on Tue 6 Oct 3:46PM
  15. A memorable performance by el phenomeno... i think this­ game should have scored a better ranking than just 51st

    From moussa_abboud, on Tue 6 Oct 3:42PM
  16. to roykeane99:

    You my friend have no idea. Manchester­ were outclassed. They were kindergarten kids opposed to­ Real Madrid on that night.
    Manchester scored with two­ own goals and a Beckham free kick. And Van Nistelrooy,­ who scored 90% of his chances from the box. The­ Manchester 2008 was a better team, but still would have­ done nothing against Real. Man U 2003 had Roy Keane by­ the way.
    And those galacticos were lighyears ahead of­ the ones right now.

    From Bogdan G, on Tue 6 Oct 2:52PM
  17. Considering I'm 24, I've seen a few great­ football matches in my life.
    Not all the English ones,­ but I could count: Milan - Barcelona (4-0 Champions­ LEague final) Brazil - Holland 3-2 (WC94), Argentina -­ Holland (CM98) and most of the great Premiership ones­ after 95-96.
    But this one, where I could actually see­ Zidane at his most mature moment and Ronaldo as the­ best striker in the world, this one will go down as the­ best modern football match ever. The technical level in­ this game surpassed everything. BEfore the game, I­ imagine Manchester would give Real a trashing, but Real­ would still put up a good fight.Ronaldo, Zidane and­ Makele coudl have played all three by themselves,­ without anyone else on the field. With a better­ defence, Real would have won the second Champions­ League in a row. IF it had not been for Sanchis, Hierro­ and Raul against Juve, Real would have destroyed Juve­ as well.
    Real 2001-2004 was better than Barcelona 2009.­ You just could not compete with Zidane and Ronaldo.­ They're Gods.

    From Bogdan G, on Tue 6 Oct 2:44PM
  18. What is this rubbish about MU being outclassed?
    It had­ been a great match. Even if we did not move to semis we­ played like gods. Real Madrid had three strikes of a­ genius.
    But after every strike of a genius we came from­ behind and finally won the match.
    No, we won't­ forget the scoreline because it would have been very­ unfair.

    As it is also unfair not to mention Pedro­ Munitis with his backheel pass that Gary Neville­ missed. He was great but not famous, just what a­ professional should be.

    From Roy, on Tue 6 Oct 2:34PM
  19. Ahhh... this was back in the day when Real actually­ performed in the Champions League. Hopefully we will­ see those days again.

    From xyz, on Tue 6 Oct 2:27PM
  20. I can't remember a better individual performance­ against Utd. I sat in the Stretford End thinking we­ could overturn their lead but every time I did he just­ went up another level and scored again. Real didn't­ outclass us (in this game), Ronaldo did.

    From Graham P, on Tue 6 Oct 12:58PM
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