Next
season's guaranteed new team have been confirmed (RoPS have won the Ykkonen at
a canter, they're currently seventeen points clear with four games to go), and
one would imagine there would be an almighty battle to avoid being replaced by
them. Well, at the moment the battle is more like three moody lazy teenagers,
hoping that their two mates are lazier than them… The teams who are getting further
and further adrift at the bottom of the top division are KuPS, Haka and Jaro.
They have nine games (Haka have eight) left to get enough points to avoid
relegation or the play-off match against the second-placed team, who are
currently SJK.
This weekend's
fixtures involving the three clubs all took place on Sunday, with Jaro hosting
MYPA, and Haka travelling to JJK, with KuPS visiting IFK Mariehamn. Bottom side
Jaro were already two points behind Haka with a game in hand, and things
started badly with Pekka Sihvola opening the scoring in the 29th minute.
Sihvola has now scored eight goals in his last five league games, and the
scoreline quickly became 2-0 and 3-0 towards the end. Jaro remain bottom, and
luckily Haka's attempts at apparently playing rush goalie are keeping them
ahead on goal difference. Jaro have lost their last five matches, and they
won't be expecting much change from their visit to Helsinki in their next match
on September 14th.
Highlights of Jaro 0-3 MYPA
Haka visited
Jyväskylä and carried on where
they've left off in recent games - they shipped five goals, seventeen in their
last three, and have got one point from the last twenty-four available. Already
missing Obi Metzger after his red card against Lahti, they went into the
interval 1-0 down. But after the break, they conceded three goals in fourteen
minutes, including a brace from Mikko Innanen. An injury time goal sealed a 5-0
victory, and has now pretty much confirmed JJK's participation in next season's
competition. Haka meanwhile have a goal difference of -25, two goals worse off
than Jaro. They may come to regret their recent thrashings come October.
Benno Haslian celebrates JJK's fifth goal
The other
struggling side in action were KuPS, visiting Mariehamn. They had picked up a
bit of form after their European exit, and had won their Suomen Cup semi-final
in midweek, but were facing a team who still had distant title ambitions. That
they lasted until the 78th minute without conceding a goal is a credit, but in
the end substitute Bosnian Ermin Gadžo scored twice, and KuPS went back to
Kuopio with nothing other than relief that their nearest rivals all lost by
greater margins.
Highlights of IFK Mariehamn 2-0 KuPS
The
remaining matches between the three teams are as follows: Jaro v KuPS on Fri
14th Sept, Haka v Jaro on Sun 23rd Sept, KuPS v Haka on Sun 7th Oct (subject to
change). These matches will have huge bearings on the final positions, and we
can hope that they don't end up as damp squibs.
The bottom three as it stands
The mid-table
Friday night match between Lahti and Honka was actually the most entertaining
game of the weekend. The visitors finally learned their Cup final opponents the
previous night, and went ahead through another Tim Väyrynen goal after six
minutes. It was the 19-year-old's tenth goal of the season, nine of which have
opened the scoring, a fantastic record. Unfortunately for him and his
Espoo-based teammates, Lahti responded with three goals in the second half.
Recent signing Ariel Ngueukam scored twice in three minutes, and Drilon Shala
scored a third goal, which proved crucial. A late consolation goal in injury
time from Honka's Antti Mäkijärvi meant little, and Lahti won 3-2. It was Lahti's
third win in four, and leaves them on the outskirts of the race for the Europa
League. Honka are ninth, and while it's highly unlikely that they'd be drawn
into the relegation battle, they have little else other than the cup final
against KuPS in four weeks time.
Highlights of Lahti 3-2 Honka
I suppose
the title race itself is what the people want. Sunday's early match was between
the teams in second and third place, with TPS hosting champions HJK. HJK had
played an entertaining 3-3 draw with Athletic Bilbao on Thursday, finally confirming
their elimination from Europe 9-3 on aggregate. This match was virtually over
by half-time, first half goals from Mika Väyrynen (again, a tidy chip over the
keeper) and Juho Mäkelä saw HJK take a 2-0
lead, although TPS did have chances. A 90th minute goal from Santeri Mäkinen
merely served to maintain a decent goal difference lead for TPS. HJK are now
three points ahead on 43 points, TPS are third on 40, level with Mariehamn but
with the superior GD.
Highlights of TPS 1-2 HJK
The final
match kicked off on Monday evening with leaders Inter knowing that they would
need a win to reclaim their four point lead, and win they did. A routine 2-0
victory over VPS took them to 47 points, with Irakli Sirbiladze celebrating his
Georgian call-up with goals in each half. The striker is now top scorer with 13
goals, and will be sure to add more in the remaining nine league games.
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