Friday 3 May 2024

Win Puts Costa Rica Back The Mix

Paying the bills

Latest

Yokasta Valle’s revenge: Golden opportunity for tourism and commerce

QCOSTARICA - Back in 2013, Costa Rican men's national...

PUSC became the big loser of May 1st

QCOSTARICA -- In alliance with the government, PUSC aspired...

How To Identify The Best CBD Vape Juice Vendor This Season?

The CBD product landscape is ever-expanding, therefore making it...

Hot mornings and afternoon showers typical during the transition to the rainy season

QCOSTARICA -- The weather service, the Instituto Meteorológico Nacional...

The 5 most common banking scams generated by Artificial Intelligence

Up to US$25 million were stolen in the world...

Find out who the new councilors of your canton are starting this May 1st

This May 1, mayors, councilors, and alternates elected in...

Dollar Exchange

¢504.80 BUY

¢511.40 SELL

03 May 2024 - At The Banks - Source: BCCR

Paying the bills

Share

One point? No problem. Coach Pinto says the Ticos will somehow get the 3 points as Costa Rica gets first hex win, 2-0 over Jamaica

2012 CONCACAF Women's Olympic Qualifying - Haiti v Costa Rica

Following last Friday’s loss to the US, Costa Rica’s national soccer team, La Sele, recovered from their wintry ordeal with a relatively comfortable 2-0 win against Jamaica.

The win put the Ticos back in the mix for CONCACAF World Cup qualifying, in a game that must have seen most Costa Ricas glued to their television sets for the 90 minutes of play.

- Advertisement -

Both sides nearly went ahead early, with Jermaine Beckford shooting wide four minutes in when Jamaica looked certain to open the scoring before, at the other end of the pitch, Reading defender Adrian Mariappa’s attempted clearance came within a couple of inches of going into his own goal. The visitors started brighter, but Costa Rica, for their part, looked thrilled to be playing on grass rather than in a blizzard — and it was the hosts who took the lead in the 23rd minute.

It was a set piece that opened up the Jamaica defence, with Alvaro Saborio bringing the ball down and playing in a deflected pass for Umaña, who took a touch and smashed a shot past Donovan Ricketts to make it 1-0. The visitors’ response was to allow Costa Rica to keep attacking for most of the half, although Luton Shelton should probably have equalised just before the break when he danced through the Ticos defence only to delay shooting and let them clear to safety.

Most of the second half was intense, if nothing else — there was a major battle going on in the middle of the pitch — but something always seemed to go wrong. A touch, a misplaced pass, a wayward finish always ensured that even the most incisive-looking move broke down. The best example came in the 77th minute, when Joel Cambell sucked the Jamaican defence (and Ricketts) to one side and squared for Saborio five yards in front of the goal only for the striker to completely miskick his effort and send the ball bobbling well wide.

Fortunately, Diego Calvo opted to take matters into his own hands and inject a moment of real quality into the match. Picking up the ball at the edge of the area, the substitute danced away from Jermaine Taylor’s challenge, drifted further in and sent a beautiful curling shot just inside the far post. With 81 minutes gone, it was 2-0, and the points were safe.

- Advertisement -
Paying the bills
Rico
Ricohttp://www.theqmedia.com
"Rico" is the crazy mind behind the Q media websites, a series of online magazines where everything is Q! In these times of new normal, stay at home. Stay safe. Stay healthy.

Related Articles

Two hopes crushed in one game at Qatar World Cup group stage

QCOSTARICA - A thrilling Thursday in Qatar has brought into question...

Thomas Müller disses Costa Rica: “8-0 is possible”

UPDATED: Game time in Costa Rica is 1 pm and not...

Subscribe to our stories

To be updated with all the latest news, offers and special announcements.

Discover more from Q COSTA RICA

Subscribe now to keep reading and get access to the full archive.

Continue reading