Bournemouth beat Crystal Palace with ease to keep Champions League dreams alive
Two goals in the first half and one in the second from Rayan gave Bournemouth a 3-0 win against Crystal Palace and put them sixth in the table
www.silverguide.site –
By month’s end, Andoni Iraola and Oliver Glasner will depart their respective clubs. Having both taken their clubs into uncharted territory, neither’s task is yet complete. Bournemouth’s victory, a game all but won in the first half, was one for the club with their Premier League position as the priority. Bournemouth’s hopes of emulating Palace this season in playing European football for the first time were increased by a deserved, convincing win. The Champions League may even be in reach, Europa League permutations permitting.
Palace played as if something else was on their minds. Perhaps understandably so. On Thursday, in the Conference League semi-final, Selhurst Park will stage the biggest match in 102 years of being home to south London’s Eagles.
Where Iraola and Glasner alight next is as yet unrevealed. The Basque is linked with the managerial meat grinders at Chelsea and Manchester United though also with replacing Glasner. The Austrian’s future is yet more opaque. Public complaints against the decision-making of Palace executives may have cooled certain elite clubs’ interest, despite trophies in Frankfurt and south London. Club suits do not react well to insubordination, as this season’s departures of Ruben Amorim and Enzo Maresca have evidenced.
Tetchy in the technical area at his team’s multiple malfunctions, Glasner may yet sign off with another trophy. His team selection, five changes from Thursday and Shakhtar Donetsk, had made plain his ambitions for the time he has left at his current club.
Those in Palace’s starting lineup had their chance to make their case for a role in a European final, should Leipzig be reached. Few convinced, though there were energy levels to conserve. A rarity for Iraola over three seasons in Dorset has been the near-fully fit squad he could choose from. Less rare, home draws, following five in succession at the Vitality. Hopes of that run ending were heightened by a 10th-minute opener. It owed plenty to casual defending by Jefferson Lerma in deflecting Evanilson’s header from Alex Scott into the goalmouth and Dean Henderson’s delay in clawing the ball only once it had crossed the line.
A regular mantra of Bournemouth’s season, even within a 16-game unbeaten run, the longest in Europe’s top five leagues, has been Iraola bemoaning missed chances, victories downgraded to draws. Misses like Evanilson’s, moments later, have been recurring features.
Rayan, moving into his fellow Brazilian’s central zone of interest, nodded over not long later. Palace were increasingly ragged, struggling with a steady flow of set pieces bombed into their box. Chadi Riad, making a first Premier League start in almost two months, had to make a key interception when Rayan’s pass would have played Evanilson straight in. Marcus Tavernier having his low shot saved by Henderson added to the stack of opportunities.
Within the Vitality’s bijou away section, Croydon cheer was high, continuing the party atmosphere of an eventful, occasionally fractious season. That was sustained even when Henderson conceded a penalty after dropping a high ball, tripping Marcos Senesi in desperation to recover. To say Senesi accentuated what contact there was would put it mildly.
Eli Junior Kroupi converted, sixth place nearing actuality. As half-time arrived, Palace’s assistant coach, Paddy McCarthy, railed at the disorganisation of an attacking set piece. As Palace closed the first half without a single shot on goal, an expected goals of 0.00 was decidedly generous.
After Tyrick Mitchell and Ismaïla Sarr were introduced, Jørgen Strand Larsen ended the wait for that first shot in the opening moments of the second half. Some Austrian invective had surely been heard in the dressing room; Palace affected far more interest. Bournemouth, as has been problematic with their unhappy habit of surrendering leads, had begun retreating.
Chances still fell Bournemouth’s way. It took Mitchell’s block to stop Kroupi ending the contest. Larsen departed, Jean-Philippe Mateta replacing him on 65 minutes, reversing what happened against Shakhtar. On Thursday, Strand Larsen came on to score but Mateta’s arrival did not bring about any improvement. Instead, Ryan Christie and David Brooks’ arrivals for Bournemouth locked down the midfield.
It was Brooks who laid up Rayan to score Bournemouth’s third, a second in successive matches, scuffed in though well-aimed. The teenager had not scored since his flurry on joining Bournemouth in January, his initial hype dying down of late. Even without Iraola around next season, if the departing manager sees out his parting objective, there are many more adventures to come from Rayan and his teammates.

Comment