Hamburg and Werder move towards all-German semi-final

Shakhtar Donetsk beat visitors Olympique Marseille 2-0 while  Dynamo Kiev drew at Paris St Germain in a lacklustre goalless  affair leaving open the possibility of a Ukrainian semi-final if  the French clubs fail to improve in the return legs.

English Premier League side Manchester City, the richest  club in the world, stunned Martin Jol’s Hamburg with a goal in  the first minute when midfielder Stephen Ireland slotted home  after a smart interchange with Brazilian Robinho.

Hamburg quickly drew level eight minutes later through Joris  Mathijsen, who powered in a header from a corner, before taking  the lead in the 63rd minute when Piotr Trochowksi scored from a  penalty after Micah Richards handled in the box.

With 11 minutes left Trochowski, outstanding this season,  provided substitute Paolo Guerrero with a low cross for the  Peruvian to slam in and give Hamburg a two-goal advantage ahead  of next Thursday’s second leg.

But for Jol, whose team is also are the running for a  domestic league and Cup double, the scoreline is tricky.

“I would have liked a fourth goal,” Jol told reporters. “The  3-1 is still dangerous and it will be very hard for us if they  (Manchester City) score again such an early goal.”

City manager Mark Hughes was confident his team’s away goal  was crucial.

“I said to the guys none of them should think the tie is  over, because we can score goals in the return leg,” he said.

Brazilian Diego scored a goal in each half to steer Werder  Bremen to a 3-1 win over Udinese, the last Italian club left in  European competition.

The mercurial playmaker, who has been linked by the media  with a move to several top Italian clubs, scored his second goal  with a curling shot from the edge of the box in the 67th minute  before Hugo Almeida added a third two minutes later.

Udinese’s Fabio Quagliarella pulled one back three minutes  from time to give the Italians some hope.

“The goal we conceded was completely unnecessary,” Werder coach Thomas Schaaf said. “This was only the first match and  that is why we need to go into the return leg with full  concentration.”

Shakhtar stayed on track for their first European semi-final  spot.

Tomas Huebschman opened the scoring from close range against  the run of play six minutes before the break.

The Ukrainians doubled their lead midway through the second  half when midfielder Jadson finished off a Brazilian combination  that included a cross from substitute Willian and a one-two  between Luiz Adriano and Fernandinho.

Shakhtar defender Mykola Ischenko was booked and will be  suspended for next Thursday’s second leg at the Velodrome.

PSG, who claimed the 1996 European Cup Winners’ Cup,  dominated the match but proved too clumsy in front of goal to be  able to take a lead into next week’s return leg in Ukraine.