Manchester misery as Basel and Napoli advance

Alex Ferguson

LONDON,  (Reuters) – Manchester United and Manchester City will begin 2012 scrapping with the also-rans of European football after ignominious Champions League exits as Basel, Olympique Lyon, Napoli and CASK Moscow grabbed the last four knockout round spots yesterday.

Three-times winners and last year’s runners-up United only needed a draw in Swiss club Basel’s St. Jakob-Park stadium to progress from Group C but slithered to a 2-1 defeat.

So used to dining with the continents’s aristocrats in the second half of the season, the English champions now face the prospect of the less salubrious and much maligned Europa League.

Alex Ferguson

At least they will have City for company after the rampant Premier League leaders’ first flirtation with the continent’s blue riband tournament ended in failure despite a 2-0 victory at home to already qualified Bayern Munich.
That win which took them to 10 points from a daunting Group A proved in vain for arguably the world’s richest club as Italian side Napoli grabbed second place with a 2-0 victory at Spanish whipping boys Villarreal who failed to register a single point.

Batefimbi Gomis scored a seven-minute hat-trick for Olympique Lyon, a new record for the Champions League, as his four goals helped the French club to a 7-1 victory over 10-man Dynamo Zagreb and second spot in Group D.

They ended on eight points along with Ajax but the Dutch side’s 3-0 home defeat by group winners Real Madrid meant Lyon achieved the seven-goal swing in goal difference they required.

Russia’s CSKA began the evening bottom of Group B but their 2-1 victory at already-qualified Inter Milan meant they rose to second after Lille and Trabzonspor played out a 0-0 draw in northern France when victory for either team would have put them into the first knockout round.

Basel enjoyed one of the greatest nights in their history as United failed to reach the knockout stage for only the third time in 17 attempts despite being in a comfortable-looking group.

“It’s a competition I’ve never been in with United, it means a lot of Sunday games (in the Premier League), that’s not ideal but that’s our penalty for not qualifying tonight,” United manager Alex Ferguson told reporters as he looked ahead to today’s  trips in the Europa League. “Of course we’re disappointed, there’s no other way you can feel. We had so much possession up to the last third of the field. Some of our play up to that point was very good, you have to say our finishing let us down.”

GRIPPING CLASH
Marco Streller struck in the ninth minute to put the hosts ahead and Alexander Frei scored late in the second half before United pulled one back through Phil Jones to set up a nerve-jangling finale to a gripping clash.

“I’m very, very proud,” Basel coach Heiko Vogel, who took over in November from Thorsten Fink, told reporters.

“Tactically, mentally, physically it was extraordinary.