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Must say directly.
Axel Kjäll and his Örebro SK had fully done their homework and then did exactly what they could when the match started and even more so when ÖSK was offered more than they could have hoped for.
Getting high in a Malmö FF where Jon Dahl Tomasson appears to have issued a long ball ban was the common denominator when MFF fiddled around a bit early in the series and is synonymous with both encounters against Elfsborg where MFF only took one point.
However, no one has received the game dividend that Örebro received.
Or if Malmö FF hasn’t given anyone that dividend.
It is up to each individual to decide.
In the eighth minute, Anel Ahmedhodzic threw the ball, Dennis Hümmet stole it like a thief gentleman for the night and replaced David Seger with a 1-0 straight through Marko Johansson.
Then Jonas Knudsen proved once again why MFF drafted him and threw a long shot that, through Rieks and an icy Berget, led to 1-1. The sensation then was that of a goal that turned the game around.
But Örebro was smarter than that.
What was Malmö FF?
Your greatest enemy.
***
This summer, MFF sold Fouad Bachirou to England’s Nottingham Forest and while Bachirou didn’t have his best season, he has the feet Malmö needs.
Now Malmö FF would again play their way through Örebro, the home team controlled MFF to put the ball on Oscar Lewicki and Oscar Lewicki has many good qualities, but the task of putting the decisive pass under great pressure when MFF comes out of the pressure outside his own penalty area should just not be his.
Now the ball went straight to Nahir Besara and the shot – which via Lewicki put Marko Johansson – meant the 2-1.
For the remainder of the first half, Malmö FF led the game and improved in terms of play, but in terms of opportunities, they were level.
And Örebro SK had not had time to clean the wrapping paper of the first half when Erdal Rakip in the opening of the second, awkwardly and awkwardly, entered Dennis Hümmet in his own penalty area.
***
It was not a hundred percent punishment, but it was a hundred percent unnecessary action from Rakip.
Marko Johansson went down the right but Besara’s penalty was too good.
3-1 for Örebro, Malmö FF had bid three times and ÖSK had won three points.
Sure, there was a forcing. It wasn’t until after the substitution, though, that Adi Nalic sent it 3-2 in the 90s and even if Isaac Kiese Thelin should have tied, the last half hour of MFF wasn’t worth a point.
However, the question is whether the defeat was the worst for Malmö.
On Tuesday, MFF captain Anders Christiansen returned from the national team meeting and, after 18 minutes, on Wednesday, he was spared a calf injury.
Now wait a week with two Allsvenskan and Europa League matches for Malmö FF.
For league leaders to be successful, they must eliminate the risk of encountering the enemy they consider their greatest.