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Häcken had to make the 1-0 too easy
Hammarby, with two wins in a row and unbeaten in the last four matches, faced a Häcken, who did not win in three straight matches. It was easy to think that Bajen would win offensively and dictate a lot in this match. But the first half was even and Häcken, in terms of his form, was unexpectedly good. Ahmed Yasin was agile and created great chaos for the home team. The visitors also went 1-0 in the 17th minute. Tim Söderström gave Yasin just one surface to hit a post too easily, as Alexander Söderlund headed the ball into the net, through David Ousted. The end was more or less direct for the goalkeeper, who pushed the ball towards the goal too easily. Before the break, both teams had time to create a few chances each, and it wasn’t right away for the home team to push their opponent low in search of a draw. The hedge held up well and felt dangerous in its adjustments.
Unexpectedly good, Häcken
Häcken continued to play with some interesting adjustments in the second half, but Hammarby had a greater playing advantage and was of course more in favor of a goal. However, without reaching greater dangers. Mainly, the local team worked on the posts, which either lacked sharpness or were cared for by Häcken’s defenders. The away team’s defensive play was stable and for a long time it was the case that goalkeeper Pontus Dahlberg was not forced to make a qualifying stop in the second half. The hedge was unexpectedly good. This was not the performance I expected from Andreas Alm’s men. The team felt weak in form and also has Daleho Irandust on the disabled list. But the yellow-blacks managed to recover and talked a lot about being able to focus on Hammarby, who seemed poor in ideas and tough.
Then Sher can dominate in the Allsvenskan
But in the end, Hammarby got a few minutes of pressure and after a counterattack won in the offensive penalty area, the ball ended up in the hands of Aimar Sher, 17, who cut down the left and thundered the 1-1 in the far center. Overtime. Incredibly bitter for Häcken, who played a good away game. Sher? He is a player who has enormous superior qualities and floats forward on the field, passing and between opponents, in a way that a shark does. Sure, in this match you had some dangerous ball losses and it is obvious that you need to take steps physically to stay stable in the dueling game and protect the ball, but once you have accumulated and found that uniformity as all talents strive, Sher You can dominate in the Allsvenskan. If you stay long enough now.
Everything is supposed to be decided in the final round.
The battle for the two European places behind Malmö FF is and will be a thriller at the end. I do not see any other scenario than that everything will live in the final round. Teams lose points a little bit here and there, and when you think that something or some teams are really moving and should give a shake, then they drop there. Of course, it is an understatement for the top team that it takes so “few” points to be second in the Allsvenskan after 26 rounds and this year’s series is so incomprehensible that it just gets weird. Where are the parties that do not surprise? Where are the long series of great results that the best teams usually get? Where are the results that can be explained? The Corona year has erased the logic.
Is the noise of “playing ball”?
In August 2017, a match between Hammarby and Häcken was played at Tele2 Arena, which among other things contained a major dispute between players on the field. It came after Bajen made it 1-1 in a situation where Häcken expected them to get the ball back after Juhani Ojala received medical attention. The Häcken camp was upset and, after the match, then-Bajen player Jiloan Hamad responded with harsh words about Häcken’s behavior. And perhaps it is the case that that game stays in the retina of the team, at least in Hammarby’s. Because when Nikola Gulan sat down with a sore thigh in the first half, Hammarby’s Abdul Khalili chose to play the ball, to great protests from teammates and especially from sports director Jesper Jansson. He stood up in the stands and yelled, “PLAY!” Jansson wanted his team to attack.