Napoli rebounded from last weekend’s defeat to Juventus by
defeating Lazio 1-0 to go third in the table, one spot ahead of their rivals in
the capital in the race for the Champions League.
Rafael Benitez’s side arrived in Rome intent on shutting
their opponents down and Gonzalo Higuian’s acute finish in the first half was
all they needed.So as Napoli move forward, and Lazio remain weighed down by injuries, let’s look at what we learned from today’s action.
Higuian still loves
playing The Eagles
By scoring his side’s winner, netting for the tenth time in
Serie A this season, Higuian made it seven goals in his last four appearances
against Lazio. You might think he raises his game against the Romans then, but
to tell the truth, he’s been this good all season and now becomes the fourth
player to score at least ten Serie A goals this term. His finish, a venomous
drive at the near post after holding the ball up alone, was the mark of a
striker in form.
Napoli grind it out
without exerting themselves
Indeed, the solitary nature of Higuian’s goal epitomised
Napoli’s performance – quick-thinking, industrious and economical. While the
hosts wasted their chances in front of goal Napoli came off on top by making
better use of the ball on the counter-attack - not from starting out with any
sense of attacking panache or reckless ambition. Their pace on the break was
frightening, and Higuian, Jonathan de Guzman and Jose Callejon all exploited
space in the final third.
Naples men can look
ahead to European qualification
Although Napoli missed out on reaching the Champions League
last season, dropping out in the play-offs to Athletic Bilbao, the Blues look
assured of at least a preliminary spot again this time around. They move to
third above Lazio and the nature of their battling, with Marek Hamsik benched
until past the hour, shows they can grind out results on the road – a habit
they will need in Europe. That’s without mentioning the experienced signing
from Dnipro, Ivan Strinic, who kept Antonio Candreva quiet and impressed on his
debut at full-back.
Crowded treatment room
at Lazio is taking its toll
It’s not so rosy at the Stadio Olimpico however. Having
thrown away a two-goal lead to draw 2-2
in the Rome derby last weekend, Lazio entered this defeat with a threadbare
squad once more. Standouts at both ends of the pitch such as Stefan de Vrij,
Stefano Mauri and Felipe Anderson are all still out while the likes of Keita
Balde, the tricky 19-year-old from Barcelona, and Danilo Cataldi, a 20-year-old
with potential in midfield, will need time to express themselves.
Djordjevic is
struggling to fill the void
Of course, with attacking talent on the sidelines now is the
time for the Serbia forward, Filip Djordjevic, to rediscover the form that
helped him score a hat-trick against Palermo in September. Still, against
Napoli he failed to read any of Candreva’s crosses – despite their variety –
and didn’t create any chances himself, stretching his barren run to just two
goals in 12 appearances. Elsewhere Marco Parlo headed against the bar, while
Balde and Luis Cavanda missed chances that will haunt them in their sleep.
By Alistair Hendrie (January 2015)