Wales 1-2 Georgia: Last-gasp goal for Georgia
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Match Stats
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Wales
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Georgia
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Shots (on Goal)
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13(7)
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15(5)
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Fouls
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9
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5
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Corner Kicks
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1
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9
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Offsides
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5
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3
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Time of Possession
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54%
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46%
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Yellow Cards
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0
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1
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Red Cards
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0
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0
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Saves
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4
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4
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Match Information
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Stadium:
Millennium Stadium, Wales
Attendance: 6,435
Match Time: 20:05 UK Official(s): Matej Jug (Referee)
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Updated: August 20, 2008, 8:00 AM UK
Georgia scored a last-gasp goal to claim a shock victory over Wales at the
Liberty Stadium to prompt exuberant celebrations from their ex-patriot fans.
Wales led in the first period through a long-range Jason Koumas strike, and
should have been further ahead at the break.
But Georgia's desire for an emotional victory, given the nature of their
war-torn country, was greater than Wales', and they equalised through Levan
Kenia and then grabbed an injury-time winner through substitute Beka
Gotsiridze.
It was no more than they deserved. Wales had fallen away badly after such a
bright, positive opening.
Georgia overcame considerable difficulties to be in Swansea for this friendly
due to the war with Russia, and a hastily patched-together squad was captained
by Blackburn's Zurab Khizanishvili and included a host of home-based players.
For Wales, the night included a parade of the seven surviving members of the
Wales squad that played in the World Cup of 1958 - Ken Jones, Cliff Jones, Terry
Medwin, Mel Hopkins, Stuart Williams, Mel Charles and Colin Baker.
No Wales side in the 50 years since has ever reached a tournament finals.
And following the crushing blow of the under-21s' defeat in their crucial UEFA
qualifier in Wrexham to Romania earlier in the evening, there was a realisation
those heroes of the past may not be emulated any time soon.
The Georgians wore black armbands and linked hands, held aloft, when their
anthem was played, Georgian flags waved from a small number of fans who had made
their way to Swansea for what was understandably an emotional occasion.
Georgia may well have had problems getting their top men here, but those that
did figure showed class, passing ability and excellent movement.
Khizanishvili and Levan Mchedlidze both saw headers go close in the opening
minutes.
But Wales slowly worked their way into the game, with Simon Davies firing over
from five yards after Parry's fine cross.
Wales then took the lead after 16 minutes when Koumas cracked in a vicious
25-yarder that goalkeeper Giorgi Loria half-stopped, but allowed the ball to
bounce out of his grasp and over the line.
Loria was forced into a plunging save to stop a Parry drive, and the Cardiff
man went close again from a Davies pulled-back cross.
Koumas was being allowed the time to run the show and he was finding space at
will, with the Georgians failing to put him under much pressure.
Neil Eardley and Davies combined well down the right after 26 minutes to
produce a delivery that evaded Loria and saw Koumas fire into the side netting.
Koumas, Parry and Davies were working well together, while Freddy Eastwood
looked lively. One run past three men by the Coventry man ended with Loria
forced into another fortunate block.
Georgia started the second period with a quicker tempo and generally more
urgency.
Substitute Rati Aleksidze saw a header go just wide, with Levan Kenia firing
over soon after.
Wales were pressured on both flanks, with plenty of good delivery.
And it was no surprise when Georgia equalised after 66 minutes. Aleksidze's
ball cut through the centre of the Wales defence to allow Kenia the opportunity
to guide the ball past Boaz Myhill.
There was a hint of offside about the goal, but it was clinically taken.
Wales hit back when Davies was played in by Koumas, and the Fulham man got
round Loria to produce a shot that Levan Khamaladze cleared from in front of an
open goal.
Parry had drifted from the game by now after a promising hour, and David
Vaughan replaced him after 70 minutes.
Robert Earnshaw finally got back into the fray when he replaced Eastwood after
79 minutes, having been left out of the last four squads.
But Wales were struggling, generally, at this stage. Georgia having looked the
better side in the second-half.
Koumas' impact had been nothing like as impressive as his first-half
contribution. He had switched from wing to wing without much effect.
And Georgia punished Wales with an injury-time winner when Beka Gotsiridze took
advantage of a mix-up between Ashley Williams and Myhill to head home.