Though Olympiacos was considered the top favourite against Spandau (GER), the
Greeks found themselves in the middle of dogfight in the third period. They laid
back too early after taking an easy 3-0 lead and the Germans came back as they
usually do whenever feeling the chance. After 4-4, however, Olympiacos managed
to find some rhythm, netted two goals and even though Spandau pulled one back
for 6-5 and had a ball at the end for a tie, the Greeks advanced to the semis.
The next two matches saw the two Hungarian powerhouses being sunk (last May
they played the semis against each other). First gone Eger: until half-time the game
seemed to be a balanced one against Barceloneta but the Spaniards shut out their
rivals in the entire second half and sailed away with an easy 9-4 win.
Szolnok came next in the rematch of last year’s final against Jug. A year ago it was
a one-sided affair (10-5), this time it was a huge and even fight. Szolnok missed a
penalty while leading 3-4 and instead of 3-5 soon Jug sat in the driving seat at 5-4.
Still, the Hungarians came back strong and retook the lead for 6-5 but the Croats
equalised shortly before the last break. In the fourth, after 7-7, the man-ups
decided the outcome: Szolnok wasted its 6 on 5 (they missed last year’s MVP
Andrija Prlainovic who was sidelined with an injury) while Jug made it and won the
game 9-8. It meant that for the first time since 2014 the title-holder couldn’t make
the semis while Jug reached the top four for the 4 th straight occasion.
The day-ending Italian derby produced a fierce fight as it was expected, and
Recco’s win – but not in a way it was expected. Brescia couldn’t find the tools
against its arch-rival’s man-down defence in the first half while Recco took control
and a 4-1 lead. The second was a totally different story as Brescia, after being 0 for
6 in the first half, made 6 man-ups out of 7 while its goalie Marco del Luongo
posted a series of huge saves. Though Brescia lost its coach and two players with
red cards as tensions ran extremely high, they avoided the straight defeat – unlike
in the previous four matches played with Recco this season – and forced the
penalty shootout. However, del Luongo’s magic finished here, the post and a save
from veteran Stefano Tempesti sent Recco through to the semis. Interestingly, in
these two met in this phase on each occasion in the last three editions, Jug upset
the Italians in the previous two.

Game descriptions

Olympiacos Piraeus (GRE) v Spandau 04 (GER) 6-5
The Greeks took a flying start and led 2-0 after 2:04 minutes and they went 3-0 up
early in the third. Spandau needed 15:09 minutes to get on the scoreboard as they
struggled against Olympiacos’s tight defence. But once they found the key, they
started using it effectively while the Greeks seemed to have lost their composure,
laid back too early after 4-1 (even missed a penalty) and the Germans climbed back
step by step. With 1:45 to go in the third it was even at 4-4 and the Greeks needed
a 6 on 4 to take back the lead 15 seconds before the last break.
Spandau had a couple of possessions in the fourth before Konstantinos
Genidounias netted his third, a fine action goal to give Olympiacos a 6-4 lead with
4:32 from time. The Germans missed crucial man-ups though Nikola Dedovic then
brought them closer with 0:56 remaining. Spandau killed the last Greek attack and
had one last ball to save the match to a penalty-shootout but the Olympiacos
defence reacted well, and a steal sealed their tough win.

ZF Eger (HUN) v Atletic Barceloneta (ESP) 4-9
A brilliant action goal from Aggelos Vlachopoulos gave Eger an early lead but that
was the last time the Hungarians could have some good feelings in this afternoon.
Felipe Perrone put away a 6 on 5 and Martin Famera blasted one from the distance
to turn the clock within 59 seconds. A fine goal from the centre by Josip Vrlic
pushed Barceloneta 1-3 up and even though Eger levelled the score at 3-3, Alberto
Munarriz’s double gave a two-goal cushion for the Spaniards once more. Eger hit
one with 0:02 on the clock for 4-5 and in the third they had a man-up to go even
once more. They missed it and that turned out to be crucial as Barceloneta netted
two 6 on 5s nicely and led by three before the last break. Eger didn’t have any
reserves left in the tank – as the time went by it wasn’t about winning but scoring
at all on their side. They couldn’t, Eger remained scoreless in the entire second half
while Barceloneta sailed away a great victory.

Jug Croatia Osiguranje Dubrovnik (CRO) v Szolnoki Dozsa-Kozgep (HUN) 9-8
Jug opened the match with a better spell and led 2-1 deep into the first period but
Szolnok could equalise just four seconds before the break. The title-holders came
back strong in the second and netted two more in 74 seconds to go 2-4 up. At 3-4
an important moment came when Marko Bijac could save Milan Aleksic’s penalty –
and started hunting Szolnok in the coming minutes as they were unable to score in
the following 10:07 minutes. Instead of sitting on a 3-5 lead they were soon 5-4
down in the third but Gergo Zalanki’s fine individual action brought the Hungarians
to even at 5-5. With 1:34 to go Batori even pushed them ahead but Viktor
Rasovic’s brilliant action shot resulted that the third period ended with a 2-2
partial result to demonstrate how even this game was.
Jug gained the lead again thanks to a nicely played 6 on 5 which was followed by a
long period with loads of physical battle and swimming. The gruelling three-minute
fight was halted by Zalanki’s blast, it stood 7-all with 3:50 to go. Luka Lozina’s
outstanding centre-action was a worthy response from the Croats, then came the decision-time where man-up play determined the winner. Szolnok
got the first chance but missed it while Jug did the same trick as at
the beginning of the period and Luka Loncar put the ball away from the 2m line for
9-7, 56 seconds from time. Though Szolnok pulled one back later but the Croats
kept the ball in the remaining 26 seconds.

Pro Recco (ITA) v AN Brescia (ITA) 8-8, pen: 4-2
Brescia opened the scoring from a fine centre-action by Petar Muslim and Recco
needed a bit more time to arrive to the game. But they did and within 104 seconds
they took the lead while killing their local rivals’ man-ups, one after the other.
Brescia missed six in a row in the first half while two blasts by Niccolo Figari and
Aleksandar Ivovic tripled the hosts’ advantage. Brescia lost one of its key-player
Vjekoslav Paskovic after some roughness enough for a red card.
Recco seemed to rule the game but Brescia came back in the third after they
started making their 6 on 5s. They netted three out of three while only a lucky shot
by Filip Filipovic kept the distance for Recco. At 5-4, Aleksandar Ivovic’s great
action goal from the wing was a boost for Recco late in the third, though they
missed their extra but Brescia’s man-up run was also halted in the dying seconds
so Recco led 6-4 before the last break.
A great action goal from Muslim brought back the tensions immediately and a
couple of fantastic saves from Marco del Luongo set up the scene for Brescia to go
even. They couldn’t create any better opportunity, though, and from a 6 on 4
Dusan Mandic doubled the gap once more – while Brescia’s coach Alessandro Bovo
was expelled from the bench. His players fought on, and soon Valerio Rizzo’s shot
bounced in from the post in a 6 on 5, so it was 7-6 with 3:32 to go. What’s more,
with 1:53 from time, it was 7-7 as Rizzo found the back of the net from the other
wing – Brescia was 5 for 6 in man-ups in the second half compared to the 0 for 6 in
the first. Recco wasn’t done, however, a 5m blast from Ivovic put them ahead
again. With 54 seconds to go Brescia got the ball once more and could attack after
a time-out. And they did it once more, Nora put the ball away in a man-up for 8-8,
with 18 seconds remaining on the clock. Recco earned a 6 on 5 but del Luongo
stopped Ivovic’s shot so a shootout decided the game (this was the first time in
this season that Recco couldn’t beat Brescia in the regular time, which they could
do in the previous for matches in this season).
Though their lucky ride ended here as del Luongo also ran out of magic. He found
the directions but couldn’t catch any shot while Muslim hit the post in the third
round and Nicholas Presciutti’s penalty was well saved by veteran Stefano
Tempesti. On the other end all four shots were netted so Recco could prepare for
another semi-final with Jug – for third in three years.

Champions League Final Eight
Quarterfinals
Olympiacos Piraeus (GRE) v Spandau 04 Berlin (GER) 6-5
ZF Eger (HUN) v CN Barceloneta (ESP) 4-9
Jug Croatia Osiguranje Dubrovnik (CRO) v Szolnoki Dozsa-Kozgep (HUN) 9-8
Pro Recco (ITA) v AN Brescia (ITA) 8-8, pen: 4-2

Friday 8 June

For places 5-8
16.00 Spandau v Eger
17.30 Brescia v Szolnok
Semi-finals
19.00 Olympiacos v Barceloneta
20.30 Recco v Jug

Saturday 9 June
16.00 For places 7-8
17.30 For places 5-6
19.00 Bronze medal game
20.30 Champions League Final
For stats and play-by-play action

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