The game of the day in Szolnok didn’t disappoint the water polo lovers. The title-
holder versus the record 8-time winner, perhaps it’s the most outstanding pairing
in today’s water polo, featuring the biggest stars of the game. Recco began the
encounter brilliantly, rushed to a 0-3 lead in 2:20 minutes but Szolnok responded
as a champion team was supposed to do and start climbing back. Still, the Italians
scored for 3-5 soon before the middle break. The third saw the hosts coming even
closer: the last minute was decisive as Recco missed a 6 on 5 to go 5-8 up, instead
Aaron Younger scored with 16 seconds remaining for 6-7.
From its first possession Szolnok equalised in the fourth, then the already heated
battle reached the boiling point with 4:44 to go. Recco’s Nicolo Gito was ejected
for 4 minutes for brutality, Andrija Prlainovic netted the ensuing penalty to give
Szolnok the lead for the first time (8-7). The home side enjoyed a 4-minute man-
up, however, Recco fought hard and effectively and could level the score twice.
But Prlainovic scored again for 10-9 with 52 seconds remaining, then the man-
down expired, Recco earned a man-up but three shots weren’t enough to save the
game to a draw. It means that Szolnok maintained its home unbeaten run lasting
for three years while Recco was defeated for the second time in the prelims since
2015 – the last one happened here in Szolnok too.
This result kept Jadran Herceg Novi on top of the group: the Montenegrins
remained the only unbeaten side in Group B as they did another great job, this
time in Bucharest. Steaua eyed its first points at home after losing to the top teams
in the first three rounds. The Romanians were on equal terms for most of the time,
it stood 4-4 at halftime, the third period brought tremendous battle without a
single goal. Then came the decisive last eight minutes when the hosts began to run
out of gas, missed a man-up to equalise after 4-5 and soon they found themselves
4-8 down as they conceded two in 31 seconds. This 0-4 run from Jadran decided
the outcome.
Eger (HUN) did something similar while beating Sabadell (ESP) with ease. The
Spaniards stayed in the game until 8-5 but then the Hungarians, semi-finalists last
May, rolled over the tiring the opponent. They netted the last six goals of the
match while the visitors missed all their 9 man-ups, kind of helping to kill their own
chances completely.

Spandau (GER) managed to keep up with the ‘big boys’ of the
group: after having caused a huge upset by beating Szolnok eleven days ago they
earned a convincing win in Alphen (NED). Their 0-3 rush in 96 seconds early in the
second period did the damage, after 1-5 they never looked back. In fact, it turned
into a lop-sided match as Spandau had a 2-10 run in the second half.
Olympiacos kept its top rank in Group A, the Greeks opened the game with a 5-1
roll and even if Partizan (SRB) climbed back to 10-6 after being 8-2 down, the hosts
dominated the last period.
As expected, the clashes in Dubrovnik and Budapest were a lot fiercer. Jug seemed
to take the upper hand as the Croats sailed to a 5-1 lead in the opening period
against Barceloneta. Soon they were 7-2 up and few would have guessed that last
season’s finalists would score only two more goals in the remaining two and a half
periods. The Spaniards tightened their defence, though, and by netting three
connecting goals they came back to life. Jug still held a 9-6 lead early in the fourth
but Barceloneta never gave up. At 9-8 Jug missed a crucial 6 on 5, soon the visitors
buried a penalty for 9-9 and there were still 1:52 minutes to play. They could have
even won the encounter but it ended in a tie – making Barceloneta the much
happier side while leaving the pool.
Brescia claimed extremely valuable points in Budapest as they beat one of their
biggest rivals in the hunt for the F8 berths. OSC led 4-3 at halftime but after a
series of missed man-ups at both ends the Italians managed to put away two in
succession for 4-5 while the hosts couldn’t score from another one before the last
break. In the fourth Brescia could add two action goals for 4-7, and even though
OSC pulled two back in a span of 48 seconds but another action goal from Petar
Muslim sealed Brescia’s victory.
Dynamo (RUS) and Hannover (GER) staged a great game offering fine twists and
turns. However, the last turn favoured the Russians as they scored four straight
goals after 5-5 and that was enough to win the game and rose to the second place
– quite a feat from a newcomer after four rounds.

Champions League, Main Round,

Day 4
Group A
Olympiacos Piraeus (GRE) v VK Partizan Belgrade (SRB) 16-8
Jug Croatia Osiguranje Dubrovnik (CRO) v CNA Barceloneta (ESP) 9-9
Dynamo Moscow (RUS) v Waspo 98 Hannover (GER) 9-6
A Hid-OSC Budapest (HUN) v AN Brescia (ITA) 6-8

Standings: 1. Olympiacos 10, 2. Dynamo 9, 3. Jug 7, 4. Brescia 6, 5. OSC 6, 6. Barceloneta 5, 7. Hannover 3, 8. Partizan 0

Group B

ZF Eger (HUN) v Astralpool Sabadell (ESP) 14-5
Szolnoki Dozsa-Kozgep (HUN) v Pro Recco (ITA) 10-9
Steaua Bucharest (ROU) v Jadran Carine Herceg Novi (MNE) 4-8
AZC Alphen (NED) v Spandau 04 Berlin (GER) 5-17

Standings: 1. Jadran 10, 2. Recco 9, 3. Szolnok 9, 4. Spandau 9, 5. Eger 7, 6. Sabadell 3, 7. Steaua 0, 8. Alphen 0

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