Napoli’s hopes of advancing to the Champions League knockout stages are still thin and they need a lot of help to get there, but they got what they needed on Tuesday in the form of a 3-0 win over Shakhtar Donetsk thanks to an absolutely dominant second half performance.
The first half of the match was, in a word, forgettable. Napoli played very poorly, creating few attacking chances and none of any particular note — more on that in a minute — and seeing both center backs require sideline treatment after taking heavy knocks. Going into the half, Shakhtar had been the better side, and Napoli fans were rightfully less than enthused with their team’s performance.
The second half, though, was a completely different, and much more glorious story.
Napoli started a bit slow, but you could see that there was a different feeling and tempo in the team compared to the first half. They were more aggressive, and much more proactive in their play, something that threw Shakhtar for a loop and seemed to catch them unawares.
That unbalance helped lead directly to Lorenzo Insigne’s spectacular opening goal a little over ten minutes into the second half, assisted by Marek Hamsik but mostly created through his own sheer will and determination:
It took Napoli awhile to find a second goal, but there was never any doubt that it would come. Napoli were utterly dominant after taking their lead, hardly even giving Shakhtar a breath in the second half. Eventually, they broke down badly — Piotr Zielinski and Dries Mertens scored easy goals two minutes apart from each other late in the match to blow the game wide open.
In fact, the match was so dominant that Napoli’s xG (Expected Goals) was hilariously high for the match:
For reference, many times when teams score even four or five goals, they only wind up with 1.5 or so xG — a statistic that grades the likelihood that a given shot taken can turn into a goal — because most of their actual goals scored tend to come from lower-percentage chances. The number is in even more stark contrast, with Michael Caley further adding that of Napoli’s 2.0 xG score, only 0.1 of that came from their dismal first-half performance, where most of Shakhtar’s total came from.
In simpler terms, Napoli didn’t just dominate the second half, they may as well have been the only team on the pitch. It was a great showing for the partenopei after an abysmal start to the game, and it was great to see them rebound with so much on the line.
Napoli still need help to reach the Champions League knockout rounds, though — not only must they beat Feyenoord again, they need Manchester City to beat Shakhtar in order to advance. But Napoli took care of step one in beating Shakhtar on Tuesday, and that’s all they can ask for right now.
On to the next.
Napoli: Pepe Reina; Christian Maggio, Raul Albiol, Vlad Chiriches, Elseid Hysaj; Piotr Zielinski (Mario Rui 86’), Amadou Diawara, Marek Hamsik (Marko Rog 65’); Jose Callejon, Dries Mertens, Lorenzo Insigne (Allan 65’)
Goals: Insigne (56’), Zielinski (81’), Mertens (83’)
Shakhtar Donetsk: Andiry Pyatov; Bogdan Butko, Ivan Ordets, Yaroslav Rakitskiy, Ismaily; Fred, Taras Stepanenko (Alan Patrick 70’); Marlos (Dentinho 79’), Taison, Bernard; Facundo Ferreyra
Goals: None
Comments
Hamsik
Is done. Once he left, you got to see the true Zielinski. Hamsik, doesn’t look engaged, doesn’t look happy. Something is def off with him.
Overall nice win. Let’s hope that Man City plays for the win. :pray:
By LouNapoli on 11.22.17 2:07am
Bravo Insigne
Ventura is criminal for leaving Insigne on the bench during the Sweden’s match
By RichardBarker on 11.22.17 12:56pm
Hey guys is Tonelli injured or just never plays?
By Agent Australia on 11.25.17 9:42pm
Never plays. Koulibaly and Albiol have the starting position on lock and Sarri prefers both Chiriches and (if you can believe it) Maksimovic as bakcups. Reports that Tonelli will be sold in January.
By PapaMassi on 11.30.17 4:38pm
Not even a match thread up for Napoli/Juve
Che peccato.
By IslesFanInNJ on 12.01.17 8:28pm
I know
For such a big game.
By Bayern_Thunder on 12.01.17 8:39pm
Mann our season has started to go downhill..
More than the loss, injuries and our lack of squad depth are what really concern me. With Ghoulam and now Insigne injured too, our left side, our predominant side, is basically handicapped.
Hopefully Insigne’s injury is nothing serious..and does anyone know when is Milik expected to return?
By Kinam13 on 12.01.17 11:01pm
Painful loss
But I saw this coming. We have been non-threatening in front of goal for a long time. Mertens is firing blank and Hamsik, Callejon has been in poor form. In fact, Hamsik has been crappy whole season so far.
By RichardBarker on 12.02.17 1:17am
Thank you ADL
Our right was always been weak and now with Insigne and Ghollum injured the left is struggling. Hamsik’s form does not help and Mertens is tired. Not many quality opIons on the bench.
By ForzaNapoli on 12.02.17 10:56pm
True but..
Sarri does not rotate. Even against lesser opponents. This imo is his worse weakness as a coach. Sure our bench isn’t top quality but top quality players aren’t going to sit on the bench. So when our regular starters are off-form / tired / injured, we turn to the bench and expect them to perform well after given so little playing time? That’s not going to happen.
By RichardBarker on 12.03.17 4:06am
Agree
This is why Strinic left.
By ForzaNapoli on 12.03.17 11:14pm
thanks Sarri not letting Strinic play for 2 years so we dont have a backup for Ghoulam
Strinic is amazing at Sampdoria and was a very good backup. At times even better than Ghoulam, how much he played? Few games per season? Why he left? Your hatred against ADL is boring and kinda tiring. Yes he could buy more options, but it is far from only his fault.
By Napoletano on 12.03.17 9:50am
Sarri is to blame for Strinic
And we had to pay double for an unfit and weaker player.
By ForzaNapoli on 12.03.17 11:15pm