Soccer

Yarmolenko strike spells Ukraine pain for Welsh

Ukraine's Andriy Yarmolenko (right) celebrates scoring the only goal in his side's Friendly against Wales
Ukraine's Andriy Yarmolenko (right) celebrates scoring the only goal in his side's Friendly against Wales Ukraine's Andriy Yarmolenko (right) celebrates scoring the only goal in his side's Friendly against Wales

Friendly: Ukraine 1 Wales 0

WALES' gamble to take a pre-Euro 2016 fixture in Ukraine backfired as they slipped to a 1-0 defeat.

Manager Chris Coleman had admitted before heading out to Kiev that the game was a “risk” with this being Wales’ penultimate match before this summer’s tournament in France.

But momentum before Wales’ first major tournament appearance for 58 years is in short supply now; it is only one win in their last six games – and that was against one of the whipping boys of European football, Andorra.

Andriy Yarmolenko’s first-half effort proved enough against Wales, who were once again without key players Gareth Bale and Aaron Ramsey as Coleman set up his side with the summer’s Euro 2016 group game against Russia very much in mind.

Ukraine will also be at Euro 2016 in the same group as Germany, Poland and Northern Ireland and the size of Wales’ task was summed up by the fact they had lost only two of their previous 15 matches, both against reigning European champions Spain.

The game had hardly caught the imagination of the Ukrainian public with the 70,000-Olympic Stadium less than a third full and those that had turned up had little to get excited about in the opening exchanges.

Wales created the first chance after 13 minutes when Tom Lawrence latched onto Chris Gunter’s ball from the right and his attempt was helped over the crossbar by Andrei Pyatov.

There was little rhythm to the contest with so many free-kicks being conceded, Denys Garmash perhaps the unfortunate recipient of a yellow card as Ukraine had appeared to foul on a rota basis.

Ukraine had barely featured as an attacking force in the opening 28 minutes with their star man Yarmolenko, the Dynamo Kiev forward, cutting a frustrated figure on the right flank.

But all that changed when Wales conceded a free-kick 35 yards out in a central position and Ukraine skipper Ruslan Rotan lined up as if to shoot.

But he instead floated the ball over the Wales wall and Yarmolenko made a difficult skill look simple, meeting the dropping ball with a sweet half-volley which goalkeeper Wayne Hennessey helped into the corner of the net.