Played
November 1, 2011 7:45 PM GMT
Estadio de Mestalla — Valencia
Referee:‬ J. Eriksson‎
Attendance:‬ 37047‎
 
1′ Jonas
 
75′ Adil Rami
 
Top of the Match
Roberto Soldado
Roberto Soldado
Valencia
Michael Ballack
Michael Ballack
Bayer Leverkusen
Flop of the Match
Bernd Leno
Bernd Leno
Bayer Leverkusen
Bernd Leno
Bernd Leno
Bayer Leverkusen

Valencia 3-1 Bayer Leverkusen: Jonas nets second-fastest Champions League goal in history as Spaniards revive qualification hopes

The Brazilian's goal after just 10.5 seconds set the La Liga side on their way to a deserved victory and kept them in the hunt for the Round of 16 despite Stefan Kiessling's effort

By Keeghann Sinanan

FC Valencia vs. Bayer 04 Leverkusen, Roberto Soldado
Getty

Valencia defeated Bayer Leverkusen 3-1 their Champions League Group E clash at the Mestalla Stadium to keep their hopes of qualification alive for the Spaniards.

Jonas opened the scoring for the hosts after 10.5 seconds, but Stefan Kiessling sent the sides into the break level with a header on the half-hour mark.

However, second-half goals from Roberto Soldado and Adil Rami secured the win for the Spanish side who are now just one point behind the second-placed Germans in Group E.

Valencia got off to the perfect start, capitalizing on an error by Bernd Leno in the Leverkusen goal to score right after kick-off as the young stopper cleared the ball straight into the path of Jonas, who pounced on the loose ball to send his side into the lead.

The goal, clocked after 10.5 seconds of play, was the second-fastest goal in Champions League history, narrowly behind Roy Makaay’s strike after 10.12 seconds for Bayern Munich against Real Madrid in the 2007 Round of 16.

Valencia dominated possession thereafter, however they were indebted to Diego Alves for preventing an equalizer in the 17th minute when the Brazilian made a spectacular diving save to deny Omer Toprak an easy finish at the back post following a corner.

The La Liga side were soon handed a blow in the 24th minute when Ever Banega had to be withdrawn due to injury and the Argentine midfielder, fighting back tears, was replaced by Tino Costa

Things went from bad to worse for Unai Emery’s men when Leverkusen evened the scoreline against the run of play on the half-hour mark.

Michael Ballack was released down the left flank and dinked in a clever cutback from the byline which Kiessling duly headed home from a few yards out.

Valencia were left ruing their inability to capitalize on their control of possession and the visitors smelled blood, ending the first-half on a strong note.

Alves had to be alert again in the 38th minute to tip over a stinging drive courtesy of Andre Schurrle from 20-yards out.

The German international went close again five minutes after the restart when he strode confidently into the area, but his effort from the right flashed wide of the far post.

Valencia managed to settle down shortly after and began to exert greater control over proceedings with some concerted spells of possession.

This time, they made their time on the ball count, taking the lead in the 65th minute through Soldado after Jeremy Mathieu broke free down the left and delivered a low cross into the path of the Spanish striker, just managing to get enough on the ball to take it past Leno.

The Mestalla was awakened, but they were almost silenced minutes later after Schurrle had a goal wrongfully disallowed for offside.

The German was clearly behind the last defender when he was put through on the right and finished past Alves, but the linesman’s flag halted the Leverkusen celebrations.

Valencia took advantage of their good fortune and scored their third goal 15 minutes from the end as Tino Costa’s corner was placed in the path of Rami, before outmuscling Lars Bender and nodding the ball past Leno to seal the points for the La Liga side.

Leverkusen were deflated after Rami's goal and spent the remainder of the match playing second fiddle to the hosts who stroked the ball around with relative ease behind their fans, who of course erupted with relief at the final whistle.

The result sees Valencia remain in third on five points, but they are now only one behind Leverkusen for second spot in Group E with two games remaining.

Chelsea remain on top in the group with eight points, while Genk prop up the table with two points.

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Valencia

1
Diego Alves
Goalkeeper
3.50
4
Adil Rami
Defender
75′
3.50
18
Víctor Ruiz
Defender
2.50
22
3.50
23
Miguel Brito
Defender
2.50
5
Mehmet Topal
Midfielder
2.00
8
Sofiane Feghouli
Midfielder
59′
2.50
10
Ever Banega
Midfielder
24′
3.50
11
Pablo Hernández
Midfielder
2.00
7
Jonas
Striker
1′ 74′
3.00
9
3.50

Bayer Leverkusen

1.50
1
Bernd Leno
Goalkeeper
2.50
5
2.50
21
2.50
24
3.00
6
Simon Rolfes
Midfielder
3.00
8
Lars Bender
Midfielder
79′
2.50
13
2.00
18
Sidney Sam
Midfielder
82′ 84′
2.00
27
G. Castro
Defender
3.00
9
3.00
11

Substitutes

13
Guaita
Goalkeeper
0.00
2
Bruno
Defender
0.00
18
Jordi Alba
Midfielder
74′
3.00
6
Albelda
Midfielder
0.00
24
Tino Costa
Midfielder
24′ 61′ 75′
1.50
23
0.00
14
2.50

Substitutes

0.00
22
David Yelldell
Goalkeeper
0.00
2
0.00
6
2.50
3
0.00
5
Hanno Balitsch
Midfielder
2.50
11
2.50
18

Coach/Manager

-
 - 

Coach/Manager

 - 
-
 
  • Goal
  • Own Goal
  • Penalty
  • Penalty Missed
  • Yellow Card
  • Assist
  • Penalty Save
  • Penalty Shootout Goal
  • Penalty Shootout Miss
  • Yellow Card / Red Card
  • Red Card
  • Substitution IN
  • Substitution OUT
  • Injury
  • Goal.com Rating
  • Goal.com Man of the Match
  • Goal.com Flop of the Match
  • Top & Flop Global Ranking
  • Fans' Man of the Match
  • Fans' Flop of the Match
Top Scorers
Player   Goals Penalties
Cristiano Ronaldo Cristiano Ronaldo
Striker
Real Madrid
12 0
Robert  Lewandowski Robert Lewandowski
Striker
Borussia Dortmund
10 1
Thomas Müller Thomas Müller
Striker
Bayern Munich
8 1
Lionel Messi Lionel Messi
Striker
Barcelona
8 0
Burak Yılmaz Burak Yılmaz
Striker
Galatasaray
8 0