Home Sports One by one the Boca champion: Rojo, one head above the others with an accompanying goal

One by one the Boca champion: Rojo, one head above the others with an accompanying goal

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One by one the Boca champion: Rojo, one head above the others with an accompanying goal

One by one the Boca champion: Rojo, one head above the others with an accompanying goal

Marcos Rojo, the figure of Boca. Photo: EFE/Ariel A. Carreras

Boca, the Professional League Cup champion, ended with a resounding result against the Tigers, with two of three goals from their defenders. The Colombian frank fabra It was best for how he connected the ball to stick it in the right corner of Gonzalo Marinelli, who was helpless.

Agustin Rossi (6): Attentive to the corners, he gave a clean start and appeared in difficult moments. always sober

Luis Advincula (6): He closed his side and had some key crosses in place. He also contributed to the attack. Gives confidence.

Carlos leaves (6): Good from above and from below. Solid, with character. Order and play too. It was no coincidence that he was wearing the captain’s ribbon.

Red Frames (8): He had the game he dreamed of when he decided to leave European football to join Boca. He won the head-ups against Retegui and opened the fight with a key header.

Frank Fabra (7): He played 4 or 5 points, but he made a bombshell defining the final to get into Boca’s great history.

William Fernandez (7): The team thermometer. Play and play. But he was also a mess: he went to the floor and scratched. One player from each area.

Alan Varela (6): Pol and Romero played well and decided to cover their backs. His entry into the team in the second half against Corinthians in San Pablo fixed the pieces and from that moment on Boca was armed to be champion.

Oscar Romero (6): He played it all. He was a left midfielder, then hitched and finished eighth. Paraguayan brought in quality and an accurate forward pass: he enabled Villa and Salvio behind full-back rivals with great cunning.

Eduardo Salvio (5): When he adds an “n” to his nickname, he’s doing something silly. He dribbles forward and is important to the team, but he almost always makes bad decisions. Quickly exit ST.

Dario Benedetto (5): He scored a great goal, but offside. He was partially involved in the game. He fought Tigre’s central defenders and came out exhausted to get a standing ovation. But it hardly posed a danger to the opposing goal.

Sebastian Villa (5): His first half was good and in the second he faded. He has a unique dribble and speed for Argentine football. But in Córdoba he was handbraked.

Juan Ramirez (5): He entered well and he passed the ball with judgment. Fabra’s goal came with a pass from him.

Source: Clarin

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