PSG stay top despite Montpellier scare

19 February 2012 22:16

Montpellier proved their Ligue 1 title credentials by holding league leaders Paris Saint-Germain to a 2-2 draw in the top-of-the-table clash at Parc des Princes on Sunday.

John Utaka's header gave Montpellier a 2-1 lead with eight minutes to play but a tap-in from substitute Guillaume Hoarau two minutes from time preserved PSG's one-point lead over Rene Girard's side at the summit.

Hoarau's goal prevented Carlo Ancelotti from tasting defeat for the first time as PSG coach, but Montpellier's surprise title challenge remains firmly on course with 14 games of the season remaining.

Montpellier had been beaten 3-0 in September's reverse fixture but they began brightly, with PSG goalkeeper Salvatore Sirigu saving from Utaka in the ninth minute and then dropping to block Olivier Giroud's follow-up effort.

Kevin Gameiro stung Geoffrey Jourdren's gloves with a snapshot at the other end, and then blazed over when clean through, before Brazilian centre-back Alex broke the deadlock in memorable fashion in the 41st minute.

A foul on Nene by Mapou Yanga-Mbiwa gave PSG a free-kick 25 yards from goal and when Nene rolled the ball to Alex, the former Chelsea man thumped a swerving strike inside the right-hand post to claim his first PSG goal.

It was the first goal Montpellier had conceded in 2012 but they replied in first-half injury-time, with Younes Belhanda ghosting in to meet Vitorino Hilton's cross with a downward header that Sirigu could not keep out.

Left-back Maxwell flashed a shot across Jourdren's goal early in the second period but PSG struggled to create chances, with Javier Pastore fluffing his lines from close range shortly after coming on as a substitute.

Moments later the visitors led, with Utaka exploiting slack marking from substitute Diego Lugano to plant a free header past Sirigu from Giroud's cross.

The league summit beckoned for the visitors, but in the 88th minute Jeremy Menez wriggled into space in the Montpellier box before squaring for Hoarau to claim an equaliser that sent waves of relief rippling around the Parc.

Earlier, Lyon lost precious ground in the race for Champions League qualification after a dismal 1-0 loss at Bordeaux left them three points behind third-placed Lille, who have a game in hand.

Remi Garde's side won 1-0 at home to APOEL in the first leg of their Champions League last-16 tie on Tuesday, but they were toothless in attack at Stade Chaban-Delmas and were undone by a 41st-minute header from Yoan Gouffran.

Lyon's defeat -- their ninth of the season -- left them in fifth place, level on 39 points with Marseille, Rennes and Saint-Etienne, who romped to a 4-0 win at home to Rennes to steam into contention for a Champions League berth.

On Saturday, a 76th-minute Mathieu Debuchy strike gave Lille a 1-0 win at Lorient that strengthened the champions' grip on third place.

Fourth-placed Marseille, who host Inter Milan in the Champions League on Wednesday, were held 1-1 at home by Valenciennes but they also have a game in hand on Lyon.

Source: AFP