Soccerverse Times
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Continental Chaos, Minute By Minute
Columbus vs U Santiago de Chile
Written by
Laura
Soccerverse Times' match & tactics analyst — a Londoner and Arsenal supporter, measured, precise, and fluent in the language of the game.

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Twenty-eight thousand one hundred and seven were in for a proper knockout night in Columbus, with Echo's side and Ekeh1995's U Santiago de Chile both trying to keep their AME Continental Knockout run alive. No league-table comfort here. One injury, one card, one save, and the whole tie could tilt.
From Kick-Off To The First Break
The first warning came almost immediately. In the 1st minute, Fuka-Arthur Masuaku Kawela pushed Columbus into an assisted chance, and the commentary moved briskly through "SHOT" and "OFFTARGET". Not clean. Still, it told us where Columbus wanted to play: early, direct enough, and into the wide channel before U Santiago could settle.
Then in the 4th minute, the match changed shape before it had even found a rhythm. Diego Rossi Marachlian went down for Columbus, the feed marked "INJURY", and Jamie Vardy was sent on. That is not just a substitution. That is a tactical reset after three minutes played.
U Santiago answered in the 6th minute when Luciano Pons and Pedro Ojeda combined, only for Derrick Jones Amaniampong to make the tackle. Two minutes later Dylan Chambost, later named man of the match, started to get his fingerprints on the tie. His 8th-minute assisted chance was stopped by Franco Calderon.
Then came the first disciplinary edge. In the 12th minute, Pons fouled and was booked. Columbus pressed again in the 14th, Chambost creating the chance, Marcelo Morales Suarez making the tackle. The game was already being played in bursts: Columbus probing, U Santiago biting back, both sides living one duel away from trouble.
The first real rupture arrived in the 16th minute. Kenny Tete found Vardy, the commentary went "ASSISTEDCHANCE", then "SHOT", then "GOAL". Clinical. Vardy had been on the pitch because of an injury, and within 12 minutes of entering the match he had supplied the moment every knockout tie waits for.
But the tie did not calm down. In the same minute, Laurenzo Monteiro Alvarenga released Pons for U Santiago, whose shot went off target. In the 17th, Laurenzo had a chance of his own and forced Bruno Semedo Varela into a save. That mattered. Columbus had landed a punch; U Santiago were still standing.
The Match Tightens
The next spell was all about defensive timing. In the 23rd minute Alejandro Zendejas Saavedra was stopped by Laurenzo. In the 24th, another Columbus move towards Vardy met the same defender. Pedro Ojeda tried to connect with Pons in the 27th, but Masuaku cut it out. Morales had a 30th-minute chance for U Santiago; Sean Zawadzki made the tackle.
Then in the 34th minute, Matias Zaldivia fouled and took a yellow card. One minute later, U Santiago still nearly turned pressure into reward: Morales fed Andreas Bouchalakis, Bouchalakis shot, and Varela saved. Proper goalkeeper's work, that, because the next thing the away side needed was belief.
Instead, the 37th minute brought another injury. Nicolas Guerra Ruz was forced off and Leandro Fernandez came on. Both managers had now been dragged away from Plan A by the match itself.
Before half-time, Vardy had a 41st-minute chance blocked by Zaldivia, Kenny Tete tried to find him again in the 44th, and the 45th minute brought chances at both ends that were tackled away. It had become a match of interventions as much as invention.
The Card That Changed The Picture
The second half opened with the same tension. In the 47th minute Masuaku pushed Columbus forward again. In the 48th, U Santiago built twice through Bouchalakis, Calderon, Fernando Arce Juarez and Zaldivia, and twice Zawadzki was there to shut the door. In the 49th, Chambost linked with Masuaku, and Laurenzo read it.
Then in the 52nd minute, the hinge. Zaldivia fouled again. The commentary did not dress it up: "YELLOWCARD", then "SECONDYELLOWCARD". From a tactical perspective, that is the moment the away structure has to become smaller, narrower, and more careful. U Santiago had to chase while protecting a gap in the back line.
Columbus did not immediately turn that advantage into comfort. Kenny Tete was warned after a 58th-minute foul. In the 59th, Zendejas found Tai Baribo, whose shot went off target. At 60 minutes, U Santiago reshuffled: Leonel Galeano replaced Calderon, and Sergio Adrian Flores Reyes replaced Bouchalakis.
The 62nd minute nearly brought the next decisive action. Vardy found room again, shot again, and Gabriel Castellon Velazquez saved. A minute later, Masuaku had a chance and Galeano tackled. Credit where it is due: ten men, patched shape, still competing.
U Santiago's best late surge came in the 73rd minute. Flores created for Razvan Patriche Nichita, Patriche shot, and Varela saved. That was the reminder that this tie was not over just because the numbers favoured Columbus.
The Final Push
At 80 minutes, Columbus made their game-management move. Zendejas had a shot saved by Castellon, then Maxime Chanot replaced Masuaku. Chambost, Zendejas and Derrick Jones were repositioned, and the log added "CHANGETACTIC". Sensible, not flashy. Protect the centre, keep enough running power out wide, and make U Santiago play through bodies.
Still, the final stretch had chances. In the 85th minute, Vardy was stopped by Morales. In the 86th, Chanot forced another Castellon save. In the 87th, Baribo and Chanot combined before Patriche made the tackle; at the other end, Ojeda and Galeano tried to build something, only for Tete to shut it down. Even in the 90th minute, Chanot found Baribo and Patriche had to intervene again.
The numbers tell the same story as the eyes: Columbus had 55% possession, seven shots and four on target; U Santiago had 45%, four shots and three on target. Chambost earned man of the match with a 9 rating, Baribo also posted a 9, Varela made three saves, and Castellon kept U Santiago alive with three of his own. Only after all that tension can we say it plainly: Columbus 1, U Santiago de Chile 0.
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