- Nathan Falzon (11),
- Jake Attard (54),
- Nicky Maylor (62),
- Nathan Falzon (68)
- Dmytro Semerenko (7),
- Oleksandr Skorbach (29),
- Svyatoslav Andrieichenko (37),
- Oleksandr Scherbina (44),
- Dmytro Semerenko (56),
- Mikhail Troyan (79)
- Shaun Chircop (1/1),
- Malcolm Attard (2/3)
- Volodimir Mazepa (5/6)
- Nathan Falzon,
- Jean-Pierre Zarb,
- Jon Jon Micallef,
- Matt Camilleri,
- Shaun Chircop,
- Malcolm Attard,
- Aaron Grech,
- Jeremy Dela,
- Jake Attard,
- Vince Farrugia,
- Ian Catania,
- Joseph Pio Mizzi,
- Tyson Freeman.
- Subs: Jamie Brincat Brockdorff,
- Nicky Maylor,
- Ben Naudi,
- Clive Sciberras
- Bogdan Veprik,
- Mikhail Troyan,
- Svyatoslav Andrieichenko,
- Mikhailo Pavliv,
- Anatoli Grankovskii,
- Oleksandr Skorbach,
- Volodimir Mazepa,
- Volodimir Radchik,
- Dmytro Semerenko,
- Nazar Semion,
- Aleksandr Sivokoz,
- Evgenii Trusov,
- Oleksandr Scherbina.
- Subs: Volodimir Karpenko,
- Igor Iurkin,
- Ostap Grischenko,
- Sergii Kravchenko
Match report
Mikhailo Troyan’s last-action try - taking Oleksandr
Skorbach’s fine cross kick - ensured that Ukraine remain undefeated at this
level after seven matches, fending off a late Maltese challenge to win 34-22 in
front of 500 fans at Marsa Sports Complex.
Troyan had been sin-binned just after the hour for a inappropriate reactions after AAron Grech high
tackle on Troyan and, in his absence, the galvanised Knights crossed twice,
through Nicky Maylor and outstanding Nathan Falzon, to cut the deficit to
eight points.
But as Troyan (pictured) prepared to come back, and with the visitors
out of substitutes in 31 degree heat, winger Anatolii Grankovskiy’s clearing
run and Falzon being called back on an interception for being offside, saw the
visitors hang on, before finally breathing easy with their sixth try on the
final play.
“It was a difficult game, but our bench really helped us,”
said Ukraine head coach Gennady Veprik. “Our experienced players who were among
our substitutes really helped us get through. Greece will be an even harder
game for us even though it is in Kharkiv, but we have time to prepare, this
experience will do us good and, hopefully, we will play even better.”
In their first game on home soil for almost three years, the
hosts fell behind in the seventh minute, hooker Dmytro Semerenko crossing from
close in, Volodimir Mazepa with the conversion. Malta hit straight back,
Falzon, whose runs were a constant threat, finding a hole and ghosting through,
Shaun Chircop with the extras to level.
More powerful up the middle, the visitors took the lead and
control on the half hour, skipper Skorbach darting over and Andrieichenko
Sviatoslav breaking clear just before the break, Mazepa’s third goal making it
6-18 as the sides went to cool off.
With a slight breeze accompanying them on their return,
Malta made a poor start to the second period, losing possession and conceding a
penalty, Skorbach’s fine inside pass sending ever-involved loose forward
Oleksandr Scherbina over.
With Malta struggling to make headway, another superb run
from Falzon set the position for hooker Jake Attard to snipe over from dummy
half, Malcom Attard converting, but the Knights put the re-start out on the
full, Grankovskiy weaved past three would-be tacklers and Semerenko crossed for
his second, Mazepa maintaining his perfect record with the boot.
Troyan’s yellow card immediately lifted the home resolve,
victim Jake Attard staying on the field as Falzon’s great soft pass sent in Nicky Maylor out wide, the conversion missed. Another high tackle gave Malta
position and this time Ian Catania sent Falzon between defenders for a deserved
score, Malcolm Attard with the goal from an acute angle.
Back up to their full complement for the closing stages,
Ukraine kept the ball tight, Troyan ensuring victory at the finale.
Malta head coach Sam Blyton-Keep commented: “I can’t criticise the guys, the heart, passion and commitment they showed was phenomenal, the final scoreline doesn’t reflect their effort. Every one of them gave their all and I couldn’t ask for more.
“Nathan and Jake were outstanding but I’m
especially proud of the domestic boys, they’ve done all that could have been
asked of them in the last three months and put everything on the line today. We
can push on from here against Greece – we’ll give them a fair shot.