Thus, the team from the south of the Buenos Aires suburbs left behind a series of seven games without winning at home, with four draws and three losses. Instead, the Santafesino team extended their falls in a row to three.
Facundo Farías scored the opening for Colón in the first half, but in the second Aarón Quirós and Juan Manuel Cruz turned the result around for the Banfileño success.
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From the beginning of the game, the one who took the predominance was the host based on the possession of the ball and its good circulation, which generated dangerous approaches for Ignacio Chicco.
The visiting goalkeeper knew how to respond to these situations, especially to the mid-distance shots of the local midfielders, such as the free kick he conjured against Jesús Dátolo next to the left flue of his goal.
In any case, that protagonism for Banfield was sterile due to its lack of effectiveness in the definition area and, worse still, with its lines that were too far ahead.
Colón took advantage of this intelligently to use the spaces left by his rival in the rearguard to execute a withering retort that Farías defined with a strong, low shot against the right spout of the Facundo Cambeses citadel, at 15m.
Thus, in the first full charge the ‘Sabalero’ took the lead and the actions became more balanced, with an intense back and forth.
In this development, those from Santa Fe had two very propitious occasions disrupted by Alejandro Maciel, in the first, when he cleared a header from Julián Chicco on the goal line, after a slap from Cambeses; and the other was thrown by the local goalkeeper before a frank entry by Ramón Ábila.
At the beginning of the complement, in the first deep charge Banfield managed to equalize when, after a series of rebounds, Quirós appeared to define with a subtle touch of left foot to the right of Ignacio Chicco, in the first minute.
It was the first conversion of the young left back in the first division, who later had to be replaced due to muscle fatigue and allowed the debut of the Uruguayan José Álvarez, from Montevideo City Torque.
To all this, the show charged in dynamics by the proposal of the constant offensive of the two teams in pursuit of the victory that they needed so much.
By insisting so much, the one who could change history was Banfield through a header from the admitted Cruz by capitalizing on a rebound offered by the visiting goalkeeper, by deflecting a previous header from the also admitted Erik López, at 34 minutes.
To make matters worse for Colón, near the end he lost “Wanchope” Ábila, sent off for a double warning after an angry claim against referee Ariel Penel.
On the next date, the 19th, Banfield will visit River Plate, next Wednesday at 7:00 p.m., and on the same day, but at 4:30 p.m., Colón will host San Lorenzo.
Source: Ambito

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