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Sensational night in the Spiroudôme

The players, the coaches and the record crowd were still catching their breath well after the first leg of the final.

By Paul Saffer in Charleroi

The players, coaches and record crowd were still catching their breath well after the final whistle following the first leg of the fourth UEFA Futsal Cup final - which at half-time looked like turning into a rout for home team Action 21 Charleroi, but by the final whistle was left on a knife-edge ahead of Saturday's return in Russia.

Charleroi lead
Charleroi, in their fourth final, came out of the traps at full pelt, and Dinamo did well to still be at 0-0 ten minutes in. Within 120 seconds, it was 3-1 to Charleroi, Andre and Robinho having struck before Sirilo pulled one back and a fourth Brazilian, home captain Alex, restored the two-goal cushion. When Eder extended the advantage not long before the interval, it seemed that the second leg in Moscow could end up falling into the category of formality.

Dinamo comeback
But the turning point of the game came seconds after the break, as Alex received the ball in front of goal but contrived to shoot straight at Dinamo goalkeeper Pavel Stepanov. Almost immediately, Pelé had reduced the gap and Konstantin Maevski's 33rd-minute effort further eroded the Charleroi lead.

Mood swings
Stepanov told uefa.com: "When it went to 1-0 it was not that bad as we knew that Charleroi could score first. It was more worrying at 4-1 but we felt it did not reflect the game. After that we came back and improved matters and we now have a good chance with our away goals."

Shipping goals
Alex, meanwhile, reflected Charleroi's frustration despite the victory. "It is not normal to ship three goals like that. Before the match we said a three-goal lead would be the perfect result. It was still a good outcome because we won but we must do well again next week. I missed the 5-1 chance as the ball arrived too quickly, soon it went to 4-2 and the game changed. It is our third final and if we don't win again it will be incredible."

Maevski suspension
One problem for Dinamo will be the suspension of Maevski, booked not long after his goal. Stepanov said: "It's not good for us that he will be suspended but we knew it was a possibility as four players were on the yellow card limit." However, Dinamo will have Alexandre Rakhimov back from a ban, and Charleroi are nervously waiting on the fitness of Kelson, who injured his ankle in the first leg but looks likely to be available, along with Eder who suffered a slight knock. Charleroi coach Sergio Benatti said: "[Kelson] is an important player but only one member of the team."

Ivanov concern
Benatti's opposite number, Yuri Rudnev, kept competition leading scorer Sergei Ivanov on the bench as he was worried the PVC terraflex surface at the Spiroudôme could aggravate a previous injury. "The pitch was not good for Ivanov, but he will play a part in Moscow," Rudnev said.

No advantage
However, Benatti insisted: "The pitch was not an advantage for us as we do not play league games or train there - we have only played there in the second qualifying round and trained there once."

Enthralling tie
While the wooden-floored Druzhba hall in Moscow will not hold the 6,500 crowd that packed into the Spiroudôme - a record for the final - the atmosphere is sure to be as intense, with Dinamo hoping their direct approach will outdo Charleroi's possession game. The unleashing of Ivanov could well prove a crucial factor in this enthralling tie.