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20 CONTINENTAL TRAVELS GIRLS, GUNS AND GOALS TINO ASPRILLA// BY STEVE WRAITH THE 1996-97 UEFA CUP //PETER MANN The Newcastle United side of the mid-nineties, Kevin Keegan’s side, the Entertainers, took Europe by both surprise and by storm, on more than one occasion. Having had four UEFA Cup outings two seasons before, the Magpies wanted more and they received that when they qualified for the 1997 European campaign courtesy of a fifth place league finish the season before. Then, in the summer prior to the campaign beginning, the HallKeegan factor brought in £15 million record signing, Alan Shearer, to add to the attacking prowess already at the club’s disposal. Shearer would join the likes of Peter Beardsley and David Ginola, Les Ferdinand and Faustino Asprilla. And, prior to that one night in Barcelona, this was to be ‘Tinos tournament.’ In reaching the quarter finals the goals that were netted by Faustino Hernan Asprilla Hinestroza saw him finish behind Ganz of Inter, Ikpeba from United’s eventual conquerors Monaco, and Meller of Brondby, it was to be a European campaign never to be forgotten from the enigmatic, Colombian frontman. Asprilla bagged five in this European adventure. Keegan, and United’s cavalier approach, was at it from the off, even though the attendance from the opening match was to be the lowest home gate of the season, registering under 35,000. Their opponents in the first round arrived in the shape of Swedish part-timers, Halmstads BK; they were destroyed. The United manager went for an all-out 3-4-3 formation and the visitors had no answer to the threat that was posed. ‘Sir Les’ opened the scoring with a customary header inside five minutes alongside later finishes from centre-half Philippe Albert, and the evergreen Peter Beardsley with a delicate chip into Faustino Asprilla scores his second goal for Newcastle United against Metz the left corner of the net from the far right of the box, as only he could. The pick of the bunch though came from the man of the moment as Asprilla fired home a flying volley from a deep Ginola cross and giving Nordberg no chance in the Halmstads goal. The tie was all but won with a 4-0 first leg success and United took their foot of the gas in the return fixture in Sweden. Ferdinand would open the scoring with a volley for the visiting Magpies to open up a five goal lead just before the interval. Two late, second half Halmstads goals, from Arvidsson and Svensson, gave the underdogs a 2-1 second leg victory, United taking the tie 5-2 on aggregate. Flashback to the success of 1969 saw United pitted against Hungarian champions, Ferencvaros, in the second round and fans would be treated to a five goal thriller in the Ulloi Ut Stadium, the hosts claiming a 3-2, first leg lead. Keeper Srnicek seemed edgy in the Hungarian cauldron and it showed, united being two down inside ten minutes. By the interval though the Magpies were level courtesy of their twin terrors, messers Ferdinand and Shearer; Lisztes though would net his second and the hosts third, early in the second half. Come the return, and a balmy night in October, it was to be a memorable European night for the hosts. Asprilla was on fire, Ginola was majestic, United hitting four without reply for the second European tie in succession. Beardsley missed a penalty before Tino struck either side of the interval, and then came the coup de grace, a moment of sublime majesty etched into United’s history from the mercurial Frenchman, David Ginola. Goalkeeper Szeiler punched away Gillespie’s corner as far as the edge of the box and, before the defence had recovered, Ginola controlled, evaded a challenge, switched to his left and fired a rasping shot into the top right corner. Ferdinand then tapped the fourth in injury time to seal an incredible, come from behind, 6-3 aggregate win. Then came the French, and, with United bereft with injuries for 1969 is best known for man taking his first steps on the moon, the birth of Monty Python and Newcastle United Football Club winning a piece of silverware, it was also the year that Faustino Hernán “Tino” Asprilla Hinestroza was born. He was brought up in Tulua an impoverished city in Coulmbia and was playing football from an early age. He started out at Carlos Sarmiento Lora School and was picked up at the age of 18 by C X