Vidi led 4-1 at the break with goals from Marko Scepovic, Danko Lazovic, Stefan Scepovic and Stopira.
The international break meant that there were no league games on Saturday. However, Vidi took advantage and arranged a friendly match against fellow first division side DVTK on Saturday afternoon. Manager Marko Nikolic chose the following team: Tujvel - Nego, Juhász, Vinícius, Stopira - Kovács, Hadzic, Huszti - Lazovics - Stefan Scepovic, Marko Scepovic for the game that was played in Budapest.
Videoton were quick to get off the mark and there were 5 goals scored within the first 30 minutes! The 5th minute saw a foul by Liptak on Kovacs inside the DVTK box. The referee pointed to the spo and Marko Scepovic calmly found the bottom right corner, with keeper Rados going the other way (1-0).
Two minutes later, a Huszti corner was met by Stopira, who from close range made it 2-0. Diosyőr came back into the friendly game when Brkovic headed home a free kick for the Miskolc side to make it 2-1. With 17 minutes on the clock, a second Huszti corner found Stefan who met the ball well to flick it beyond keeper Rados (3-1).
Shestakov had an effort for DVTK on 21 minutes, but Tujvel in the Vidi goal denied him. Kovacs played Marko Scepovic in on goal, and he passed it into the middle for the arriving Lazovic to make no mistake from 10 meters to make it 4-1.
Tujvel collected a 40th minute Busai long distance shot for the last action of an eventful first half.
The second half was 5 minutes old when DVTK scored their second goal through the head of Liptak to make it 4-2. Vela hit a long range effort on 58 minutes for Diosgyőr, which produced a good save from Tujvel. A low shot from Scepovic 10 minutes later went wide of the right post. Makrai then had a one on one with Tujvel after 73 minutes, which the keeper emerged better from thanks to a block from his feet. Not long before the end of the friendly, Bacsa had a shot that ended in the hands of Tujvel.
Vidi won 4-2 and will next be in league action against the Puskas Academy on the 31st March.
Author: David Rechnitzer