Roma made life difficult for themselves, admits Di Francesco
Eusebio Di Francesco conceded Roma made hard work of their win over Qarabag but feels the result was all that mattered.

Roma head coach Eusebio Di Francesco was relieved to see his side leave with three points following a tough 2-1 win over Qarabag.
Kostas Manolas and Edin Dzeko put the Serie A side comfortably in control after only 15 minutes but the home side hit back when Pedro Henrique scored the first Champions League goal for a team from Azerbaijan.
The hosts produced a far better performance than they managed in their 6-0 loss to Chelsea on matchday one but could not fashion a clear chance for an equaliser, as Roma held on for their first away win in the competition since November 2010.
Di Francesco admitted his side made their own lives difficult but says Qarabag proved they deserve respect.
2520 - have won a Champions League match away from home for the first time since November 2010 (vs Basilea), 2520 days ago. Break.September 27, 2017
"You can't have any regrets after a win," he told Mediaset. "We certainly could have done better at 2-0 but you can't forget Roma haven't won in the Champions League for some time and that this was a difficult atmosphere.
"Every time Qarabag got the ball and ran forward, it was as though they had the chance of a lifetime. We could have controlled the ball better and we took some risks late on, but Qarabag are in the Champions League, which means they have quality.
"We made life difficult for ourselves. But it's a process. Last season, Roma went out in the qualifiers and now we're in the group stage.
Get FourFourTwo Newsletter
The best features, fun and footballing quizzes, straight to your inbox every week.
"We could have won differently but we did win, which is the important thing. We go forward and learn from the positives and negatives. Don't forget we now have four points from two games."

‘I don’t think Liverpool would look at Ollie Watkins, a striker isn’t a pressing issue for them – it’s Arsenal who need one’ Former Reds star explains why his old club don’t need an out-and-out forward this summer

‘He’ll still be playing at 40 at a good level because he’s in such good shape and looks after himself so well. He does everything to be a top professional’: Ex-Liverpool coach insists Mohamed Salah has plenty more miles in the tank