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Sunday, July 11, 2010

Spain win the World Cup in extra-time



Andres Iniesta grabbed a late winner in extra-time as Spain won the World Cup for the first time.

Iniesta struck with four minutes remaining to settle a tetchy encounter which saw English referee Howard Webb brandish a record 12 yellow cards, plus a red for Everton's John Heitinga on a night when Holland shamed the 'Total Football' for which they have been synonymous since the first of what is now three final defeats in 1974.

Webb deserves a huge amount of credit for not setting a new record for red cards, let alone yellow, the first of which he showed to Robin van Persie in the 14th minute.

Pretty soon combative midfield duo Mark van Bommel and Nigel de Jong joined him for challenges that could easily have ended their evening.

The feeling that if the match had been played on a park pitch rather than being a showpiece occasion watched by an estimated three billion, one, or both, would have been sent off was inescapable.

Van Bommel's challenge on Joan Capdevila was bad enough. De Jong's karate kick on Xabi Alonso was awful.

That Wesley Sneijder was not even cautioned for a similarly woeful attempt at stopping Pedro could only be put down to either Webb being unsighted or the Dutch playmaker diverting attention by claiming to be injured himself.

Spain were not complete innocents in all of this. But it was the European Champions who were feeling most aggrieved, which only intensified when Webb did not see a niggly second-half challenge from Van Bommel that sparked a reaction from Barcelona playmaker Iniesta.

Vicente del Bosque was particularly annoyed, jabbing his finger at either Webb or Van Bommel, who were both in roughly the same area of the pitch.

It made for such unsightly viewing and a final which did not even come close to matching its billing.

In fairness any game that is preceded by an appearance from Nelson Mandela is going to struggle to live up to expectations.

However, as the rather tasteless celebrations of Uruguay's Luis Suarez showed after his 'real Hand of God' that denied Ghana a place in the semi-final, the ends justify the means.

And that is exactly how Holland would have viewed it if Iker Casillas had not made a quite brilliant save to deny Arjen Robben after the former Chelsea star had been set free by Sneijder.

Robben must have thought he had done everything right.
Running at pace until he saw the whites of Casillas' eyes, he shaped to go one way, then placed his shot to the other corner.

Casillas was committed in the other direction but stuck out a leg and turned the effort wide.

It was by some distance the best opportunity of the regulation 90 minutes, although Sergio Ramos had a couple of decent openings himself, both headers, both from crosses from Xavi.

On the first occasion, Maarten Stekelenburg flung himself to his right and made the save at a point early enough in proceedings that a goal could have changed the contest completely.

By the time, unmarked, Ramos headed Xavi's corner over, Webb had become as much part of the occasion as the players.

It was the only Englishman to survive beyond the last 16 that Robben ran to when he threatened to sprint through again, only to be denied by Casillas.

But losing possession did not come before Carles Puyol had made a desperate grab for the Bayern Munich winger, who was convinced the Barcelona defender should have been sent off.

On as a substitute, with a point to prove after mustering the grand total of 93 minutes prior to tonight, Arsenal's Cesc Fabregas twice came close to breaking the deadlock in extra-time, when Xavi also had a penalty claim turned down.

But Spain were not to be denied. Fabregas slotted it through to Iniesta and after one touch to control it, his second was a crisp volley past Stekelenburg.

The loss of Fernando Torres to a hamstring injury in stoppage time may have further consequences for Liverpool.

But in Madrid and Barcelona that will not matter. In Amsterdam, only a shattered reputation remains now.

Saturday, July 10, 2010

Uruguay 2-3 Germany



Thomas Muller staked his claim for the Golden Shoe award as the World Cup's top scorer as Germany secured the third-place consolation prize.

The 20-year-old midfielder currently leads the race after his fifth goal of the tournament - the same as Diego Forlan, David Villa and Wesley Sneijder but with more 'assists'.

Villa and Sneijder play in tomorrow's final but Muller, the outstanding young player of the tournament, set the target in only his eighth appearance for Germany.

Muller opened the scoring in a rain-soaked Port Elizabeth before Edinson Cavani equalised for Uruguay, then Diego Forlan volleyed the South Americans in front before a goalkeeping error allowed Marcell Jansen to equalise.

A thrilling game - the most open contest of the World Cup - was finally decided when Sami Khedira headed home to give Germany their second third-place finish in consecutive tournaments.

Germany's hopes had looked dented when Miroslav Klose - who could have broken Ronaldo's all-time scoring record of 15 World Cup goals - was ruled out by a back injury.

Muller was back from suspension however, as was Luis Suarez, the man whose controversial handball prevented Ghana from reaching the semi-finals.

It was Germany who seized control of the match in the opening exchanges with Cacau having a goal ruled out and Arne Friedrich thumping a header against the crossbar.

Germany made their dominance tell in the 19th minute when Bastian Schweinsteiger let fly from 30 yards and Uruguay keeper Fernando Muslera misjudged the shot, allowing Muller to tuck home the loose ball with a minimum of fuss.

Saturday, July 3, 2010

Spain 1-0 Paraguay



Spain's irresistible striker David Villa grabbed a late winner for Spain as they beat Paraguay 1-0 in their World Cup quarter-final on Saturday.

Villa, top scorer with five in the tournament, netted in the 83rd minute from a rebound after substitute Pedro hit the post following a brilliant run by Andres Iniesta.

Earlier, both teams missed penalties in a frantic three-minute spell. Spanish keeper Iker Casillas dived to his left to save Oscar Cardozo's penalty after Gerard Pique dragged down the Paraguayan striker in the box in the 59th minute.

Three minutes later Xabi Alonso took a penalty for Spain after Villa was fouled. His first effort went in but was disallowed for encroachment and his re-taken kick was saved by Paraguayan Justo Villar.

In the semi-finals, Spain will play Germany, who thrashed Argentina 4-0 earlier on Saturday in Cape Town.

Argentina 0-4 Germany



Germany crushed Argentina 4-0 with a sparkling display of attacking football on Saturday to book their spot in the World Cup last four.

Germany, who outsmarted their lacklustre opponents, got off to a dream start when Thomas Mueller snatched his fourth goal of the tournament, heading in a curled Bastian Schweinsteiger free kick after just three minutes.

Miroslav Klose, making his 100th international appearance, doubled Germany's lead in the 68th minute when Lukas Podolski put in a perfect pass from the left and the striker tapped in from close range.

Defender Arne Friedrich got a third with his first international goal in the 74th minute, finishing from a metre out after Bastian Schweinsteiger's cross, before Klose completed the rout with his second in the 89th minute.

Dictating the pace early in the first half, Germany refused to fall back after their quick lead, pressing high in Argentina's half and coming close to a second through Sami Khedira and Klose.

Germany, who beat Argentina on penalties at the same stage of the tournament in 2006, gradually allowed their opponents to come forward, and responding with lightning-quick counter-attacks.

GOAL - GERMANY - KLOSE



Holland, Uruguay, Spain and Paraugay, you have been warned. Klose finishes off a superb German break with Ozil putting in a perfectly time cross. He is now joint-top scorer in the World Cup.

GOAL - GERMANY - FRIEDRICH



Schweinsteiger dances through the Argentina defence, they don't know how to defend it seems as he beats several players and lays it back for Freidrich to seal the German's passage into the last four.

GOAL - GERMANY - KLOSE



That could well be the end of Argentina's World Cup challenge. Mueller, despite falling to the grounds, manages to poke the ball through to Podolski. It is two on one with Klose well positioned in the penalty area. Podolski bides his time and waits for the defender to commit before crossing for Klose to tap home into an empty net. On his 100th appearance for Germany, he has put Germany within touching distance of the World Cup semi-finals.