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Showing posts with label FIFA 2010. Show all posts
Showing posts with label FIFA 2010. Show all posts

Monday, July 12, 2010

FIFA WORLD CUP- Spain is the New Champ, Dutch dreams ends ...

Spain midfielder Andres Iniesta's nerveless finish in extra time delivered a knockout blow to Netherlands in a bruising final to clinch a 1-0 win and their first World Cup triumph at the first African finals.

With a shootout looming, the peerless Iniesta controlled a ball from substitute Cesc Fabregas four minutes from time and found the coolness that had eluded forwards on both sides to fire the ball past the helpless Maarten Stekelenburg.

The Dutch, who ran fuming to referee Howard Webb convinced the goal was illegal on at least two counts, were already down to 10 men following John Heitinga's red card seven minutes earlier and there was little realistic hope of a comeback.

Spain succeeded in keeping their opponents at arm's length and their players wept with joy as they celebrated becoming the first European team to win the World Cup on another continent and the first to triumph after losing their opening game.

"Euphoria, joy, everything positive," Spain midfielder Xabi Alonso told reporters. "The only thing that counts in finals is to win them."

There followed a firework celebration but the soccer itself had fizzled rather than sparkled as Spain became the lowest scoring team to win the World Cup.

They managed only eight goals in their seven games -- three fewer than the previous lowest total in a winning campaign.

For the Dutch, who knocked Spain out of their cultured stride for long periods and should have taken the lead with one glorious chance for Arjen Robben in the second half of normal time, defeat was an all too familiar disappointment.

While Spain were triumphant in their first final, the Dutch have now lost three, following defeats in 1974 and 1978.

BRUTAL TACKLING

The Dutch tactic on Sunday was clearly to frustrate the superior Spanish midfield with some brutal tackling.

There were 13 yellow cards as well as the red, eight of the cautions for the Dutch and five for Spain, who got dragged into a street fight in front of a raucous crowd when they would have preferred a more gentlemanly contest.

So a match billed as one for the purists turned out to be anything but -- it was tense, bad-tempered and had little of the skill the two technically accomplished sides had demonstrated throughout the tournament.

Spain briefly showed some of the precision passing and artful movement that made them such worthy European champions two years ago, Xavi, Iniesta and forward David Villa combining effortlessly in what was a nightmare start for every Dutch fan.

The standard was soon a distant memory, though, as the rest of the first half degenerated into an ugly affair.

Bert van Marwijk's Netherlands side had chances to take the lead, notably when Robben cut in and tested Spain's captain and goalkeeper Iker Casillas with a low shot to his near post.

Robben missed a better chance from Wesley Sneijder's precise pass, Casillas saving with a foot, and the winger appeared to be manhandled by Carles Puyol when racing through again.

Robben stayed on his feet when he might have gone down. Center-back Puyol, already yellow-carded, escaped what might easily have been a sending-off and Spain breathed again.

MORE DANGEROUS

The Spaniards had been creating a few problems themselves following the introduction of Jesus Navas for Pedro after an hour and they looked even more dangerous once Fabregas replaced Xabi Alonso toward the end of normal time.

However, Fabregas missed a great chance to put Spain ahead when Stekelenburg made a vital save in an echo of Robben's earlier miss before central defender Heitinga's sending off finally tilted the game Spain's way late in extra time.

With forwards on both sides failing to deal with the intense pressure, it was almost inevitable that it would fall to a midfielder or defender to break the deadlock.

Iniesta, a candidate for player of the tournament, found the calm head and dead aim required to settle the match.

The Dutch were angry there had been no offside call and could not understand why a deflected free kick moments earlier had not resulted in a corner in their favor.

English referee Webb waved away their claims and was booed by the huge orange-clad contingent in the crowd, scarcely able to believe they had come so near and yet so far once again.

"That decision should have been a corner for us," said Netherlands midfielder Nigel de Jong. "The goal resulted from the next attack. That's football. We're very disappointed."






Victory sees Spain join Brazil (five times winners), Italy (four), Germany (three), Uruguay (two), Argentina (two), England and France as world champions and they are only the third side to hold the European Championship at the same time.

They were not able to produce the metronomic passing of previous performances but that scarcely matters to the millions of fans back home who were ecstatic that their team of talents had finally made an indelible mark on the World Cup.

Sunday, July 11, 2010

Wait is OVER for FIFA 2010 World Cup

Friends,

Today at 12.oo p.m. the world will get its new Champion of Football. The wait is over now. Serial under performers in the World Cup, Spain and Holland will meet here on Sunday for a final fling, after which one of them will be called chokers no more.

And the world will all-hail a new champion. One that will join the group of seven previous World Cup winners. Spain had never got past the quarter-final stage in the World Cup. Holland made it to the finals in 1974 and 1978 but lost on both occasions.

In Shakira, Spain have already got one famous cheerleader.

“I wish Spain the very best. Hope the octopus (Paul) is right. I have to confess that, Hispanic as I am, it is my moral duty to support the Spanish team,” the Colombian singer said at Soccer City on Saturday.

“It’s an even final between two teams that deserve to be here. We’ve got good players but so do they,” said Spain coach Vicente del Bosque. “It’s going to be great propaganda for world football.”

Holland will be boosted by the return of midfielder Nigel de Jong and defender Gregory van der Wiel from suspensions. And they will hope that the curse of 1974 and 1978, when they finished runners-up, is laid to rest.

At least this time, they are not facing the hosts in the final.

“That game [the 1974 final] is precisely what I mean when I say that, too often in the past, the team has started well and then become too complacent,” said Holland coach Bert van Marwijk.

For all the popularity of the English Premier League in India, there will possibly be only two players, Holland’s Dirk Kuyt and Robin van Persie, from that competition starting on football’s biggest stage.

Before we forget about them, here’s a final chance to see Wesley Sneijder, Arjen Robben and all those stars from Barcelona and Real Madrid, who play for Spain.

FIFA WORLD CUP - Third Place goes to Germany

Germany rounded off an impressive World Cup with a thrilling 3-2 win over a stubborn Uruguay on Saturday in a playoff for third place in Port Elizabeth.

Midfielder Sami Khedira headed in a corner after a goalmouth scramble eight minutes from time to give the three-times champions a well-deserved victory and deny Uruguay their best World Cup finish since lifting the trophy 60 years ago.

It was the second tournament in a row Germany finished third after they won the playoff game as hosts at the last finals.

Germany went ahead in the 19th minute with Thomas Mueller's fifth goal of the tournament but Uruguay hit back nine minutes later through Edinson Cavani.

The Uruguayans briefly snatched the lead through striker Diego Forlan, with his fifth goal of the tournament, in the 51st minute but fullback Marcell Jansen equalised five minutes later.

Khedira then popped up with the winner but Uruguay went agonisingly close with the last kick of the game when Forlan's curling freekick from 20 metres rattled the crossbar.

Mueller and Forlan joined Dutch midfielder Wesley Sneijder and Spain striker David Villa at the top of the scoring charts.

Four changes

The Germans made four changes to the side that lost to Spain in the semi-finals and showed touches of the slick style that saw them trounce England and Argentina in the knockout stages.

The Germans went ahead when Uruguay keeper Fernando Muslera pushed Bastian Schweinsteiger's swerving long-range shot into the path of the onrushing Mueller, who slotted calmly into the corner to put himself into the joint lead for the Golden Boot.

Uruguay exposed the German defence in the 28th minute when Diego Perez dispossessed Schweinsteiger on the halfway line and played in Luis Suarez, who threaded the ball to Cavani to level the score with a delightful finish into the far corner.

Uruguay were in attacking mood straight after the break and were denied the lead two minutes later by a fabulous double save by from Hans-Joerg Butt from Cavani then Suarez.

They did go ahead though six minutes after the break with a fantastic volley on the turn from the edge of the area by Forlan, who drove Egidio Arevalo's cross into the far corner.

But the Germans had not given up and levelled the score in the 56th when Jansen got above two defenders and the keeper to head home Jerome Boateng's perfect cross to the far post.

They then withstood a stream of Uruguayan attacks and carved out the winner in the 82nd minute through Khedira before holding their collective breath when Forlan hit the bar.





Saturday, July 10, 2010

The Race for third place in FIFA 2010



Germany and Uruguay will hope to salvage some pride in their third-place playoff match on Saturday after devastating semifinal defeats earlier this week.

The two teams were largely written-off in the run-up to the finals but can hold their heads high after some stunning performances against top-ranked sides before their respective exits to Spain and Netherlands in the last four.

Germany's high-scoring young side are determined to cap their impressive World Cup with one last win where coach Joachim Loew promised his bitterly disappointed players will be in the right frame of mind and ready to win.

“The disappointment is there but now we need to build up the team a bit,” he said. “I'm certain we will go into the match with the necessary focus. No one needs to hang their heads low and we want to have a good final match,” said Loew.

History will not favour twice World Cup winners Uruguay after fourth place finishes the last two times they reached the semifinals, losing out in the playoff to Austria in 1954 and the Germans in 1970.

Germany have finished third thrice and lost the playoff only once in 1958, to France.

Two players central to the German and Uruguayan marches through the knockout stages will be available again after suspensions that weighed heavily on both teams in the semis.

Attacking midfielder Thomas Mueller was sorely missed by the Germans on Wednesday and will likely start, as will Uruguay striker Luis Suarez, whose handball on the goal line late in the match against Ghana helped put his team in the last four. Uruguay could be without in-form marksman Diego Forlan on Saturday because of a thigh problem sustained in the semis.


Uruguay striker Diego Forlan has recovered from a thigh injury and will play in the World Cup third-place play-off against Germany, coach Oscar Tabarez revealed on Friday.

The influential Atletico Madrid forward was substituted in the 84th minute of Uruguay's 3-2 semifinal defeat by the Netherlands but Tabarez says he is ready to assume a starting role against Joachim Loew's side on Saturday.

"Yes, he's ready, but that doesn't meant he's only going to play to score and for the top goalscorers standings," said Tabarez of four-goal Forlan, who currently trails Spain's David Villa and Holland's Wesley Sneijder by one goal in the race for the Golden Boot.

"We absolutely want to win this match and it's a collective effort."

Winning the prize for the tournament's most prolific marksman would cap a memorable season for Forlan, who netted twice as Atletico Madrid defeated Fulham in the final of the Europa League in May.

Tabarez is convinced he can be decisive once again against the Germans.

"There are lots of good things to say about Diego," he said.

"He's much more than just an excellent footballer and a great professional; he's there in the big matches."

Forlan will be joined at the point of the attack by strike partner Luis Suarez, who missed the semifinal through suspension after being sent off for a controversial handball in the quarter-final win against Ghana.

Uruguay emerged from a tough group featuring 2006 runners-up France, hosts South Africa and a well-drilled Mexico side before defeating South Korea 2-1 to reach the last eight.

Their victory on penalties against Ghana gave Uruguay their first semi-final appearance since 1970 and Tabarez wants his team to round off their memorable campaign on a high by beating Germany.

"They're a marvellous opponent," said Tabarez.

"They belong to the history of the World Cup, having playing at every finals since 1954 and being three-time world champions.

"It's very motivating to meet one of the best teams of the tournament, who play with lots of young players. But it's not impossible, just as it wasn't impossible against the Netherlands."

As he did prior to the game against Holland, Tabarez named his starting XI for the third-place play-off, with regular captain Diego Lugano set to return from injury at centre-back and left-back Jorge Fucile also available after suspension.

Uruguay team to face Germany

Fernando Muslera, Martin Caceres, Diego Lugano, Diego Godin, Jorge Fucile, Maxi Pereira, Diego Perez, Egidio Arevalo Rios, Edinson Cavani, Diego Forlan (capt), Luis Suarez

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