Wednesday, 28 June 06, 10:13 AM · Comments (10)
Four years ago Guus Hiddink led South Korea to the semi-finals of the World Cup. On that fairytale run they benefited from several appallingly inept refereeing decisions, not least when they played Italy in the second round. Prior to Ahn Jung-Hwan's golden goal for South Korea in extra-time Giovanni Trapattoni's team had a perfectly legitimate goal ruled out for offside, a player sent off for diving instead of being awarded a penalty, and a variety of other bad calls go against them.
On Monday Italy had their revenge with a 1-0 win over Hiddink's Australia. Once again Hiddink's side were handed an unfair advantage by a poor refereeing decision when early in the second half Italy and ex-Everton defender Marco Materazzi was red carded for a tackle on Marco Bresciano. Materazzi's tackle was rash and cynical, but it deserved no more than a yellow because Juventus defender Fabio Cannavaro (linked with a move to Stamford Bridge earlier this week) was covering back. Australia played well and went on to dominate the remainder of the match but seemed afraid to make their advantage count, although Italy did what Italy do best: defended brilliantly.
Australia's lack of killer instinct cost them. In the third minute of injury time, Fabio Grosso, Italy's left back, dribbled the ball past Bresciano and into the Aussies' penalty area where Lucas Neill, probably the Socceroo's best player of the tournament and not the psycho we're used to seeing in the Premiership, awaited him. Grosso made to cross, fooling Neill into thrusting out his right leg before sliding to ground; Grosso jinked right and took full advantage of the prone Neill, tumbling over him. There was no intent on Neill's part to bring down or obstruct Grosso, but Spanish referee Luis Medina Cantalejo put his whistle to his lips and blew for a penalty. Up stepped the playboy of Italian football, the overrated Francesco Totti, to slot home high beyond Mark Schwarzer's right hand. There was no time for a restart. What goes around comes around.
In Monday's other match between Switzerland and Ukraine, nothing of note happened for one hundred and twenty minutes. During what was the most insipid and mind-numbing game of the tournament so far (I doubt there will be worse for quite some time) neither side looked like scoring, seeming to fear losing rather than having any desire to win. In the subsequent and first penalty shoot-out of this World Cup, Chelsea new boy Andrey Shevchenko saw his, Ukraine's first, saved. It hardly mattered; Switzerland didn't net a single penalty. Ukraine will play Italy on Friday.
I stand by my belief that Brazil won't win the tournament despite their somewhat fortunate 3-0 victory over a proud Ghana yesterday afternoon. Ronaldo put Carlos Alberto Parreira's side one up within five minutes, in the process becoming the highest scorer in World Cup finals history. Kaka took advantage of some naive Ghana defending, slipped the ball through for the lumbering striker to cleverly round goalkeeper Richard Kingston with a trademark step-over and slot home his fifteenth World Cup goal, thus breaking Gerd Muller's previous record tally of fourteen. Ghana were always up against it after that shaky start. They played some good football but a combination of wasteful finishing and poor defending cost them. Jonathan was at the game and will probably write about it later.
Yesterday's evening game saw perennial big tournament underachievers Spain lose 3-1 to France. Les Bleus and a resurgent Zinedine Zidane put paid to yet another Spanish side which flattered to deceive. Luis Aragones' team are not the new Brazil after all. The game was marred by Thierry Henry's shameful attempt to get Carles Puyol sent off. In the 81st minute, Puyol used his arm to block Henry as the pair chased a loose ball; the Arsenal player fell to the floor as if pole-axed, clutching his face. Replays showed that Puyol's arm never came higher than Henry's chest. The Barcelona player was booked but Henry got off scot-free. The subsequent free-kick led to France's second goal, a Patrick Vieira header at the far post. Spain were undone for a third time in the 92nd minute when Zidane slotted home after some trademark dribbling skills. France will play Brazil on Saturday in a repeat of the 1998 final, which France won 3-0.
Football's already "taking off" in Australia. Generally though, it's only when the national team play. Attendance at the home leg against Uruguay was twice that of ALL A League fictures that week.
Interest in the A League continues to be a bit patchy, probably due to the lack of atmosphere and crap standard of play. In terms of participation, football is the biggest fame in Australia, turning that interest into bums on seats is the challenge now.
Argentine has reminded me Chelsea in their first half play; similar formation, defender scoring goal from corner kick, pretty much Chelsea style. However, then in the second half Rekerman has made all the mistakes he could and looked even worse than Sven. Bad substitutions decided the game instead of pressing for win all these defensive players. He all the time reduced the ranks of his team. He had to know that Lehman going to liability for side, if it reaches penalties, very bad coaching.
United States keeper Kasey Keller has labelled David Beckham "a total poser". TRUE!!!!!!!!!!!!
Okay England's WOrld Cup is over but am just wondering here...Will Looney be given a ban in the premier....
If Blatter is what he professes to be and then I will not be surprised if he gets nothing....However, England aside Looney should not see football for at least one year...
It is one thing to foul another player and another to stamp in another players groin...
All this rubbish about c.ronaldo having this and that on the game is totally rubbish...Looney should not be in the game of football with such outrageous displays towards other professionals.
That was an act of assault....Oh pity it was against a CHELSEA PLAYER.... No wonder nothing has been mentioned about in the press...or am I missing something....
BAN BAN BAN!!!!! FOR LOONEY
10 Comments · Add yours
The saddest thing as an Australian fan was that throughout the tournament most of us never really expected too much, if we were to be honest about it. But somehow we just kept getting to where we needed to be, and just when it looked like maybe, just maybe, we were going to roll Italy and have an easier passage to the semi, our bubble was busted by the most cruel of penalties.
having said that, im not 100% convinced that it wasn't a penalty. it was cruel yes, but...
i also dont think, as you mention nick, that australia had the attacking ability to score. we had 40ish minutes of one extra player and never really threatened, whereas the italians on the counter always looked like they might have nicked a goal.
if extra time had of come round? 2-0 to the italians..
however, "what goes around comes around" while i understand where it comes from, it hurts like hell.
on a final note, the socceroos have left an impression on not only the world but more importantly australians, and maybe, just maybe, the sport will take off. i think the majority of Australians are proud of what they achieved.
I shall indeed Nick - a truly remarkable experience, on which I shall write more once I've addressed the sleep deprivation / alcohol overdose issues I'm currently suffering from. I'll say one thing though - those Germans sure know how to put on a football tournament.