Germany...


Tuesday, July 04, 2006



Germany 0-2 Italy (aet)
Stunning late extra-time strikes from Fabio Grosso and Alessandro Del Piero took Italy into the World Cup final at Germany's expense with a 2-0 win.
An absorbing semi-final seemed set for penalties until Grosso curled man of the match Andrea Pirlo's pass past Jens Lehmann with just one minute left. Del Piero then finished an Italy break with a delicate chip into the corner.
Germany's Lukas Podolski earlier sent a header wide and saw a shot saved, but the hosts' Cup dreams were shattered. There were, unsurprisingly, tears among German players and fans after the extraordinary end to an enthralling encounter - in which Italy also hit the woodwork twice in extra-time. The opening 90 minutes were intriguing - but goalless - and it was in the extra period that the game truly exploded into life.
The Italians, famed for their defensive strength, adopted an increasingly attacking approach, aware of the Germans' brilliant record at penalty shoot-outs. Substitute Alberto Gilardino's shot rebounded off the post and Gianluca Zambrotta's drive struck the bar.
But Podolski led the German attacking threat, missing the header from David Odonkor's cross and forcing a brilliant one-handed save from Gianluigi Buffon. Del Piero then squandered a shooting chance from the edge of the box after great work from Vincenzo Iaquinto and Francesco Totti and Pirlo forced a diving save from Lehmann. But Pirlo still had time to have his say as, with Italy pushing forward in numbers, he threaded the ball to Grosso whose first-time shot left Lehmann with no chance.
The goal was timed at 119 minutes and Germany, and their supporters who had crammed into Dortmund's Signal Iduna Park, were stunned. And as Jurgen Klinsmann's side pushed forward in desperation, Gilardino found the ball in space and rolled it to Del Piero who sent a clinical finish beyond the advancing Lehmann into the roof of the net.
The opening 90 minutes saw Italy work the first clear opening as Totti's astute pass picked out Simone Perrotta, but Lehmann smothered the ball. Fabio Cannavaro, exceptional throughout the match, marshalled the Italian back line effectively and limited Germany in the opening period. Italy saw a Pirlo free-kick on 24 minutes elude both Luca Toni and Marco Materazzi by a fraction. Then Toni was played in by Grosso, only for his goalbound shot to be blocked by Per Mertesacker.
Germany, however, fashioned the best chance of the first half, but Bernd Schnieder shot over after finding rare space behind the Italian defence. Buffon had to make his first real save, and had to race from his goal to block as Miroslav Klose danced his way into the area.
Germany were on top and Buffon parried a close-range effort from Podolski 12 minutes later. But extra-time seemed inevitable as Michael Ballack, not at his imperious best, sent a free-kick over the top from 20 yards. Indeed, the 90 minutes ended without a goal - opening the dramatic extra period in which Grosso and Del Piero wrote themselves into Italian football history.
Their delight at the final whistle was in stark contrast to Germany, who were left bereft as their dream of lifting the World Cup on home soil came to a sudden, heart-breaking end.

Posted by Samvit :: 9:39 PM :: 0 comments

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Monday, July 03, 2006



Fifa has suspended Germany midfielder Torsten Frings for Tuesday's World Cup semi-final against Italy.
Frings, 29, was banned for punching Argentina forward Julio Cruz in a fracas which followed the quarter-final between the two countries. He has been given a two-match ban, but the second match is suspended meaning he will be available for the World Cup final, if Germany qualify.
Germany team manager Oliver Bierhoff said he was disappointed by the ban.
"We found out about it on the plane on the way to Dortmund (for the semi-final)," Bierhoff told reporters. "We haven't seen the written reasons but will accept the Fifa decision. Frings will get a special training programme to be completely fit for the final. Torsten is obviously not very happy about it. He'll be able to go at full steam for the final, though."
The ban is a blow for coach Jurgen Klinsmann, who would have started the Werder Bremen player had he been available. Klinsmann said before the verdict that he was confident Frings would be cleared, saying Argentina were to blame. "I don't think we were the culprits. He should be in the line-up on Tuesday," Klinsmann said.
Fifa had announced on Sunday that it would take no action against the German players.
Football's governing body is considering action against officials of both teams and cases have already been opened against two Argentine players.
Non-playing substitute Leandro Cufre was red-carded by referee Lubos Michel for his part in the incident. A Fifa spokesman said Maxi Rodriguez may be punished for an "apparent attack on Bastien Schweinsteiger".
The referee and Fifa officials were caught up in the fighting, with punches and kicks appearing to be thrown during the ugly scenes which lasted 90 seconds.

Posted by Samvit :: 9:49 AM :: 0 comments

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Saturday, July 01, 2006



Ugly scenes mar Germany triumph

Germany and Argentina players clashed on the pitch after the hosts' quarter-final victory in Berlin.
Ex-striker Oliver Bierhoff, now part of the German backroom team, appeared to be at the centre of the melee. Fifa officials and referee Lubos Michel were involved, while Argentina's unused substitute Leandro Cufre was sent off for unsporting behaviour.
Bierhoff said: "Fans have shown they can get on with each other. We should be able to do the same as sportsmen." Punches and kicks appeared to be thrown in chaotic scenes which went on for approximately 90 seconds in front of a 72,000 crowd.
Bierhoff told German TV that he intervened after Cufre trod on German defender Per Mertesacker, leaving the player lying on the ground. The trouble seemed to start when midfielder Tim Borowski gestured towards the Argentina players to "keep quiet" having scored his penalty to make it 4-2 in Germany's favour.
Several of the South American players walked towards him and when the final Argentina spot-kick was saved, the Argentina defender Fabricio Coloccini approached Germany's Oliver Neuville. Punches were thrown in a brief melee before it was broken up.
"It's a shame that in a game like a quarter-final such pictures end up getting sent around the world," Bierhoff added.
Germany coach Jurgen Klinsmann put the trouble down to the intensity of Germany's dramatic win. "I'd like to remind people that in football there is so much tension, so many emotions and if it goes all the way to penalties someone can lose control," he said.
"Football is just so emotional. It's just normal. It's no big deal, no problem at all."
And he was backed by Argentine coach Jose Pekerman.
"At times emotions run away with themselves at a match and it's not what we feel. Germany and ourselves have great respect for each other and this was a thing of the moment," he said.

Posted by Samvit :: 5:09 AM :: 0 comments

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