Sunday, July 09, 2006

World Cup Review

The 25th and Final of the Tournmet
Sunday, July 9


it Start about a month ago 32 of the world greatest Soccer teams quaifiing from all over the world for one goal to lift a gold Torphy and clam the title World best Soccer team on the planet many fave did not get past the Group stage(Poland, Serbia and Montenegro,Czech Republic,USA,Croatia,South Korea) outher made some suprize like Australia,Ukraine,and Ghana, some of the best teams fell deep into the tourment like Argentina, the always favorite England and the defening Champs Brazil and after Portugal and Host Country Germany fell in the Semi-final we were Left with only Two.

Italy and France play to a sold out pack Crowd 69000 at the Olympiastadion in Berlin for Game 64, The Last game in the World Cup at the end of this one the winning team will have there captin to life the World Cup as the Best Soccer team in the World.

this Match is from the FIFA world Cup site from
yahoo.com you can relive the tourament at the office web sight at http://fifaworldcup.yahoo.com/06/en/

The World Cup Final:
Italy vs France


First Half:

6': This Final began with the most extraordinary of opening goals after Materazzi was adjudged to have illegally halted the progress of Malouda as he hurtled into the box. The resultant penalty saw two adidas Golden Ball candidates face off, and it was Zidane who prevailed, if only just, with an impudent chip that deceived Buffon, but rebounded off the underside of the bar and dropped down no more than a foot over the line. (0-1)

9': Materazzi, perhaps unsettled by his role in the French goal, came perilously close to doubling Les Bleus' advantage - and his own misery - when he glanced a Willy Sagnol cross into the side-netting with Buffon scrambling frantically across his line.

14': With Andrea Pirlo's set-pieces as dangerous as ever, Lilian Thuram showed admirable bravery to dive in and head one particular out-swinging free-kick behind for a corner, this from a position which could easily have seen the Juventus defender put through his own goal.

19': Italy hauled themselves level thanks to a potent combination of Pirlo’s dead-ball mastery and the aerial ability of Materazzi, as the latter gained spectacular redemption for his earlier blunder by towering above the French defence to bullet the former’s corner past Barthez. (1-1)

35': Some neat, one-touch interplay by the Azzurri on the edge of the French box gave Toni his first scent of goal, but Thuram slid in decisively to make a last-ditch saving tackle. France's defence again struggled to deal with Italy’s height and power from the resultant corner, however, and Toni headed yet another pinpoint Pirlo cross against the crossbar.

Second Half:

47': Henry started the second half in threatening mood, breaking into the Italy box but failing to trouble Buffon with his shot.

49': As in the first period, however, Italy looked threatening from a corner as Totti swung in the ball towards the head of Cannavaro but his effort was blocked by a defender and France survived.

50': Henry showed remarkable balance to carry the ball past three defenders but he could not pick out a white shirt with his low ball across goal, Zambrotta clearing the danger.

58': Despite the loss of Patrick Vieira with an apparent hamstring injury, replaced by Alou Diarra, France continued to take the game to the Azzurri. Lippi responded by sending on Daniele De Rossi and Vincenzo Iaquinta in place of Francesco Totti and Simone Perrotta.

62': France breathed a sigh of relief when Toni headed a Pirlo free-kick past Barthez only for the linesman to raise his flag for offside. Moments later at the other end, Henry, under pressure from Cannavaro, found the space to get in a shot but Buffon made the save.

72': Toni turned on the edge of the box and forced Barthez into a low save but the Italian had controlled the ball with his arm before letting fly.

78': As the clock ticked down, the game became increasingly scrappy with neither side enjoying any sustained possession. Pirlo was not far off target with a 25-yard free-kick, curling the ball narrowly wide of Barthez’s right-hand post.

90': Come the closing moments of the match, and despite the introduction of Alessandro Del Piero, it was Italy on the back foot but for all their probing, France were unable to open up the Azzurri back line.


Extra time:

100': Ribery created and then spurned the first opportunity of the extra period. He played a wall pass with Malouda on the edge of the Italy box and continued his run into the area before poking the ball just wide of the far post.

104': France were dominating and Zidane was denied a second goal only by the excellence of Buffon. The French No.10 slipped the ball out wide to Willy Sagnol and then met the ensuing cross with a firm header but Buffon tipped over.

111': Suddenly this Final took another twist as referee Horacio Elizondo brought play to a halt and marched to the other end of the field, where, after consulting with his linesman, he sent off Zidane for an off-the-ball incident in which Materazzi was butted in the chest. A sad way for the France captain to end his glorious career.

Penalties:

Pirlo, Materazzi, De Rossi and Del Piero all converted their spot-kicks for the Azzurri but although Sylvain Wiltord, Eric Abidal and Sagnol found the net for France, Trezeguet’s miss from France's second penalty let in Grosso to win the Trophy for Lippi’s side.

Italy are world champions for the fourth time after beating ten-man France 5-3 on penalties after a 1-1 draw in Berlin's Olympiastadion on Sunday, 9 July 2006.

Twelve years after losing to Brazil in the first shoot-out in a FIFA World Cup™ Final, Italy made up for that heartbreak as all five men in blue converted their kicks to claim world football's greatest prize for the first time since 1982. For France the pain of defeat was compounded by the sight of Zinedine Zidane, on his last appearance as a professional, leaving the field having been sent off in extra time for butting Marco Materazzi off the ball.

It was Italy's first successful shoot-out in a FIFA World Cup after previous failures in 1990, 1994 and 1998 and ironically it was a miss from France’s David Trezeguet – whose golden goal had defeated the Azzurri in the final of UEFA EURO 2000 – that opened the door for Fabio Grosso to fire the winning spot-kick past Fabien Barthez and spark celebrations all the way from Bergamo to Bari.

If penalties can resemble a lottery, there could have been no more deserving matchwinner than Grosso, such a positive influence for Italy throughout this tournament. He was one of several Italians prominent in a first period where the Italians played the more fluent football, although it was France who took an early lead.

Eight years after scoring twice in the FIFA World Cup Final in Paris, Zidane opened the scoring with a seventh-minute penalty after Materazzi’s trip on Florent Malouda. By the 19th minute, however, Materazzi had made amends, the big defender heading the equaliser from Andrea Pirlo’s corner.

Although both sides threatened to score a second – notably Italy’s Luca Toni, who headed against Fabien Barthez’s crossbar before the break - neither managed to add a second. Extra time brought a scare for Italy when Buffon had to tip over Zidane's header but soon afterwards the France captain was making the sad walk to the dressing rooms.

In conclusion:

Italy are deserved world champions after this narrowest of triumphs over France. In doing so, they buried the ghosts of USA 94 and climbed above Germany as the most successful European team in FIFA World Cup history with four wins. For France and Zidane there was no fairy-tale ending and instead they are left to reflect on a bitter ending to an unexpectedly long adventure.

Goals
France - 1-0 - Zinedine Zidane (pen 7)
Italy - 1-1 - Marco Materazzi (19)

ShootOut
Italy - Pirlo (pen)1-0
France - Wiltord (pen)1-1
Italy - Materazzi (pen)2-1
France - Trezeguet (miss)2-1
Italy - De Rossi (pen)3-1
France - Abidal (pen)3-2
Italy - Del Piero (pen)4-2
France - Sagnol (pen)4-3
Italy - Grosso (pen)5-3
Italy win 5-3 on penalties

Yellow Cards
Italy - Gianluca Zambrotta (5)
France - Willy Sagnol (12)
France - Alou Diarra (76)
France - Florent Malouda (111)

Red Cards
France - Zinedine Zidane (110)

Match Stats
Shots (on Goal)
Italy - 6(2) France - 14(7)
Fouls
Italy - 15 France - 24
Corner Kicks
Italy - 5 France - 7
Offsides
Italy - 4 France - 2
Time of Possession
Italy - 51% France - 49%
Yellow Cards
Italy - 1 France - 3
Red Cards
Italy - 0 France - 1
Saves
Italy - 6 France - 1


Now that the world cup is over let see who won the post-awards

Mastercard All Star Team

Goalkeepers
Gianluigi Buffon - Italy
Jens Lehmann - Germany
Ricardo Pereira - Portugal

Defenders
Roberto Ayala - Argentina
John Terry - England
Lilian Thuram - France
Philipp Lahm - Germany
Fabio Cannavaro - Italy
Gianluca Zambrotta - Italy
Ricardo Carvalho - Portugal

Midfielders
Roberto - Brazil
Patrick Vieira - France
Zinédine Zidane - France
Michael Ballack - Germany
Andrea Pirlo - Italy
Gennaro Gattuso - Italy
Francesco Totti - Italy
Luís Figo - Portugal
Maniche - Portugal

Forwards
Hernan Crespo - Argentina
Thierry Henry - France
Miroslav Klose - Germany
Luca Toni - Italy

Golden Shoe Winner
Miroslav Klose - Germany
He lead all scored with five Goals

Golden Ball Winner
Zinédine Zidane - France

Yashin Award - Best Goalkeeper
Gianluigi Buffon - Italy

Best Young Player
Lukas Podolski - Germany

FIFA Fair Play Trophy
Brazil & Spain

Most Entertaining Team
Portugal

Now for the Next Four years Italy is the King of foot Ball will see if they defend in 2010 in South Afica.

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

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