Argentina will face Germany in the Finals after beating Holland 4-2 in Penalties!

Lionel Messi, the best player of his generation, now faces the best team of this World Cup, Germany, in Sunday’s mouth-watering final in Rio. Messi was one of Argentina’s four successful penalty-takers as they deservedly overcame the ultra-defensive Dutch after two stultifying hours of football.

The Germans must have been looking on from afar, smiling at the sight of their next opponents straining their sinews in the rain. They will have looked at Argentina and know they are superior, particularly if they can ensnare Messi as the Dutch did.

Messi is a special player, a talent who deserves this final chance, but he was unable to impose himself until the shoot-out. But he now has the stage to parade his undeniable gifts. The world will be watching. Those who chronicle the first draft of history will judge on events at Maracana whether Messi can be hailed as a legend of the game along with his compatriot Diego Maradona, with Pele, the man who so graced Maracana, and with Alfredo di Stefano, whose memory was saluted emotionally before kick-off here.

Victory for Messi and company ensures the re-establishment of one of the great historic World Cup fixtures, a match that has been decided down the years by shoot-outs, by German routs, even a post-match ruck and most famously in two finals.

Sunday represents a repeat of the 1986 World Cup final whenArgentina prevailed in the Azteca in Mexico City. It will give Messi the opportunity to match the Maradona, who was tightly marked by the West Germans but still managed to sweep that pass through for Jorge Burruchaga to beat Harald Schumacher and win the trophy. Messi was closely shadowed by the Dutch and he faces a huge task to unravel Germany’s defence.

It is also a repeat of the climax of Italia 90 when this time the Germans won with a late penalty kick from Andreas Brehme in Rome. Pope Francis will have been watching on with interest, supporting his native Argentina as they held their nerve in penalties.

Holland had to look to Jasper Cillessen as their keeper for the shoot-out as Louis van Gaal had used up all his subs so was unable to bring on Tim Krul, who had thwarted Costa Rica in the quarter-finals. But this was all about Argentina’s keeper, about Sergio Romero, who had played under Van Gaal at AZ Alkmaar.

It was surprising seeing a defender, Ron Vlaar, walking up to take Holland’s first penalty. Vlaar had been terrific all game, making key interceptions, but it was still a shock with more technical players available. Romero promptly saved from the Aston Villa centre-half and the pressure was heaped on Holland.

Cillessen tried to put Messi off but the little genius stayed calm, and swept his penalty home. Arjen Robben stepped forward, and coolly slotted his kick low to Romero’s left. Ezequiel Garay took a long run-up and slammed his penalty in, keeping the pressure on the Dutch.

Next up was Wesley Sneijder, whose right-footed shot was saved by Romero as the Argentina fans went crazy with delight. Their joy was unconfined when Sergio Aguero stroked his kick in. Dirk Kuyt had to score and he did, sending Romero the wrong way. But then came Maxi Rodriguez, formerly of Liverpool, converting the decisive kick. A broad smile spread across Messi’s face.

When Messi’s name was read out almost three hours earlier, Argentinian cheers drowned out mock Dutch boos. Yet one of Messi’s first acts was to foul Nigel De Jong, slightly against the natural order. With the Dutch defensive and organised, Messi was faced with a difficult task to escape the orange maze.

Few of the stars got going before the break. Robin Van Persie and Robben were disappointing, failing to elude Argentinian defenders who had shown real signs of improvement as the World Cup has progressed and have now not been breached for 373 minutes.

Far from the highs of the other semi-final Belo Horizonte, this was low key. The game shifted listlessly from end to end. Argentina were marginally the brighter. “Messi, Messi” chorused the fans in blue and white as their idol addressed a free-kick. Messi struck the ball low and hard, sending it curling round the wall but it was superbly caught by Cillessen, diving to his right.

Both sets of supporters sought to lift their players. The Argentinians leapt up and down, waving scarves, flags and banners. The Dutch formed splashes of orange all around Arena Corinthians. There were some Brazilians in attendance, but still subdued after Belo Horizonte.

The neatest touch of the half came from a keeper, Cillessen, who dummied Gonzalo Higuain with a body swerve that Johan Cruyff would have been proud of. After a couple of seconds, and with the ball safely transferred forward, Cillessen glanced back at Higuain, who stared back, unimpressed.

Messi was finding little pockets of space but was also finding Dutch in close company. De Jong was never further than a few yards away. Sneijder tracked him. So did Daley Blind, and most painfully Bruno Martins Indi, who deliberately baulked the No 10 twice and was booked.

The game was meandering. Robben and Van Persie were failing to link up.

Argentina kept trying to break through the Dutch defence but found Vlaar indomitable. Rather unrecognisable from his Aston Villa self, Vlaar dispossessed Higuain but then conceded a free-kick with a challenge on the Argentinian No 9 which had something of the line-backer about it.

Messi continued to be stopped through fair means and foul, such as a body-check from Clasie. As Messi recovered, Perez flew down the right, drilling a cross towards the near-post but Higuain could find only the side-netting.

Higuain and Enzo Perez were then taken off for Sergio Aguero and Rodrigo Palacio. Cillessen was almost caught out by a Marcos Rojo long-ranger. Robben almost prevented extra time with a driving run down the inside-left channel. He could have shot earlier but took the extra touch, allowing Javier Mascherano to stretch out a leg and divert his shot.

During extra time, Robben went on one of those runs but ran down a cul de sac. He then cut in from the right, wrong-footing Rojo and bringing a low save from Romero. Almost 100 minutes and the Dutch had their first shot on target.

Argentina, missing the creativity of the injured Angel Di Maria, formed another huddle, taking more words of inspiration from Alejandro Sabella at the midway point of extra time. Cillessen then turned Aguero as confidently as he had guided the ball past Higuain. Palacio could have won it when clear through but his header was too weak and Cillessen caught the ball easily. Messi then raced away from Vlaar and Kuyt, lifting in a cross that Rodriguez wasted, shooting straight at Cillessen. He made no mistake with his penalty, giving Messi, Argentina and their huge hordes of fans their final dream. In Brazil’s backyard.

Argentina to the Semifinal after beating Belgium 1-0!

Argentina to the Semifnal after beating Belgium 1-0 (Goal by Gonzalo Higuain at 8′)

The South Americans limped past Switzerland in the last 16 after overcoming Ottmar Hitzfeld’s team 1-0 in extra-time and will face even tougher European opponents in the last eight.

Belgium overcame a stubborn USA side to advance to their first quarter-final since 1986 but will have to improve on their poor finishing from that 2-1 extra-time victory to progress past one of the pre-tournamant favourites.

Formations:

Argentina: Romero, Zabaleta, Demichelis, Garay, Basanta, Biglia, Mascherano, Lavezzi (Palacio 71), Messi, Di Maria (Perez 33), Higuain.
Subs: Orion, Campagnaro, Gago, Maxi Rodriguez, Augusto Fernandez, Federico Fernandez, Alvarez, Aguero, Andujar.

Goal: Higuain 8.

Belgium: Courtois, Alderweireld, Van Buyten, Kompany, Vertonghen, Fellaini, Witsel, Mirallas (Mertens 59), De Bruyne, Hazard (Chadli 75), Origi (Lukaku 59).
Subs: Mignolet, Vermaelen, Defour, Lombaerts, Dembele, Januzaj, Ciman, Bossut.

Booked: Hazard.

Referee: Nicola Rizzoli (Italy)

Belgium defeats USA 2-1 in Extra Time and Argentina breaks Swiss hearts 1-0

Belgium scored an early goal in extra time to take a quick lead. The game went to overtime after regulation ended with the score 0-0.

In the knockout round, there are 30 minutes of overtime and then a round of penalty kicks until the tie is broken.

Belgium has been “far more consistent” than the U.S. team, according to USA TODAY’s analysis, but U.S. goalie Tim Howard is keeping the American team in the match.

The last, and only, time the U.S. team ever won a Round of 16 match was in 2002. That year marked the furthest the U.S. team had advanced since it made the semifinals in 1930.

Belgium to the final 8 after defeating USA in Extra time!

Final Score: Belgium 2-1 USA

1st Goal: Du Bruyne (Belgium) scores: 93′

2nd Goal: Lukaku (Belgium) Scores: 105′

3rd Goal: Green (USA) Scores: 107′

Live Score on ECB on your Right! ~>

 

 Argentina breaks Swiss hearts 1-0 in Extra Time

Even by Lionel Messi’s standards at what is an ever more extraordinary World Cup, this was late.

But once again Messi was the difference. Once again an Argentina team that continues to disappoint was exposed as desperately over-reliant on their magical, masterful No10.

He was not the scorer of the winning goal on this occasion. That honour would fall to Angel Di Maria. But he was the provider of a perfectly-weighted  ball after a trademark run that saw him ride one challenge before inviting his international colleague to score.

For Switzerland it was so, so cruel. For 118 minutes they had more than provided an answer to the best that Argentina could throw at them.

Indeed they were the better team; certainly the creators of the better first half chances. Chances that will leave them only with regrets that they did at least not take this last 16 encounter to penalties.

Even after Di Maria’s goal they had opportunities, the sight of Blerim Dzemaili’s close-range header bouncing off the post – before rebounding off him and trickling wide – making defeat all the more painful for Ottmar Hitzfeld and his team.

Argentina were so desperately disappointing in this game even if Hitzfeld, twice a Champions League winner, did once again prove himself a master tactician.

Messi endured comfortably his worst game of the tournament, struggling to escape the attention of a superbly drilled Swiss defence until that decisive run; the first time he had really got beyond the Swiss midfield to take on their back four.

While Di Maria actually had a dreadful game, losing possession no less than 37 times in normal time.

If the Swiss were crushed by France in the group stages, conceding five goals, they were defensively brilliant this time. Further evidence, surely, of the impact a decent international manager can have on his players.

For the Argentina fans it was nothing short of torture. For the thousands of yellow-shirted Brazilians more enjoyable. They delighted in Xherdan Shaqiri’s fearless attacking football, even if he was a little too elaborate at times. Echoes of a young Cristiano Ronaldo. But he posed constant danger to a stuttering, static Argentina.

Germany and Ghana Play to a 2-2 Draw and Messi’s wonder goal saves Argentina against Iran

Germany and Ghana traded blows in a pulsating 2-2 tie in Fortaleza on Saturday.

The result leaves Germany at the top of Group G with four points from two games; a win for the United States against Portugal in Manaus tomorrow would give the Americans sole possession of top spot.

After a torpid first half of patient German possession and quick Ghanaian counterattacks, the game sprang to life in the 51st minute, when Mario Gotze capped a long run to head home Thomas Muller’s fine cross.

The Germans had barely finished celebrating when Ghana pulled level; Andre Ayew rose above a static German defense to head past Manuel Neuer in the 54th minute.

The Black Stars took a shock lead in the 63rd minute, after Sulley Muntari broke up some sloppy German play in their own midfield to send a pass to Asamoah Gyan. The striker raced in on goal, took one touch to control the ball and another to fire it past the outstretched fingertips of Manuel Neuer.

But Germany Coach Joachim Low had an ace up his sleeve: the veteran striker Miroslav Klose. Germany won a corner, and Klose’s first action was to pop up at the far post to poke home a loose ball that flashed across the goalmouth. The goal was Klose’s 15th in World Cup finals play, tying him with Brazil’s Ronaldo as the all-time leading scorer. He also became the third player to score in four tournaments alongside Pele and Germany’s Uwe Seeler.

Both teams had chances in a frenetic finale, but neither could provide a winner. The result left Germany with four points and Ghana still alive in Group G.

Germany now faces the United States in Recife on June 26. Ghana will travel to Brasilia to play Portugal.

Messi wonder goal saves Argentina against Iran

Lionel Messi spared Argentina’s blushes with a wonderful last-gasp winner against unheralded Iran at the World Cup on Saturday to give the South Americans a 1-0 victory and passage to the last 16.

Argentina’s fabled “Fab Four” strike force had appeared heading for a blank despite dominating possession to the frustration of their massed hordes of fans who came expecting a goalfest at Belo Horizonte’s Mineirao stadium.

But four-times world player of the year Messi, who has struggled to reproduce his Barcelona form at past World Cups, curled the ball in during stoppage time to send them wild with his second goal of two games in Brazil.

 

“With Messi, everything is possible,” said relieved Argentina coach Alejandro Sabella, praising Iran for playing a “great” game and making it difficult for his side.

Watched by past Argentine great Diego Maradona in a 57,698 crowd, Messi had appeared in an unthreatening position when he received the ball on the right in the 91st minute.

Then dropping his shoulder and cutting quickly inside, he curled a simply brilliant 25-yard left-foot shot over Iran’s massed defense and into the far corner past outstanding goalkeeper Alireza Haghighi’s outstretched hand.

“Not even two goalkeepers could have stopped that Lionel shot,” Sabella added.

The result was probably fair given Argentina’s 71 percent possession and superior ballplay in the middle but felt cruel after Iran had grown in confidence and begun counter-attacking neatly to complement their solid defense.

The result leaves Argentina on top of Group F with six points from two games and takes them into the knockout stage.

ARGENTINA WILL NEED MORE GUILE

Sabella’s men will need more guile and precision, however, than they have shown against both Bosnia and Iran, if they want to take home a third World Cup.

Iran, on just one point after a draw with Nigeria and widely viewed as one of the weakest teams in Brazil, were shattered by the game’s denouement but will take heart from a fantastic performance against one of the favorites to lift the trophy.

Their final game is against Bosnia, who face Nigeria later on Saturday

Constantly crowded out by two and sometimes three Iranians, Messi had until the end been unable to pull the strings and again vomited on the pitch in the first half. The Argentine captain put two free kicks wide in either half, and saw a shot go wide after a trademark run early in the second.

In a succession of wasted Argentine first half chances, Gonzalo Higuain was quickly shut down by goalkeeper Alireza Haghighi in a one-on-one in the 13th minute, Angel Di Maria shot over the bar and Sergio Aguero had a curling shot well saved.

 

World Cup 2014: Messi magic saves Argentina, Benzema shines in French colours

Lionel Messi ended an eight-year wait for a World Cup goal on Sunday as Argentina edged past debutants Bosnia at the Maracana stadium in Rio de Janeiro, while fellow No 10, France’s Karim Benzema, put two past Honduras in a man-of-the-match display.

The goals continued to rattle in across Brazil. France cruised to a 3-0 victory in Porto Alegre, and in the other Group E match, Switzerland came from behind to beat Ecuador 2-1 with a dramatic, counter-attacking winner in injury time.

The buildup to the fourth day of action at the 2014 World Cup had all been about Messi, the 26-year-old Barcelona forward who has lit up club soccer like few others but has so far failed to repeat those heroics on the biggest stage of all.

His last World Cup goal came on June 16, 2006, the sixth out of six Argentina put past Serbia and Montenegro in Germany.

Messi’s roar of delight after a fine left-foot strike from the edge of the area on Sunday suggested the goal would lift a huge weight from his shoulders.

“It was important to start with a win and to get three points, but we need to improve,” Messi said after also being named man of the match in the 2-1 victory in Group F.

Until that point Messi’s display had been lacklustre, but it proved a crucial goal when Bosnia scored late on to set up a tense end to a game many had expected Argentina to win easily.

There was a touch of fortune in the outcome, after Bosnia’s Sead Kolasinac netted the fastest own goal in World Cup history in the third minute.

His side recovered from the shock and began to look the better team, but a lack of composure in front of goal saw several long-distance efforts fly high and wide.

Messi’s successor as World Player of the Year, Cristiano Ronaldo, expects to start for Portugal against Germany in the pick of Monday’s matches.

The 29-year-old said he was fit for the Group G encounter in Salvador, despite struggling with tendinosis in his left knee.

Asked whether a great World Cup was all that was missing from a glittering career, he replied: “I don’t think I have to show anyone anything. If you look at my statistics and my resume… I have no words for that question.

“I think I do not have to demonstrate anything, not now, before, not after. What I have to do is just continue my career, which has been great so far.”

In the other Group G clash, Ghana meet the United States in Natal, while Iran and Nigeria play in Curitiba in Group F.

France reunited

In Porto Alegre, France survived a bruising encounter with Honduras, but passed the test with aplomb in a game where Benzema grabbed two and goal-line technology was used to confirm the ball had crossed the line for the first time at a World Cup.

Benzema’s shot hit the upright and the ball rolled across the goal, only for Honduras keeper Noel Valladares to divert it over the line by inches.

France’s forward Karim Benzema takes a penalty during their World Cup match against Honduras at the Beira-Rio Stadium in Porto Alegre. (AFP Photo)

Honduras were reduced to 10-men after Wilson Palacios charged into French midfielder Paul Pogba seconds before the break in a challenge that earned him a second yellow card.

Benzema stroked home the resulting penalty, and 18 minutes from time he struck again from a narrow angle, earning a rendition of “La Marseillaise” from the red, white and blue clad French fans.

The result will have delighted France coach Didier Deschamps, especially after Les Bleus’ 2010 debacle in South Africa when they failed to win a game amid bitter squabbling that blew up into a national scandal.

Swiss smash-and-grab

Switzerland’s Haris Seferovic celebrates after scoring a goal with Ricardo Rodriguez during their World Cup match against Ecuador at the Brasilia National Stadium in Brasilia. (Reuters Photo)

In arguably the most exciting contest of the day, substitute Haris Seferovic finished off a breathtaking box-to-box counter-attack in stoppage time to give Switzerland a 2-1 win over Ecuador in Brasilia.

A brilliant block tackle by Valon Behrami in his own area instigated the break, which was allowed to continue by an excellent decision from Uzbek referee Ravshan Irmatov after the midfielder was body-checked.

With more than three goals a game on average, and a surprisingly expansive style of soccer for the early stages of a World Cup, action on the field has grabbed people’s imagination in a country considered by many to be the sport’s spiritual home.

The tournament has gone much more smoothly than many had expected, with protests against the $11 billion spend on new stadiums and infrastructure small compared with mass demonstrations that rocked Brazil a year ago.

On Sunday, police blocked a small group of anti-World Cup protesters who were trying to reach the Maracana stadium before the Argentina-Bosnia game.

About 150 bandanna-wearing demonstrators carrying banners that said “Fifa go home” marched towards the stadium, but police on horseback blocked their path, leading to minor scuffles.

A similar-sized march was held ahead of the Switzerland-Ecuador game, but participants simply laid down their banners in front of a police cordon and dispersed when the game started.