Day 22 - #1 BITES THE DUST
Brazil’s championship dreams come crashing down after a furious 15-minute span that turned a sure victory into a sour defeat; Uruguay delivers more dark horse heroics in an unbelievable penalty kick ending.
July 2, 2010
by Dan Krier

Netherlands 2 - Brazil 1
When Friday morning’s sunrise hit the horizon, who could have guessed that the Netherlands were about to vanquish Brazil from the 2010 World Cup?…And by the same exact score by which they ousted Slovakia just 4 days earlier, no less??
I know it’s rhetorical and obvious, but I’m still going to say it: NO ONE. Not me, not the players, not anyone who’s ever seen a World Cup game in their entire lives before this one. No one.
The measure of how unprecedented this truly is can be summed up with one key statistic: Brazil had never lost a game in 37 previous World Cup matches when leading at the half. NEVER.
And the ease with which the Brazilians scored made it seem like this contest would be anything but. 10 minutes in, a midfield laser beam of a pass from soon-to-be supergoat Felipe Melo went right up the gut of the Dutch defense where it latched on to the foot of Robinho, who deftly one-timed the ball into the back of the net for a 1-0 lead and what looked to be a laugher.
But the lasting laugh will go happily to the Netherlands, who approached the second 45 minutes with a “why not?”-attitude, and were richly rewarded for such bravehearted fortitude. Without even hoping to score on the kick, Wesley Sneijder sent a cross towards goal in the 55th minute that skimmed off the scalp of Brazil defenseman Melo (whose head had been treated as collateral damage on a wayward Julio Cesar clearing punch), and the next thing you knew, the game was tied 1-1 on the own goal. Oops.
The seed of self-doubt had been potted & watered, and just 12 minutes later, a blazingly-fast rope of a corner kick was superbly flicked-on by forward Dirk Kuyt, where it stayed up on a platter for the 5’7” Sneijder, who happily became the owner of the 2nd goal against Brazil this day, his smashing header giving the Netherlands an unbelievable 2-1 lead.
Brazil seemed to crumble at this point. Just 4 minutes after the Sneijder goal, Felipe Melo momentarily snapped, completing his nightmare of a match by stomping on a tripped & fallen Arjen Robben in the 72nd minute in what I would label as a clinical case of frustration overload. Player stomp = Red Card. Brazil with 10 men = no comeback vs Netherlands.
Only a lone attack up the left wing by Kaka is all the Brazilians could muster until the final whistle, and the 5-time champions were knocked out, coincidently at the same stage as in the 2006 World Cup, when they were sent packing by a non-bickering French team.
2-1 win for Holland. Amazing. The Dutch get Uruguay for a place in the World Cup finals. Anyone in orange is smiling right now.
Last note: Strange affair overall. Not the best individual player selection if you ask me for Brazil. Because to go to the World Cup without Ronaldinho and come home empty-handed makes the coaching appear to be at blame. It’s a rough thing to take the criticism off the players, who surely didn’t perform their best, but Dunga will be feeling the heat of this failure for years to come. And trust me: I’m not the only one who knows this will be true.
Final last note…Save of the tournament goes to Dutch goalkeeper Maarten Stekelenburg, who robbed Kaka in the 31st minute with a fantastic stretch, singlehandedly (pun intended) keeping the Netherlands within striking distance instead of being down 2-0. If Holland go on to hoist the cup, the save will be named “The Stekelenburg”, and the man will see a statue of himself in that exact same pose in Amsterdam’s Vondelpark some day. You can book that.
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Uruguay 1 - Ghana 1
(Uruguay wins 4-2 on extra-time Penalty Kicks)
A complete summary of Friday night’s match between Uruguay and Ghana in Johannesburg would likely be the size of a Merriam-Webster Dictionary if you tried to explain all the back & forths and ups & downs that went on in the 120 minutes of action. But the only thing need be said is…Best Game of the 2010 World Cup so far.
To keep it succinct, the story boils down to this: both teams were as evenly matched as you could be at every position, and ball possession stayed constant at a 50/50 clip the whole time. Each team found a way to punch home a top-tier goal (one by Ghana’s Sulley Muntari in first-half stoppage time, the other by Uruguay’s Diego Forlan on a wicked knuckle-curve of a free kick in minute 55), and each side saw numerous chances thwarted by rock-solid defense and right place, right time goalkeeping.
So lets just get down to it. Tied 1-1, we’re in the 120th minute with the referee lifting his whistle to send the game to what would be a boring penalty-kick finish. Ghana has one last chance…a cross from the right that swings in and gets batted around! One kick…off the goalie! Two kicks…goal!!! No wait!…It’s off a Uruguayan defender standing on the goal line. Wait a second…HAND BALL! Wait!…it’s a deliberate hand ball by Luis Suarez. Wow, what?!…RED CARD. He’s gone, outta here. Penalty kick for Asamoah Gyan to end things with a 2-1 Ghana win. Can’t believe they’re gonna win it this way.
Those thoughts took the span of three seconds at most. But the following few minutes will fuel many upon many sleepless nights for those in Ghana, if not all of Africa.
Gyan, who had scored two previous goals via the penalty kick in the 2010 World Cup, stepped up and proceeded to spike the shot high, directly off the crossbar to the sheer relief of the entire Uruguay squad, also turning Suarez’ necessary move into one of the most quick-thinking reactions in sporting history.
So penalty kick shootout it was (I’m not a fan, but what else can ya do?), which ended 4-2 in favor of Uruguay. Ghana really lost the shootout by kicking two goals directly at goalkeeper Fernando Muslera but overall it was a typical PK session where players look good for making it and like fools for missing.
With the win, Uruguay carry their torch to the World Cup semi-finals for the first time since 1970, where they’ll face the Netherlands on July 6th. Great run for Ghana, but like many things in life, it came down to a case of so close yet so far. We’ve all been there.
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