France....


Wednesday, July 05, 2006



Portugal 0-1 France
France booked a World Cup final spot against Italy after Zinedine Zidane's first-half penalty earned victory over a disappointing Portugal in Munich.
Zidane struck coolly past Ricardo on 33 minutes after Thierry Henry was tripped inside the box by Ricardo Carvalho. Henry saw another shot trickle wide and Franck Ribery forced Ricardo to save. Luis Figo and Deco saw shots saved by Fabien Barthez and Figo nodded over late on, but France stayed in control and thoroughly deserved their win.
The final will be Zidane's last game before he retires from professional football and is a chance to win his second World Cup after the 1998 triumph on home soil. Zidane's influence on proceedings was not quite as substantial as in the previous rounds against Spain or Brazil, but apart from a lively start Portugal rarely looked like ending their French curse. They have not beaten France since 1975 and have still never beaten them in a major competition.
But Luiz Felipe Scolari - who lost his 100% record as a coach at World Cup finals - saw his side begin well, with Deco and Figo both forcing saves from Fabien Barthez with low 20-yard drives.
Cristiano Ronaldo was being roundly booed every time he touched the ball after his histrionics against England, but he was in fine form and twice had shots blocked as he surged at the French defence. Having made a slow start, Domenech's side clinically took the lead just after the half hour mark.
Henry turned exquisitely just inside the area and was brought down by Carvalho, Zidane stepping up to decisively strike the penalty past Ricardo, who managed to get a hand on it. Ronaldo tried to win a spot-kick of his own moments later, but his theatrical dive under the slightest challenge from Willy Sagnol was ignored by referee Jorge Larrionda. Henry had a chance straight after the restart to double the lead, but after twisting and turning in the box his shot squirmed under Ricardo and out for a corner. Portugal looked far from threatening with the out-of-sorts Pauleta on his own up front and Ricardo had to save Ribery's drive as France stayed in control.
The second half was a dire affair, scrappy and lacking any real creativity - it suited the French down to a tee because they never let Portugal back into the game. Their best chance was down to Barthez. He bizarrely parried a Ronaldo free-kick into the air but from six yards Figo could only head the rebound over. Figo and his team-mates tired badly and they simply could not muster a late rally to provide the French with any sort of threat.
Scolari furiously marched onto the pitch at the final whistle to remonstrate with referee Larrionda, but had little reason to complain. The 57-year-old, who had won 12 World Cup games in a row as coach of Brazil and Portugal, was finally left to suffer the bitter taste of defeat.

Posted by Samvit :: 10:51 PM :: 0 comments

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Sunday, July 02, 2006



Vieira dismisses ageing team jibe

Patrick Vieira says France's quarter-final win over Brazil provided the perfect answer to critics who said they were too old.
Coach Raymond Domenech was criticised for picking an ageing squad, which struggled in its opening group games. But Vieira, 30, said: "A lot of people placed too much emphasis on the age factor but they're beginning to focus on what we do on the pitch. We responded well and this is the best answer we can give."
Juventus midfielder Vieira's views were echoed by his former Arsenal team-mate Thierry Henry. Henry said: "People were killing us from day one, saying this team is too old. But we have kept going."
The 1998 World Cup winners have come into form at just the right time, with the turning point their 3-1 win over a fancied Spain team.
Vieira said: "We faced a difficult game against Spain and we played well. The game against Brazil was a challenge from the start but we were really strong, we worked as a team and fought very hard for 90 minutes. The key to our victory was the fact we didn't give them any space, they couldn't play their game. We had fun because we beat a really good team. People are still talking a little bit too much but we are just enjoying the ride."
France now face England's conquerors Portugal in the semi-final and Vieira said: "It's going to be a very difficult game. When you arrive at this stage of the competition every team is challenging."

Posted by Samvit :: 11:01 PM :: 0 comments

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Zidane's second coming silences the laughter

Zinédine Zidane was the first French player to leave the pitch but the majesty of his performance will remain seared on the memories of those present. The scoreline may suggest a squeeze but Les Bleus humiliated the defending champions en route to the semi-finals, with their inspiration illuminating Zidane's farewell tournament to remind the watching world what will soon be gone. The hollered strains of "Zi-zou" still echoed across the mock Manhattan skyline here yesterday. Munich and Berlin should brace themselves in the days to come.
It says much that as many bellowing the 34-year-old's name were clad in yellow as blue shirts. Where Brazil were only ever jaundiced, Zidane orchestrated one of the finest France displays since they triumphed in Euro 2000 - and he was at the peak of his staggering powers - to propel a team that had laboured so pitifully on arrival in Germany into Wednesday's semi-final with Portugal. "A side everyone was laughing at doesn't suddenly become favourites," insisted Thierry Henry in the aftermath. Reality suggests otherwise.
The transformation of this team is personified in Zidane's own return to form. A player who laboured off the pace in the pre-tournament friendlies is now revelling as he drifts with menace behind opponents' lines. Gilberto Silva and Ze Roberto never smothered his threat on Saturday, the France captain's range of passing switching from simple to staggering and hypnotising panicked markers. His flick over the floundering Ronaldo, first with a snap of the ankle and then a nod of his pate, was as glorious to behold as it was agonising for the Brazilian to endure. By the end the World Cup's record goalscorer had been reduced to diving pathetically in an attempt to glean a penalty, a reflection of his team's inadequacy.
Zidane had conjured the decisive goal by then, his free-kick veering wonderfully over the clutter in the six-yard box to Henry, utterly ignored at the far post, with the striker's shot flying high beyond the exposed Dida. It was the first time Zidane had ever created a goal directly for the Arsenal forward in France colours, stretching back some 61 matches. When he prompts as he did here, that statistic seems even more remarkable.
"I think he's playing like this precisely because he is retiring," said Raymond Domenech, whose contract with the French Football Federation will surely now be renewed when barely two weeks ago he appeared to be a dead man walking. "He can play with freedom and expression because he knows every game could be his last."
"We are improving with every game, just like we did in 1998, and that performance shows what we are capable of," said Vieira, whose gallop through the centre on to Zidane's pass might have earned France the first-half lead they merited had Juan not clattered the midfielder on the edge of the area. "There aren't many players who have won two World Cups but we are capable of it. We have the potential to go much further and this result was born of the hard work we've put in."
"Things seem to be coming together at the right time," added Henry, with five goals in his last seven internationals suggesting France are starting to witness his Arsenal form. "We were criticised at first, and rightly so because we weren't playing well. People thought we'd be home after the South Korea game, but we let them talk and just concentrated on getting through the group stage. After that, this competition is another story.
"We've shown we're not scared of playing. People point to Zizou coming into the game more but that's because the team's playing better as a whole. The three other teams left in the competition will be difficult, all great sides, and we haven't won anything yet. But people will sit up and notice that we've beaten Brazil.

Posted by Samvit :: 10:52 PM :: 0 comments

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Brazil 0-1 France

Thierry Henry's superb volley sent holders Brazil out of the World Cup as France moved into the semi-finals.
Inspired by man-of-the-match Zinedine Zidane, France were the better side in the first half, but failed to create clear chances to trouble Dida. That changed just before the hour when Zidane swept a free-kick to the far post where it was sumptuously volleyed past the Brazilian goalkeeper by Henry. Fabien Barthez denied Ronaldo late on to set up a semi-final with Portugal.
Prior to that save Barthez had flapped on a couple of occasions, but it was a mark of Brazil's lacklustre play that Ronaldo's shot came in stoppage time. Brazil had strolled their way to the quarter-finals, but Carlos Alberto Parriera's side had no answer to a France team that combined defensive discipline with some wonderful attacking play. France's route to the last eight has involved plenty of huffing and puffing, but the knockout stages have brought out the best in Raymond Domenech's side. Zidane was magnificent throughout, while after the interval the speed of Henry and Franck Ribery unsettled the Brazilian defence.
As early as the first minute Brazil were given a glimpse of what they were to experience for the remaining 89 minutes as Zidane glided away from a succession of Brazilian tackles as he executed a quick turn and that trademark stepover. A Zidane flick that deceived Cafu was equally breathaking, while he held off and teased Kaka by juggling the ball.
Not to be outdone, Brazil's number 10 Ronaldinho deftly touched the ball into Ronaldo's path before the Brazilian striker was closed down by the French defence. A Zidane free-kick set up France's best chance in the first half but Florent Malouda headed over. A minute before the interval another piece of Zidane wizardry released Patrick Vieira, who was scythed down by Juan, who was booked.
Within a minute of the second half starting Vieira went close with a glancing header from a Zidane free-kick. As the second half developed Henry began to come to the fore, first sprinting past Cafu, then troubling Lucio, before the Frenchman's backheel nearly released Vieira. So often in their careers with France, Henry and Zidane have failed to quite click, but on 57 minutes they combined to devastating effect.
Zidane whipped in a free-kick to the far past that Henry spectacularly volleyed past Dida into the roof of the net. Soon after the waspish Ribery nearly created a second goal for France when his penetrative cross was almost inadvertently turned into the Brazilian goal by defender Juan. Ribery then almost latched on to a Henry pass, but Dida just got to the ball before the Marseille winger.
The win means France have beaten Brazil in three of their four World Cup encounters.

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