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July 09, 2010

June 28, 2010

Controversy

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Germany send England crashing out

Disallowed Lampard goal sparks controversy, but Capello’s men are outplayed

gergoal1Germany goalkeeper Manuel Neuer could only look as Lampard’s shot hit the bar to bounce over the line. No goal was given. AP

BLOEMFONTEIN: Germany inflicted England’s record World Cup finals defeat yesterday after a 4-1 victory in their Last 16 match that was overshadowed by one of the worst refereeing mistakes in the tournament’s history.
 
Germany’s superior movement and ruthless finishing made them worthy winners on an afternoon when England’s defending was shockingly sub-standard and their talisman, Wayne Rooney, once again failed to deliver on the game’s biggest stage.

But there is no saying what would have happened if England had not been denied a goal that would have levelled the match at 2-2 just before half-time, when a Frank Lampard shot bounced off the underside of the bar and landed a yard over the goal-line.

gergoal3Matthew Upson had just headed England back into the match after Miroslav Klose and Lukas Podolski had given Germany a two-goal advantage.

Two second-half goals for Thomas Mueller enabled the Germans to run up their most convincing win against their biggest rivals, but they were both scored on the counter-attack as England sought an equaliser they should not have been obliged to chase.

Referee Jorge Larrionda’s misjudgement was all the more inexplicable because he was well-placed to see the incident. Yet, after looking across at his linesman, he waved play on.

England coach Fabio Capello said that the Lampard moment was the turning point.

‘‘The Lampard incident was one of the most important in the match,’’ said Capello.

‘‘The referee made one of the biggest mistakes, but Germany are a great team, we were caught out on the counterattack.

‘‘This is football. Little things make all the difference.’’

The controversy over the incident will rumble on but England will also have to ask themselves some hard questions after what was, at times, a shambolic display.

Germany coach Joachim Loew, whose side next face Argentina, revealed he ordered his side at the interval to keep pushing.

‘‘I said to my team at the half-time break, we need to try to score the third goal. We knew we could hit England on the counter-attack because they were open. Our players carried it off brilliantly,’’ he said.

England’s vulnerability at the back had been exposed early on and, after goalkeeper David James had denied Mueller, Klose exploited it to get on the end of goalkeeper Manuel Neuer’s upfield punt to give Germany the lead.

John Terry allowed the ball to fly over his head and Klose outmuscled and outpaced Upson before flicking the ball past James with the outside of his boot.

Mueller did the damage for Germany’s second. Taking Klose’s first-time pass, the Bayern Munich midfielder broke into the box before switching the ball to Podolski, who beat James at his near post from a tight angle.

Lampard came agonisingly close to an equaliser seven minutes after the restart, hammering a free-kick from nearly 40 yards against the bar with Neuer struggling to cover.

Germany centreback Arne Friedrich, who had already been booked, was fortunate to stay on the pitch after a cynical body check on Rooney.

The resulting free-kick was blocked by the German wall and Germany immediately swept upfield to claim their third goal.

Bastian Schweinsteiger did most of the leg work through the inside left channel before switching the ball to Mueller who beat James at his near post with a fiercely struck drive from 12 yards.

The fourth was virtually a carbon copy, although this time it was Mesut Oezil who wreaked havoc after latching on to a punted clearance towards the left touchline.



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