Showing posts with label Uruguay. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Uruguay. Show all posts

Saturday, July 10, 2010

Lesotho Soccer World Cup: Uruguay 2-3 Germany

Image source: http://www.etaiwannews.com/

World Cup 2010: Uruguay 2-3 Germany - Mueller & Forlan hot up golden boot race in end-to-end game as Joachim Loew seals third place

Confident Germans grab bronze...

By Robin Bairner | goal.com

Uruguay 2-3 Germany

Germany have grabbed third place at the 2010 World Cup, claiming the bronze medal position after a fine 3-2 win over Uruguay.

Die Mannschaft impressed early and moved ahead thanks to a predatory strike from Thomas Mueller but Edinson Cavani had tied the scores by the interval. The Celeste turned the game on its head when Diego Forlan’s well-taken volley found the net but their lead was also short lived, with Marcell Jansen levelling matters. Sami Khedira won the game with a header in the twilight of a fine fixture.

Traditionally the third place playoff is one of the most exciting games of the World Cup, and both sides showed early enterprise in Nelson Mandela Bay.

As early as the third minute Thomas Mueller would have the ball in the Uruguayan net, poking home from 18 yards, though his goal was disallowed for an earlier infringement committed by Cacau, who had been drafted into the team to replace the flu-ridden Miroslav Klose.

Moments later a rash challenge by another newcomer to the Europeans’ starting XI, Dennis Aogo, was lucky to escape with only a caution when he clattered into Diego Perez high and late, leaving the Uruguayan hardman to receive treatment.

Diego Forlan was typically the first man in sky blue to threaten, sending a free kick a foot to the right of Hans-Joerg Butt’s goal.

But it was Germany who were making most of the early running, forcing Jorge Fucile and Diego Lugano into some desperate clearances. The South American defence was very nearly breached on ten minutes when a deep corner from Mesut Oezil was firmly headed against the bar by Arne Friedrich, with Fernando Muslera beaten. Mueller could not wrestle home the rebound.

The Bayern Munich man had better luck soon afterwards. A thunderous long range drive from Bastian Schweinsteiger was poorly dealt with by the Uruguayan custodian, who spilled the ball out into the middle of the box. Mueller reacted when others did not, giving himself a simple tap in from ten yards.

Die Mannschaft were at this stage creating regular inroads into the Celeste’s defence but wouldn’t even enjoy the lead for ten minutes.

Forlan had already worried the German rearguard with a blocked back post header from a deflected cross by the time Cavani drew the sides level. Perez superbly picked the pocket of Schweinsteiger in the centre of the park, setting in motion a break that saw the Europeans outnumbered from the outset. Luis Suarez, booed relentlessly by the South African crowd, rolled a well-weighted pass to the Palmero striker, who took a touch before stretching to prod the ball by Butt and into the net.

The closing stages of the opening period, which were played out under heavy rain, did not bring the drama of the opening moments, though Uruguay might have grabbed the lead four minutes before the break. Forlan’s clever reverse pass released Suarez but the Ajax striker dragged his shot wide from a somewhat awkward angle.

Right on the stroke of half-time, Cacau nearly latched onto a deflected Mueller pass, though Fucile covered superbly across to avert the danger. Continue reading here...

Monday, July 5, 2010

Lesotho Soccer World Cup Preview: Uruguay - Netherlands

World Cup Preview: Uruguay - Netherlands
By Robin Bairner

Miracles Do Happen
Image source: goal.com

Both Uruguay and the Netherlands are small nations steeped in World Cup history but only one has the ability to progress to another final when the sides meet on Tuesday evening in Cape Town.

It’s been 60 years since the Celeste were on top of the world, yet Oscar Tabarez’s side stand only 180 minutes from arguably their greatest ever success. The story could have been very different after a dramatic quarter-final meeting with Ghana that saw the South Americans come through in remarkable circumstances.

Having fallen behind in first half stoppage time, Uruguay battled back after the break thanks to a goal from Diego Forlan. When Luis Suarez was dismissed in the very last minute of stoppage time for handling a goalbound header on the line it seemed he had earned his side only a temporary reprieve but Asamoah Gyan sent his penalty against the bar. From a seemingly impossible position, the Celeste then won on penalty kicks.

“The ‘Hand of God’ now belongs to me,” Suarez cheekily proclaimed to the press after the game. “There was no alternative for me. This was the end of the World Cup and when I saw Gyan miss the penalty it was a great joy. I thought ‘it is a miracle’.”

Uruguay’s football history is marked with controversy due to the stereotypically unscrupulous nature of their defending, but this was not la Garra Charrua – the fighting spirit of the Uruguayans – as seen before. Nevertheless, the Celeste will no longer have the support of neutral South Africans after such a notorious incident, which Ghana coach Milovan Rajevac labelled “an injustice against football”.

Organised at the back, dangerous up front and prepared to do anything to earn progression through to the final, Uruguay should not be discounted.

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Wednesday, May 12, 2010

2010 World Cup Team Profile - Uruguay

32 Teams 1 Dream. Who will win?

Uruguay is the first nation to win the FIFA World Cup. Its their 11th appearance in the World Cup. They skip the 2006 World Cup in Germany and has won 15 drew 10 and lost 15.



Coach: Oscar Tabarez
Group: A

Lists of provisional players:

Goalkeepers
Fernando Muslera Lazio (ITA)
Juan-Guillermo Castillo Deportivo Cali (COL)
Martin Silva Defensor Sporting

Defenders

Diego Lugano Fenerbahce (TUR)
Diego Godin Villarreal (ESP)
Andres Scotti Colo Colo (CHI)
Jorge Fucile Porto (POR)
Martin Caceres Juventus (ITA)
Mauricio Victorino Universidad de Chile (CHI)
Maximiliano Pereira Benfica (POR)

Midfielders
Walter Gargano Napoli (ITA)
Egidio Arevalo-Rios Penarol
Sebastian Eguren AIK (SWE)
Diego Perez Monaco (FRA)
Alvaro Pereira Porto (POR)
Alvaro Fernandez Universidad de Chile (CHI)
Jorge Rodriguez River Plate (ARG)
Alvaro Gonzalez Nacional
Ignacio Gonzalez Valencia (ESP)
Nicolas Lodeiro Ajax (NED)

Forwards
Sebastian Fernandez Banfield (ARG)
Luis Suarez Ajax (NED)
Diego Forlan Atletico Madrid (ESP)
Edinson Cavani Palermo (ITA)
Jorge Martinez Catania (ITA)