Germans celebrating their winning |
Lionel Messi's hope of lifting the coveted World Cup suffered another devastating blow again with yesterday's defeat.
Mario Goetze’s superb 113th minute
volley gave Germany their fourth World Cup title and their first since they
became a unified country with a 1-0 win over Lionel Messi’s Argentina at the
Maracana on Sunday.
Each side had chances during the
match with Messi going agonisingly close in the 46th minute, scuffing his shot
with the ball rolling just wide of the far post.
The decisive moment of a World Cup
brimming with wonderful goals came with penalties looming in front of 74,738
fans at Rio de Janeiro’s famous Maracana Stadium.
Andre Schuerrle burst clear down the
left flank and crossed for Goetze.
The 22-year-old took the ball on his
chest and then volleyed past Sergio Romero to spark delirium among the largely
pro-German crowd.
Argentina and Messi were left
squandering a handful of gilt-edged chances, including one that fell to Messi
in the second half.
Messi was largely anonymous for most
of the evening and his miserable evening was summed up when a late free-kick to
equalise sailed over the bar.
The victory was celebrated raucously
by Brazilians in the crowd, who had dreaded the prospect of sworn South
American rivals Argentina lifting the title in their backyard.
An absorbing first half saw Germany
forced into a reshuffle moments before kick-off with inexperienced Christoph
Kramer replacing Sami Khedira after the Real Madrid star injured a calf in the
warm up.
With Bastian Schweinsteiger running
midfield the Germans laid siege to Argentinian territory, passing smoothly and
denying Messi a route into the game.
Yet for all Germany’s early
dominance they created little in the way of clear chances.
And it was Argentina who were
presented with a glorious chance to open the scoring.
Toni Kroos misdirected a header back
to Manuel Neuer to send Gonzalo Higuain racing through on goal.
But with only Neuer to beat the
Napoli striker dragged his shot wide to disbelief from fans and team-mates.
Germany continued to probe for
openings, and a Philipp Lahm pass almost put Thomas Mueller clear.
The pace of Argentina on the
counter-attack continued to unsettle Germany however.
Schweinsteiger picked up a yellow
card for bringing down Ezequiel Lavezzi just after the half hour mark.
Moments later, Argentina had the
ball in the net only to see the goal disallowed for offside.
Messi released Lavezzi down the
right who swept in a low cross for Higuain who drilled his finish past Neuer
before wheeling away in delight.
Higuain’s roar of celebration was
cut short however after Italian referee Nicola Rizzoli whistled, correctly, for
offside.
Germany’s personnel problems
deepened when Khedira’s replacement Kramer himself limped off, prompting the
introduction of Andre Schuerrle.
The Germans remained unfazed by the
setback however, and quickly set about reimposing their control of the game.
Schuerrle drew a fine near-post save
from Romero on 37 minutes with a rasping shot after Mueller’s cutback.
But the latent threat of Messi meant
Germany could never entirely relax.
Messi burst away down the right and
raced into the box, toe-poked past Neuer only for Jerome Boateng to clear.
On the stroke of half-time Benedikt
Hoewedes came within inches of scoring, crashing a header from a Kroos corner
against the post.
The second half followed a similar
pattern, Germany controlling possession but Argentina often threatening on the
break.
Messi squandered another golden
Argentinian chance two minutes after the restart, latching onto a pass from Lucas
Biglia but scuffing his shot wide of Neuer.
The hard-fought nature of the
contest led to a flurry of cards from referee Rizzoli, who cautioned Javier
Mascherano and Sergio Aguero in quick succession for fouls on Miroslav Klose
and Schweinsteiger.
The remainder of the half saw
neither stride able to get on top.
Germany controlled possession
without really testing Romero, while Argentina were unable to pass a German
defence superbly marshalled by Mats Hummels and Boateng.
Schuerrle came closest to breaking
the deadlock in the first period of extra-time, forcing Romero into a desperate
block.
Penalties looked to be the likeliest
outcome, but Goetze had other ideas.
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