Late, late goals send Italians to final
Germany 0Italy 2(after extra time)\nFabio Grosso and Alessandro del Piero grabbed two goals in the final two minutes of extra-time to puncture the German World Cup party and send Italy into the final after a 2-0 win. With a penalty shoot-out looming,...
Germany 0
Italy 2
(after extra time)
\nFabio Grosso and Alessandro del Piero grabbed two goals in the final two minutes of extra-time to puncture the German World Cup party and send Italy into the final after a 2-0 win.
With a penalty shoot-out looming, Grosso curled a fantastic left foot drive into the corner and as Germany desperately searched for a late equaliser, substitute del Piero broke free to guide in the killer second goal.
Germany had been seeking their eighth appearance in the final where Italy were hoping for a sixth - both countries having won the trophy three times.
The game began at a terrific tempo and it rarely dropped as each side passed sharply and went forward probing for openings.
Generally, however, the defenders were able to resist most forays, with captain Fabio Cannavaro again masterful at the heart of Italy's back four and Italy's Simone Perrotta and Germany's Bernd Schneider missing the best of the few first-half chances.
The end-to-end approach continued after the break though neither side were able to muster the necessary precision to force the goalkeepers into serious action and Sebastian Kehl, in for the suspended Torsten Frings, and Italy's Gennaro Gattuso were both dominant in screening their defences.
Gianluigi Buffon did have to move sharply to end a Miroslav Klose run and then block a powerful shot on the turn by Lukas Podolski as the home side began to turn the screw midway through the second period.
Coach Juergen Klinsmann threw on wide midfielders Bastian Schweinsteiger and David Odonkor but neither man was able to make the difference and the game went into extra-time.
Germany had never beaten Italy in their four previous competitive matches including the 1982 World Cup final, but in the plus column they had never lost in Dortmund, winning 13 and drawing one of their 14 games there over 71 years.
If both records had remained intact it would have been penalties, where the Germans' World Cup record of four wins from four compared with the Italians' three out of three defeats would leave the hosts as favourites.
Perhaps with that in mind the Italians blasted out of the blocks in extra-time and hit the woodwork twice in two minutes.
Substitute Alberto Gilardino carved through the retreating German defence but hit the post and then Gianluca Zambrotta smashed a 20-metre shot against the bar with Lehmann again helpless.
Podolski then headed wide from inside the box in the last action of the first extra period.
Germany: 1-Jens Lehmann; 3-Arne Friedrich, 21-Christoph Metzelder, 17-Per Mertesacker, 16-Philipp Lahm; 19-Bernd Schneider (22-David Odonkor 83), 5-Sebastian Kehl, 13-Michael Ballack, 18-Tim Borowski (7-Bastian Schweinsteiger 73); 20-Lukas Podolski, 11-Miroslav Klose (10-Oliver Neuville 111).
Italy: 1-Gianluigi Buffon; 19-Gianluca Zambrotta, 23-Marco Materazzi, 5-Fabio Cannavaro, 3-Fabio Grosso; 20-Simone Perrotta (7-Alessandro del Piero 104), 21-Andrea Pirlo, 8-Gennaro Gattuso, 16-Mauro Camoranesi (15-Vincenzo Iaquinta 90); 10-Francesco Totti; 9-Luca Toni (11-Alberto Gilardino 74).
Referee: Benito Archundia (Mexico).
Linesmen: Jose Ramirez (Mexico), Hector Vergara (Canada).
Scorers: Grosso 119; del Piero 120.
Half-time: 0-0. Attendance: 65,000.
FIFA man of the match: Pirlo.
Germany vs Italy stats
|
Germany |
Italy |
Goals |
0 |
2 |
Shots on goal |
2 |
10 |
Shots |
13 |
15 |
Fouls |
21 |
19 |
Corner kicks |
4 |
12 |
Offsides |
2 |
11 |
Yellow cards |
2 |
1 |
Red cards |
0 |
0 |
Possession |
43% |
57% |