The Socceroos were tough on Italy. The referee was tougher on
Australia. Another questionable call in this World Cup showed Italy
the way to the quarterfinal Monday, giving the Italians a penalty
kick that Francesco Totti converted for the 1-0 win as time
expired.
Moments earlier, Italy's Fabio Grosso was dribbling a few
strides from the goalmouth when Lucas Neill slid in front of him.
The Italian cut in Neill's direction and tried to leap clear, but
tripped over the defender's back.
To the amazement of the Socceroos, Spanish referee Luis Medina
immediately ruled it a penalty with 12 seconds remaining in extra
time.
Totti, a second-half substitute, sent his penalty kick high and
to the right of goalkeeper Mark Schwarzer, who guessed correctly
but couldn't stretch far enough to stop it. With no time left to
restart, the Italians started celebrating.
"We suffered but we gave them no chances," said Italy coach
Marcello Lippi, whose team plays Friday in the quarterfinals
against Ukraine. "This is an incredible joy."
There was no joy for the Socceroos, whose howls of protest over
the call gave way to head-shaking and resignment.
"I just can't believe it, mate," Australian forward Tim Cahill
said. "We play all our lives to be honest on the pitch and to work
hard and I suppose these days you fall over on the pitch and get a
penalty, free kick whatever. It's disappointing.
I'm furious. It's unbelievable. The luck we've had with
refereeing decisions this World Cup. Everything's been against
us."
About the only people in the Fritz-Walter-Stadion who thought
Grosso was fouled were the Italians - and Medina.
With a match-fixing scandal rumbling along back home, only Italy
could come up with this scenario - though there was no suggestion
of any skullduggery here. Only more suggestions of a bad decision
by the referee.
"It's cruel, very cruel," Australian striker Mark Viduka said.
"This was a game where we really dominated. We had the feeling that
if the game went into extra time we were going to beat them."
It was another match filled with yellow cards and one ejection -
a growing trend at this World Cup. The red card against Marco
Materazzi was the 24th in this tournament, already a record with 11
matches left.
The ejection gave the Australians a man advantage for the last
40 minutes of the game, but Australia couldn't capitalize.
"I never feared being eliminated," Lippi said. "We still had the
extra time, the penalties. We had had scoring chances, four or
five, and even when we were down to ten players, we remained well
organized. Italy has shown a great heart."
It was the Australians who showed that a team ranked just 42nd
in the world - in just its second World Cup, its first since 1974 -
could compete with traditional soccer powers. In Germany, the
Australians scored their first World Cup goals (five total), their
first victory (3-1 over Japan) and riveted a nation that stayed up
late and partied later when the Socceroos played.
Winger Harry Kewell, man of the match in the 2-2 draw with
Croatia that earned Australia a place in the final 16, missed the
game with what turned out to be gout in his foot. He supported
himself with crutches as he watched from the bench.
Although the Australians pressured from the start, three-time
champion Italy created the better chances with the tall Luca Toni
coming close to scoring four times before the interval.
He headed narrowly wide from eight yards in the third minute
from Alessandro Del Piero's left wing cross, forced Schwarzer to
save his shot with his legs, had another shot blocked by defender
Craig Moore and also sent another header past the post.
Strike partner Alberto Gilardino had a shot pushed over the bar
by Schwarzer and Australia's Scott Chipperfield blocked a goalbound
drive by Simone Perrotta.
At the other end, Mark Viduka's powerful header went straight at
Italian goalkeeper Gianluigi Buffon, who also smothered a low drive
from Chipperfield.
Later, the Aussie defender lamented that referees always seem to
favor the powerhouse teams.
"They look after the big nations," Chipperfield said. "They want
the big nations through to the semis and finals. It's always the
way."
He pointed to other refereeing controversies at the
tournament.
"A lot of the games, everyone's talking about the referee, which
shouldn't be the way. They should be talking about how good the
game is. Not the refereeing. It's something that needs to be looked
at."
Australia coach Guus Hiddink said his players were sure there
was no foul on the final play, and described Neill as despondent in
the locker room, quietly sitting in one corner.
"You feel guilty if you cause a penalty," Hiddink said. "But, in
this case, it was so bitter and that makes it doubly sad for him
not committing a foul."
(AP via China Daily June 27, 2006)