WORLD CUP SOCCER



WORLD CUPSOCCER
Monday's games
Italy 1, Australia 0
KAISERSLAUTERN, Germany -- 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, 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 goal mouth 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 resignation. "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."
Ukraine 0, Switzerland 0, (Ukraine wins shootout 3-0)
COLOGNE, Germany -- The idea is to put the ball in the net, not just keep it out. Ukraine figured that out a lot quicker than Switzerland in the shootout. And the World Cup newcomers are headed to the quarterfinals because of it. After 120 minutes of scoreless soccer, goalkeeper Oleksandr Shovkovskyi didn't have to work very hard in the shootout, either. The Swiss misses came right at him, and another shot clanged off the crossbar. The Swiss, who did not yield a goal in the entire tournament, stood stunned at their lack of marksmanship from the penalty spot in the first shootout of the World Cup. Meanwhile, Artem Milevskiy, Serhiy Rebrov and Oleg Gusev hit the net after Ukraine star Andriy Shevchenko's weak, low shot was stopped by Switzerland goalkeeper Pascal Zuberbuehler. The Ukrainians mobbed each other in a pile after the 3-0 shootout win, which put them in a match Friday against Italy at Hamburg. Shevchenko said it was a "great victory." "We suffered a lot and we're happy to have won for all Ukrainians," Shevchenko said. "We do not have the greatest players, but we make up for that by making sacrifices for each other, by playing with a lot of heart." The Ukrainian capital of Kiev erupted in celebration, with fans spilling out of bars shouting "Ukrania!" and drivers leaning on their horns in the early morning hours. But Ukraine, like the Swiss, was considered an outsider at the World Cup, and if Ukraine can't find a semblance of offense in the quarterfinals, it's unlikely to stick around. It was a tame game, particularly in comparison to the other quarterfinals. There was only one yellow card, the calmest match in a tournament that has set a record for yellows and for ejections. Mexican referee Benito Archundia gave the yellow to Tranquillo Barnetta in the 59th minute for a push from behind. Ukraine coach Oleh Blokhin chose to start the shootout with his top scorer, but Shevchenko's shot was poor. Marco Streller's effort for Switzerland was worse -- low and directly at Shovkovskyi. And after Milevskiy scored, Barnetta hit the crossbar. Rebrov made it 2-0 and Ricardo Cabanas looked almost amateurish on his shot directly into the middle of the goal -- and again, right at the Ukranian goalkeeper. Then Gusev powered his winner into the left side of the net. "We put in a good performance and I hope all of Switzerland is still behind us. Football is sometimes hard, but we gained a lot of experience for Euro 2008 in our own country," defender Ludovic Magnin said.
COLOGNE, Germany -- The idea is to put the ball in the net, not just keep it out. Ukraine figured that out a lot quicker than Switzerland in the shootout. And the World Cup newcomers are headed to the quarterfinals because of it. After 120 minutes of scoreless soccer, goalkeeper Oleksandr Shovkovskyi didn't have to work very hard in the shootout, either. The Swiss misses came right at him, and another shot clanged off the crossbar. The Swiss, who did not yield a goal in the entire tournament, stood stunned at their lack of marksmanship from the penalty spot in the first shootout of the World Cup. Meanwhile, Artem Milevskiy, Serhiy Rebrov and Oleg Gusev hit the net after Ukraine star Andriy Shevchenko's weak, low shot was stopped by Switzerland goalkeeper Pascal Zuberbuehler. The Ukrainians mobbed each other in a pile after the 3-0 shootout win, which put them in a match Friday against Italy at Hamburg. Shevchenko said it was a "great victory." "We suffered a lot and we're happy to have won for all Ukrainians," Shevchenko said. "We do not have the greatest players, but we make up for that by making sacrifices for each other, by playing with a lot of heart." The Ukrainian capital of Kiev erupted in celebration, with fans spilling out of bars shouting "Ukrania!" and drivers leaning on their horns in the early morning hours. But Ukraine, like the Swiss, was considered an outsider at the World Cup, and if Ukraine can't find a semblance of offense in the quarterfinals, it's unlikely to stick around. It was a tame game, particularly in comparison to the other quarterfinals. There was only one yellow card, the calmest match in a tournament that has set a record for yellows and for ejections. Mexican referee Benito Archundia gave the yellow to Tranquillo Barnetta in the 59th minute for a push from behind. Ukraine coach Oleh Blokhin chose to start the shootout with his top scorer, but Shevchenko's shot was poor. Marco Streller's effort for Switzerland was worse -- low and directly at Shovkovskyi. And after Milevskiy scored, Barnetta hit the crossbar. Rebrov made it 2-0 and Ricardo Cabanas looked almost amateurish on his shot directly into the middle of the goal -- and again, right at the Ukranian goalkeeper. Then Gusev powered his winner into the left side of the net. "We put in a good performance and I hope all of Switzerland is still behind us. Football is sometimes hard, but we gained a lot of experience for Euro 2008 in our own country," defender Ludovic Magnin said.
Associated Press