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Argentina vs Germany - Quarter Final Round
posted Jul-03 | 1150 hits
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Argentina vs Germany Final Score :0-4 We update World Cup 2010 match Argentina vs Germanyresult ( also Germany vs Argentina result ), information, match preview, match analysis, also match Argentina vs Germany video and photos. Argentina vs Germany Stadium : Green Point Time : July 3rd, 2010 - 16:00 South Africa time Type : Quarter Final Match - The World Cup 2010 Result |
Argentina vs Germany result ( also Germany vs Argentina result ) Argentina vs Germany Score : 0-4 Germany Goals : Thomas Müller (2') , Miroslav Klose (67', 88') ,Arne Friedrich (73') Referee : Ravshan Irmatow (Usbekistan)
Road to quarter final of Argentina : Argentina vs Nigeria (1-0) Argentina vs South Korea (4-1) Argentina vs Greece (2-0) Second Round : Argentina vs Mexico (3-1)
Road to quarter final of Germany : Germany vs Australia (4-0) Germany vs Serbia (0-1) Germany vs Ghana (1-0) Second Round : Germany vs England (4-1)
Argentina vs Germany Preview : Argentina and Germany meet on Saturday 3 July 2010 in the quarter final of the 2010 FIFA World Cup at the Green Point Stadium in Cape Town. But both teams had a controversial route to this match, each benefiting in their own way from a wrong refereeing decision that has once again renewed calls for technology to be used during matches to help officials.
Argentina had a clearly offside goal allowed. This was shown immediately afterwards on the big screen at the ground and all the officials realised the goal should not stand but under rules were not able to do anything about it. And Germany had a goal against them disallowed because the referee believed it had not crossed the line but replays later showed it clearly had.
Argentina So Far in the FIFA World Cup Argentina were clearly the better side in the Round of 16 match against Mexico but the route to the 3-1 win started with the controversial goal by Carlos Tevez that should not have stood on twenty-six minutes. The Mexican players were still reeling from the decision when Argentina added a second through Gonzalo Higuain just five minutes later. Carlos Tevez scored with an undisputable wonder strike early in the second half and Manchester United’s new signing Javier Hernandez pulled one back for the Mexicans, but it was too little too late.
Argentina stormed to three wins and maximum points in their group games and did it with a flair and style that cannot have failed to impress. Their most cautious game was the opener against Nigeria, which they won through an early goal by Gabriel Heinze. But Argentina ran riot against South Korea, with Gonzalo Higuain scoring a hat-trick in the 4-1 victory. In the final group match against Greece, Martin Demichelis and Martin Palmero gave Argentina a 2-0 victory.
Germany So Far in the FIFA World Cup Germany’s victory over England in the Round of 16 ended up comfortable but the first half was clouded in the controversy over England’s goal that was not allowed.
Before that, lapses in England’s defence had allowed the Germans to take a 2-0 lead through Miroslav Klose on twenty minutes and Lukas Podoloski twelve minutes later. Matt Upson headed one back for England shortly afterwards and then came the controversial goal that wasn’t. England never really recovered from the injustice and in the second half were caught twice on the break within three minutes of each other, Thomas Müller scoring in both cases to make it 4-1 to Germany.
This was the second time Germany have scored four goals in this tournament, beating Australia 4-0 in the first group game before losing 1-0 to Serbia and then beating Ghana by the same score.
Argentina vs Germany Analysis :
Germany hammered Argentina in the quarter-finals of the 2010 World Cup on a gorgeous afternoon in Cape Town. Thomas Mueller opened the scoring for die Mannschaft after just three minutes, and Germany took second half goals from Miroslav Klose (68, 89), and Arne Friedrich (74) to round off their comprehensive victory.
Following emphatic wins in the Round of 16, coaches Diego Maradona and Joachim Loew named unchanged lineups. There had been fitness concerns for Argentine forward Lionel Messi and German winger Lukas Podolski, but the pair were declared ready to play from the start.
For Argentina, Gabriel Heinze and Javier Mascherano entered the game just a yellow card away from missing out on a possible semifinal berth. The Germans had to be more careful, with Arne Friedrich, Sami Khedira, Bastian Schweinsteiger, Mesut Oezil, Thomas Mueller, Philipp Lahm, and substitute Cacau all set to earn suspensions in the event of a booking.
Argentina kicked off the match and were faced by a high-intesity, pressing German machine that could not have started the match better. After just three minutes, Lukas Podolski won a free kick from Nicolas Otamendi. Schweinsteiger delivered a gorgeous cross to Mueller, who beat Otamendi to the ball and nodded home the opening goal, his fourth of the tournament.
After the opener, Argentina found it difficult to move fluently forward. The entire German team dropped back to deny their opponents space to pass, and were quick to exploit a rather exposed Argentine defence. With Mascherano the only buffer for his team's centre halves, the Germans created and used space in the centre of the park.
After spending the majority of the opening ten minutes on their heels, the Argentines settled in. Their pace and runs up front were difficult to cover, and Messi, Carlos Tevez, and Gonzalo Higuain linked well in the build-up.
Still, the Germans seemed to always have the ability to recover and make the necessary, last-minute intervention. In the opening half hour, the best chance the Albicelestes created was a through ball from Messi that goalkeeper Manuel Neuer was able to collect just ahead of Tevez.
While Argentina had trouble creating goal-scoring opportunities, the Germans were next to threaten to score. In the 24th minute, Mueller pounced on a deflected ball, and burst into the penalty area before squaring for Miroslav Klose, who looped his first-time effort over the bar. Six minutes later, Podolski unleashed a long-ranged effort that flashed just wide of the right post.
Late in the first half, Argentina finally began to look a threat in front of goal. Angel di Maria, who began the game as a left winger, found space to attack on the right side, but had his low shot saved by Neuer. Not long thereafter, Higuain had a similar effort stopped.
After 36 minutes, Maradona's men thought they had equalised, but the play was called back. After Mueller was carded for a hand ball, Higuain slotted home from a through ball from the ensuing freekick, but was adjudged to have done so from an offside position.
The game began to stretch in the final moments of the first half, and while Messi regularly found the ball at the top of the German penalty area, he was always closed down and never had a clear view of goal. Mueller had a chance to double the Germans' advantage late in the half, but had his close-ranged effort blocked.
At the end of a rousing first half, Germany entered the tunnel with a well-deserved, albeit slim, advantage. Argentina looked good in spells, but needed much more in order to advance to the semifinals.
The second half began with both teams unchanged, and Argentina pinning their oponents back in their own half. Di Maria struck a scorcher wide of the left post early on, but it did not take long for play to stretch over the length of the pitch.
As in the first half, Messi found himself having to drop very deep to retrieve the ball, and Germany used a very high offside trap. Argentina managed to breach their opponents' back line on multiple occasions, but a timely intervention from Per Mertesacker's face denied Tevez a shot on goal.
Towards the hour mark, the game shifted into a new gear. Back and forth the teams sprinted, but neither could create a clear goal-scoring opportunity. The sheer pace left both sides visibly fatigued, but favoured the seemingly fitter Germans, who bested their opponents in transition.
Whereas Argentina often had to settle for shots from outside the box, the Germans showed enough mettle to double their advantage. Once again, the impressive Mueller was at the centre of the play. As he appeared to be felled by Martin Demichelis, the 20-year old attacker managed to turn and pass through to the wide-open Podolski. With just goalkeeper Sergio Romero to beat, the Koeln striker squared for Klose, who tapped his 13th World Cup goal into an open net.
After going two goals behind, Maradona had to roll the dice, and opted to bring on attacking midfielder Javier Pastore to replace Otamendi, who by the time of his substitution, was on his final warning.
Unfortunately for the Albicelestes, they had no time to develop a comeback before Germany struck yet again. After a short corner kick, Schweinsteiger was given a free path to the byline, wherefrom he centered to Friedrich, who scored his first international goal with a tap-in.
With the score at 3-0 and a quarter hour left, the game was effectively ended as a contest. Argentina sought a consolation goal, but were fatigued and had to be more concerned with the prospect of giving up a fourth goal. Loew brought on substitutes Toni Kroos and Piotr Trochowski to protect the card-bearing Mueller and Khedira, and still, the Germans were able to use team defending to thwart their opponents.
As icing on the cake, Klose completed his brace in the 89th minute, finishing coolly from Oezil's cross.
The final result sends Argentina home on a bitter note, while Germany head into their semi-finals task without the suspended Mueller, but with a massive confidence boost. Argentina vs Germany Photos : | Argentina vs Germany Photo Gallery |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  | Argentina vs Germany Videos : |
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