Italy players celebrate after winning the
penalty shootout in the World Cup 2006 final soccer match between Italy
and France in Berlin July 9, 2006. [Reuters] |
Italy won its first-round group over the higher-ranked United States and
Czech Republic, and Ghana. Then it beat Australia on a controversial penalty in
the second-half extra time that Francesco Totti converted.
It routed Ukraine 3-0 before depressing the host nation with two stunning
goals in the final minutes of extra time for a semifinal win over Germany.
Gianluigi Buffon made the save of the final match in the 104th minute as the
ever-dangerous Zidane fed Willy Sagnol on the wing and then slipped into the
area. Sagnol's cross was headed into the top of the net with the Italian keeper
soared high to knock it over.
By then, the sea of blue supporters for both teams seemed as exhausted as the
players. The crowd let out a short gasp, and then it was back to the tense and
tentative action.
Zidane used his head again in the 110th, albeit the wrong way, and almost got
away it. Argentine referee Horacio Elizondo didn't see the butt, and Buffon
charged out of his net imploring Elizondo to seek help.
The ref finally asked his assistant on the sideline, then pulled out the red
card.
For the remaining extra time, the fans whistled their displeasure.
"We prepared exactly how we needed to be at the top. You could see that in
the second half and in extra time," Domenech said. "Once again we were largely
superior to our opponents."
Both sides played nervous, sloppy soccer for 120 minutes, hardly befitting a
World Cup final. There were far more mistakes than inspiration.
France's Thierry Henry went down in the first minute in a seemingly innocent
collision with the impregnable Cannavaro. Henry stayed on the ground, clearly
dazed, for two minutes before being helped off with an ice bag held to his head.
The striker soon came back and his first touch, naturally, was a header. It
was a terrific one, too, falling at the feet of a breaking Florent Malouda.
Malouda stumbled, many might say dived, in the penalty area and Elizondo
immediately signaled a penalty kick.
Zidane, whose penalty beat Portugal in the semifinals, lobbed it right as
Buffon dived the other way. The ball struck the crossbar and fell 2 feet inside
the net in the seventh minute.
For the rest of the half, the French showed little of the flair that carried
them this far. And Italy tied it with one of its strengths: a set piece.
Mauro Camoranesi won a corner kick on right wing and was setting up to take
it when Andrea Pirlo signaled Camoranesi to back off. Pirlo took the corner, a
perfect spiral that found the head of defender Materazzi above France's Patrick
Vieira.
Materazzi's header soared past goalkeeper Fabien Barthez to tie it.
Luca Toni hit the crossbar off another corner kick in the 36th.
Henry had the best opportunity in the second half, but Buffon lunged left to
hand-save his right-footed drive. France got a scare, too, when Zidane fell on
his right arm and shoulder and needed freeze spray applied before staying
in.