Holland will have their chance to exorcise the ghosts of World Cup
finals past on Sunday after they beat Uruguay 3-2 to set up a final
showdown with Germany or Spain.
Goals from Giovanni van Bronckhorst, Wesley Sneijder and Arjen Robben
secured a semi-final victory over Uruguay in Cape Town and a chance to
avenge defeats on the game's biggest stage in 1974 and 1978.
Bert van Marwijk's side may not delight like the `Total Football'
Dutch
teams from the playing days of Johan Cruyff.
But having waited so long, the `Oranje' will care little for that as the
prepare to bring their own glow to Johannesburg in a meeting with
either Spain or their 1974 conquerors Germany.
- Uruguay
v Netherlands: As it happened
The occasion will also provide captain Van Bronckhorst with the
opportunity to end his career in glorious fashion.
The 35-year-old brilliantly put his side in front tonight before former
Manchester United star Diego Forlan levelled with a goal that ultimately
was not quite enough, even though Maximiliano Pereira's strike gave a
glimmer of hope in stoppage time.
Memories of Forlan's dismal time at Old Trafford and a less than
sparkling season for Dirk Kuyt at Liverpool should have sent shudders
down English spines.
Knowing one of those players would be competing to become world champion
at Soccer City on Sunday only emphasised what a chance England let slip
through their fingers when they failed to finish top of what still
looks like a straightforward group even now.
That is not to say Fabio Capello's men would have made it this far.
Nothing they did in South Africa suggested it.
But, as both Uruguay and Holland felt at times during their own
quarter-finals that they were heading home, it proves glory can emerge
from the most unlikely settings.
Uruguay's moment of despair came following that controversial handball
from Luis Suarez that denied Africa its first semi-finalist and left a
continent in mourning.
Retribution came in Cape Town as, without his trusted strike partner,
Forlan was too isolated to cause Holland damage that was beyond repair.
The 31-year-old Forlan has long since proved his time under Sir Alex
Ferguson's wing was an aberration.
Two Golden Boots in Spain and the goal to beat Fulham in this season's
Europa League final do that alone.
Still, with the clock ticking down towards half-time, there seemed to be
little on when Forlan collected possession 40 yards out.
But, offered space to advance into, he then delivered the kind of shot
this hotly-debated Jabulani ball was made for.
Big questions will be asked of Maarten Stekelenburg. Yet, in super
slow-motion, it was hard not to have some sympathy for the giant
goalkeeper as the ball shuddered in flight and then found the net with
Stekelenburg just out of position.
Stekelenburg's part in the equaliser ensured Van Bronckhorst's opener
was the better of two eye-catching first-half efforts.
As with Forlan, there seemed no danger when the Dutch skipper received
possession in a similar position, far from goal.
Due to retire when this tournament is over, the 35-year-old defender
could not have been any more accurate had he placed the 35-yard shot
into the net himself.
High to the goalkeeper's left, so far into the corner that it struck the
inside of the post before finding the net, it also had the speed of a
tracer bullet, which left Fernando Muslera beaten.
Uruguay had not made their impact in South Africa through dazzling skill
and unchecked flair.
They are defensively aware and exceptionally well organised by wily old
coach Oscar Tabarez.
Yet the indignation with which Tabarez met legitimate questions about
Suarez's conduct against Ghana was not becoming of a world champion.
So, for all the effort of his team, and the excellence of Forlan, it was
perhaps right that Holland should emerge victors.
They took their time about it though as Uruguay's defence threatened to
hold firm, so it took a bit of good fortune to bring about a second
goal.
We will never know whether Sneijder's shot would have gone in without
the deflection off Pereira. With it, at such close quarters, it deceived
everyone in its wake.
Even Robin van Persie was caught off guard as it flashed through a crowd
of bodies so dense Sneijder had to watch carefully to ensure it had
found the net.
Three minutes later, Robben rose to power home Kuyt's cross.
For Forlan and Uruguay, the game was up. For Holland, the glory that
proved so unobtainable all those years ago, is in reach again.
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Source: DSG