The 2014 World Cup has its first historic moment as the Netherlands hammered Spain 5-1 in an incredible match in Salvador.
The champions were not just
beaten, but absolutely ripped to pieces by a much-unfancied Dutch side
that could have scored even more than the five they put past the
reigning Spaniards.
Yet it was actually Spain who started the strongest, having several chances to put themselves in the lead through Diego Costa, who thrice broke clear of a ponderous Dutch backline to get in space.
The first such chance was denied by Ron Vlaar, who made a fine recovering tackle after the big striker hesitated, while a ponderous touch for the second allowed Daryl Janmaat to shepherd him into the corner.
The third, however, was the most
decisive and the most controversial, as Costa was clearly brought down
by De Vrij after cutting back inside, although replays showed he may
have been looking for the contact. Nonetheless, it was a penalty, and Xabi Alonso stepped up to roll it into the bottom corner.
Spain were looking comfortable, but the Netherlands soon struck back with a majestic goal, Robin van Persie meeting Daley Blind's long pass with a diving header that was more reminiscent of Nijinsky than Henrik Larsson, the ball sailing over Iker Casillas and into the net.
Suddenly, Spain seemed to waver,
and the Netherlands took the lead shortly afterwards through Arjen
Robben, the winger collecting another Blind pass before cutting inside
and putting his shot past Casillas. And from there, Spain began to fall
apart. A free-kick from Wesley Sneijder
found Stefan de Vrij to make it 3-1, and Casillas' horrorshow continued
after when he presented the ball to Van Persie while playing out of
defence, allowing the Dutchman to prod into the empty net.
Just when it seemed like things
couldn't get any worse for Spain, an unbelievable run and counter-attack
from Robben made it five. The Bayern forward darted between his two
markers to pick up a long pass, cut inside, left Casillas in a heap and
then leathered the ball into the roof of the net past the waiting
Spanish defence.
Incredibly, things could have
been even worse - a ragged Spain defence came close to conceding three
more times before they heard the referee's whistle, with Fernando Torres
almost pulling back a consolation goal but being denied by a last-ditch
tackle. But the scoreline could not be improved - this was a mauling.
An historic evening in Brazil, and perhaps the greatest group stage match of all time.

No comments :
Post a Comment