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Saturday, July 3, 2010

ORANJE CRUSH



The memories of 94 and 98 are finally erased. In a brilliant display of resilience, the Netherlands have made their way into the semis after going down to a seemingly in control Brazil after 10". Dunga's Brazil has betrayed the mythical free flowing, samba style that Brazilians have been brought up on. Had he won the tournament, he could have thumbed his nose at his detractors, but now, after a second consecutive exit at the quarter final stage, Brazil will be looking for a more attacking philosophy to present in their own backyard.

Brazil, for all their quick and effective interplay during the first half, self-combusted as they were drawn into a series of transactions that you'd expect from bickering cousins playing in the street, with the skillful Robben attracting more attention than Lara Bingle at an all boy's school. Repeatedly fouled by Michael Bastos, Felipe Melo and Dani Alves, Robben went down more times in 90 minutes than Kim Kardaschian. The referee, a model of Asian diplomacy, was probably too eager to protect the flying Dutchman, but in truth Bastos was lucky to stay on before Dunga interevened in a switch he hadn't expected tactically.

In a bizarre 20 minutes after a brilliantly saved shot by Kaka, Brazil had lost it, whatever 'it' was. Foul after foul gave Holland the possessive advantage, leading to numerous set pieces, from which the 2 goals effectively came from. The first was a second phase play where a hopeful Sneijder cross was contested by both Felipe Melo and keeper Cesar, with the latter flapping wildly, and the ball nestling in the bottom left corner. If Cesar had compared the Jabulani to a supermarket ball, this was definitely a spill in aisle 3.The second was a beautifully worked corner, with a flick on from Kuyt and a free header to the 5'7" Sneijder.

From here, desperation set in, with nasty foul after nasty foul raising the stakes. After Melo's expulsion for a Zizou style stamp on Robben, Brazil went all Wimbledon, with 3 at the back and disarray reigning supreme.

For all of Brazil's indiscipline, the attitude of Robben and card seeker VanBommel was ugly and detracted from an otherwise great Dutch performance. Uruguay will watch the tape with interest as they seek to nullify Robben and not repeat the mistakes of Brazil.

Holland deserve this. Only arrogance stands between them and their first finals appearance since 1978.

As for Dunga, he will be pilloried for biasing the tactics too much towards the defensive. The 2 cogs that left him without pants were 2 of the defensive cogs he depended upon.

HOLLAND 2
BRAZIL 1

GP

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