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Last updated on May 31, 2012 at 17:56 EDT

Zidane puts jubilant French in the final

July 5, 2006
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By Andrew Gray

MUNICH (Reuters) – A Zinedine Zidane penalty gave France
victory in their World Cup showdown with Portugal on Wednesday
and set up a final with Italy which will be the gifted
playmaker’s last game before retirement.

The 34-year-old took just two steps, then coolly fired his
penalty into the bottom left-hand corner to score the winner in
the 33rd minute and ensure he goes out right at the top.

The 1-0 semi-final victory prompted jubilation among the
blue-clad French fans in Munich’s futuristic Allianz Arena and
across France, where fans have come to believe in a second
World Cup triumph to go with their first in Paris eight years
ago.

The streets of the French capital were filled with the
sound of blaring horns, whistles and cheering as people
streamed out of bars cheering, “We’re in the final!.”

“What matters now is to go all the way. We can’t be content
with this,” France coach Raymond Domenech said.

“We have to recuperate and start focusing. We must give all
we have in that final to make sure we have no regrets.”

Zidane’s penalty came after Portugal’s Ricardo Carvalho
caught France striker Thierry Henry’s ankle inside the box.

Italy had claimed their place in the final with two goals
late in extra time on Tuesday against hosts Germany, whose
attacking football and unexpected run to the last four prompted
an outpouring of German patriotism unknown in the post-war era.

The hosts were still digesting their exit from the
tournament as France and Portugal met on Wednesday — with one
group of fans in the crowd holding up home-made letters
thanking the Germany team for their efforts.

BRIGHT START

Portugal started brightly, with Maniche and Cristiano
Ronaldo firing in strong early shots. But France often appeared
to have just a touch more class, typified by the skills of
Zidane who also inspired them to their 1998 triumph.

The midfielder, three times World Footballer of the Year,
was at the heart of almost every French move, spending time on
the wings and in the center of the field, peppering his game
with short and long passes and running at the Portuguese.

France also relied on a formidable defense, which has
conceded only two goals in six games at this World Cup.

Domenech’s side held firm under an intense bout of
Portuguese pressure in stoppage time helped by their superb
central defender Lilian Thuram, who was named man of the match.

“I’m 34 and I feel like the 10-year-old boy who watched the
World Cup and found it beautiful,” said Thuram, one of four
members of the French team who also played in the 1998 final.

“The final has been our objective from the start. Being
there is a dream. Missing it would have been a nightmare.”

Portugal coach Luiz Filipe Scolari, who had hoped to win a
second World Cup four years after he achieved the feat with his
native Brazil, remonstrated with the officials at the end.

But in his post-match comments he was gracious toward the
French, telling reporters: “We did everything we could, we did
our best. Congratulations to France.”

The French had made a sluggish start to the month-long
tournament, prompting criticism they relied too much on aging
players past their best and reviving memories of the last World
Cup when as holders they went out in the group stage.

But their form improved dramatically in the knockout stage,
transforming the mood among fans from gloom to exuberance.

“We are going to win this World Cup, that’s for sure,” said
Yohan Haouzi, a 22-year-old Parisian brandishing the national
flag of red, white and blue in the French capital.

(Additional reporting by Swaha Pattanaik in Paris)


Source: reuters