DAWN.COM

Today's Paper | October 19, 2024

Published 20 Jun, 2008 12:00am

Russia set up quarter-final clash with Netherlands

VIENNA, June 19: Russia set up a Euro 2008 quarter-final with coach Guus Hiddink’s native Netherlands after a deserved 2-0 win over Sweden in Group ‘D’ on Wednesday completed the line-up for the last eight.

The Swedes, who only needed a draw to progress from the opening group stage which ended on Wednesday night, join the already eliminated Greeks on an early flight home.

Like Romania on Tuesday before them and to an extent France, Sweden and Greece have paid the penalty for a lack of attacking ambition in a tournament which has been graced generally with scintillating and winning football in more ways than one.

Greece, who won Euro 2004 against all the odds and expectations, have returned to type as big-event whipping boys — they are the only one of the 16 finalists not to gain a single point after losing to Spain 2-1 on Wednesday.

Fans from co-hosts Austria and Switzerland, whose teams also made first-stage exits, are looking for other nations to support following their failure too in the group stage and Russia’s dominant display will certainly have won them some new admirers.

Roman Pavlyuchenko sidefooted home after a great interchange of passing midway through the first half in Innsbruck before Andrei Arshavin, playing his first match of the tournament after a ban, finished off a similar flowing move.

“We’re very proud of what the team’s achieved in this tournament but that’s not enough. The next goal is the Dutch,” said Hiddink, who coached Netherlands to the World Cup semi-finals in 1998 and now meets them in Basel on Saturday.

“Our problem is we have only two days to recover.”

Angelos Haristeas, who scored the winner in the Euro 2004 final, put Greece ahead in Salzburg with their first tournament goal but Ruben de la Red and Daniel Guiza, two minutes from time, made it three wins out of three for Spain.

The group winners Spain played a second string side ahead of Sunday’s last eight clash with world champions Italy in Vienna.

The tournament, which kicked off on June 7 and has not had a day free of action since then, does not pause for breath now the finalists have been whittled in half to eight teams — the quarter-finals feature Portugal and Germany, Croatia and Turkey, Netherlands and Russia and Spain and Italy.

Germany were to play Portugal in the first quarter-final in Basel on Thursday but coach Joachim Loew will not be allowed to set foot on or even near the newly relaid St Jakob Park pitch after being banned from the touchline for one game by UEFA on Wednesday.

The punishment comes after he and Austria counterpart Josef Hickersberger were sent to the stands during Germany’s 1-0 Group ‘B’ win on Monday for arguing with a fourth official.

Turkey goalkeeper Volkan Demirel is also due to miss his side’s quarter-final with Croatia on Friday and a possible semi-final after receiving a two-game ban for pushing Jan Koller and being sent off in the 3-2 win over Czech Republic on Sunday.France coach Raymond Domenech could be poised for a much lengthier absence from international football after his team’s dismal elimination from the tournament on Tuesday.

The French Football Federation (FFF) said a decision on whether Domenech remains national coach will be made on July 3 following their 2-0 defeat by Italy.

Swiss and Austrian minds are also starting to wander following their elimination in the week.

“You might find some Austrians start to support a team that is doing well but there is not one team we would naturally sway towards now, certainly not Germany,” said 24-year-old student Stephan Kohaut.

—Reuters

Read Comments

Over 250 arrested as protests against alleged Lahore rape spread to Rawalpindi Next Story