konstantinl Wrote:
Heartbreaking for Australia but I thought they were a fairly limited team to be honest. Even at 10 men Italy looked more likely to score than Australia did.
I thought it was a penalty at the time but the replays show it wasn't.
Materazzi went in two footed so all thought the red card might seem harsh he can't have too many complaints about the red card. Quite similar to the US sending off against Italy.
So this is the first time I've been back near a computer since the match.
I'm STILL gutted about what happened. Not the result so much as the way it happened. In no way was it a penalty, and then for it to be Neill that caused it, who has been far and away our best player in the tournament. It would have been so much easier to take if Italy had outplayed us and won by 2 or 3.
But at the same time I'm finding it difficult to criticise the ref for it. I can see how it probably looked bad in real time, but given the shitty refereeing we've had to put up with in our games, I can't shake the feeling that he was trying to make up for the red card, or that it was another case of the established power getting the important calls. He did have a good game in general though. It was the same guy who did the 2nd leg of the playoff against Uruguay, so I was hoping that was a good omen, even when he gave the penalty (given Schwarzer's 2 excellent saves in that match), but it wasn't to be.
I'm more than willing to admit that we lacked the punch up front, which is a huge disappointment since coming into the cup I would have said we could score plenty of goals but not keep enough out. But it wan't really helped by Italy playing defensive even by their standards. Even in the first half they were sitting back and letting have all of the possession (well, until that flurry just before half time anyway).
Perhaps the most disappointing thing is that guys like Bresciano in particular, and Viduka and maybe even Cahill didn't
really step up like we needed them to. If Bresciano had played well in that game, having Kewell out wouldn't have been such a big problem. And while Wilkshire did actually play ok, we really missed Emerton out there as well.
Oh well. At least we actually got there this time, rather than having the heartbreak in the final qualifier. And it's had a huge amount of coverage over here as well. Hopefully some of those people will stay interested in the game rather than just jump back in for the next WC.
The big problem we have though is that half of the squad will probably retire now, and we'll have to rebuild immediately for the next Asian Cup qualifier in the middle of August. There doesn't seem to be a lot of confidence among those in the know about the generation immediately behind. God knows why, when it should be full of the players from the team that got to the final of the u17 world championships back in 2000 or so.