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Friday, June 20, 2014

Italy v Costa Rica: World Cup 2014 – live!

Italy v Costa Rica: World Cup 2014 – live!


Italy 0 Costa Rica 1

World Cup 2014
Italy
Costa Rica
  • Bryan Ruiz 44

Costa Rica's forward Bryan Ruiz celebrates after scoring the opener.
Costa Rica's forward Bryan Ruiz celebrates after scoring the opener. Photograph: Ronaldo Schemidt/AFP/Getty Images
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A picture paints a thousand words

So have a quick read of this gallery of images from the match so far.

Half-time: Italy 0-1 Costa Rica

Time for England players to make a decision on that always-tricky moral dilemma: to sneak some hotel towels and toiletries into your case before check-out or not. Unless Italy change dramatically in the second half, England are homeward bound. Costa Rica don't look like letting this slip - they have been mostly solid at the back, dynamic all over and incisive going forward. They should really be two goals in front, Campbell having been refused a blatant penalty.
Updated
45+2 min: This ref is having a shocker. He's just given Italy a freekick about 35 yards out after a Costa Rican won the ball legitimately. Pirlo's poor delivery ensures the injustice is not rewarded.
Updated

GOAL! Italy 0-1 Costa Rica (Ruiz 44)

Richly deserved! A superb Diaz cross from the left is rewarded with a well-directed header in off the crossbar from Ruiz! Chiellini defended like an Englishman, completely losing track of the attacker. England's doom draws closer. All glory to Costa Rica.

Outrage!

43 min: That seemed an irrefutable case for a penalty to Costa Rica! Campbell surged into the box and was barged off the ball by two Italians but, to the disbelief of Ticos' players and staff - and the mighty relief of England, the ref waved play on.
40 min: Danger from Costa Rica! And again Buffon looked worried. Ruiz clipped a dainty ball in from deep and Duarte flicked a back-header just over the bar, with Buffon not knowing whether to come for it or not.

Buffon has looked unconvincing so far.
Buffon has looked unconvincing. Photograph: Jamie McDonald/Getty
Updated
38 min: Bryan Ruiz, showing the dynamism that made him such a favourite at Craven Cottage, dances past two Italians and then unleashes a tricky low shot from 20 yards. Like a hip dad challenged to win a dance-off to prevent the local discotheque from being shut, Buffon gets down to save. "Costa Rica knows a thing or two about punching above their weight based on their qualifying through CONCACAF," roars Daniel Stauss. "Not that the US and Mexico are on the same level as Italy, but credit where it's due, Costa Rica ground out a 0-0 draw at the Azteca against Mexico and handed the US a 3-1 loss in San Jose. Leaving Honduras aside, CONCACAF has represented well so far." Best be careful what you say about Honduran players: they seem to track you down and reply with a two-footed lunge.
Updated
36 min: The corner, like all that hope invested in England pre-tournament, comes to nothing.
35 min: Buffon dives to his left to push away a decent long-range curler from Bolanos. That means another corner for Costa Rica. "Win, lose or draw, Italy will still need a result against Uruguay to advance," bugles Mark Weiner. "A draw is no different than a victory for them, as they could still be eliminated with a Uruguay victory. So expect Italy to close it down and walk off the field 0-0 and England’s elimination."
33 min: That's better from Balotelli! He unleashes a meaty shot from the edge of the area - but it was straight at the keeper, who managed to scramble it away.
Updated
30 min: What a chance for Balotelli! And what a miss! For the first time in the match the Costa Rican defence was prised apart by a wonderful ball from Pirlo. Balotelli peeled off his marker to run on to it and then, from 10 yards, tried to lift a dainty lob over the advancing goalkeeper ... but it was the finish of a dilletante rather than a deadly striker and the ball dropped meekly wide. Perhaps he's having second thoughts about getting a kiss from the Queen?

Balotelli is released by Pirlo and is through on goal but shoots tamely wide
Balotelli is released by Pirlo and is through on goal. Photograph: Robert Cianflone/Getty
Balotelli chips wide.
But chips the ball tamely wide. Photograph: Ruben Sprich/Reuters
Updated
28 min: With much of the play mired in midfield, it's worth wondering which team would be happier with a draw. Costa Rica, probably, as that would mean Uruguay and Italy would face an intense face-off in the final game of the group while Costa Rica could take a draw against England - or just go and beat England, who seem resigned to going out already.
26 min: Balotelli gets enough on to a long ball to knock it down for Thiago Motta, who lets fly from 26 yards. His shot trickles wide ... but at least it's a shot, Italy's first of the game. "Hello Paul, greetings from Portugal," greets Martinho Lucas Pires. "As a devoted fan of the Guardian Football Team of Live Game Commentaries, I must say that I was terribly shocked by England's defeat yesterday. To try to cheer things up a beat, following this good initial start from Costa Rica, I feel it is good to remember that this is, and will always be, Italy. I explain myself. They can use all the attacking style that they want nowadays, and pretend that they also enter this new fashion of 'joga bonito'. It is only a distraction, because deep down inside, we all know, they are still Italians, meaning that: one, they do not need to play well to win; two, even when they play horribly, they win; and three, they have the most incredible defensive luck of all time. Never forget that, if Costa Rica seems to be on the verge of winning." What's the Portuguese equivalent of the term 'clutching at straws'?
Our man Paolo Bandini offers a possible explanation for Italy's slow start

21 min: Balotelli gets a semi-decent pass for the first time in the match and he collects it well on his chest before beating his marker. But two other Costa Ricans converge on him quickly as he tries to wriggle his way into the box and the striker is eventually dispossessed.

Balotelli is being tightly marked by the Costa Ricans. Michael Umana grabs his shirt
Balotelli is being tightly marked by the Costa Ricans. Michael Umana grabs his shirt. Photograph: Kai Foersterling/EPA
Updated
19 min: Campbell delivers another Costa Rica corner, from the opposite side the previous ones. He overhits it but Duarte scampers after it and keeps the ball in before attempting another cross, which clobbers Chiellini right in the mush. Throw-in to Costa Rica, a sore nose to Chiellini.
18 min: Costa Rica are the better team so far. Italy seem increasingly flustered ...
15 min: Italy's slackness is summed up by an errant pass by Marchisio, which leads to the needless concession of a corner. Buffon does not look especially sprightly as he comes for it but manages to punch it to safety.
13 min: Italy manage to shift play up the edge of the the Costa Rican box but they are foiled by the discipline and sheer peskiness of the underdogs, who have deployed a five-man defence and four energetic midfielders.
10 min: There hasn't been much to encourage England fans so far: Costa Rica are looking dynamic and composed. They've disrupted Italy and prevented them from finding rhythm. Aside from a couple of slack passes early on, there has been no hint of an Italian breakthrough and the Ticos have carried a threat going forward.

Costa Rica have started brightly in the heat.  Here, Italy's Andrea Barzagli challenges Costa Rica's Yeltsin Tejeda
Costa Rica have started brightly in the heat at the Arena Pernambuco. Here, Italy's Andrea Barzagli challenges Costa Rica's Yeltsin Tejeda Photograph: Ruben Sprich/Reuters
Updated
7 min: Close for Costa Rica! Buffon came for a corner with all the effectiveness of a suddenly awoken man groping in the dark for his dressing gown. Borgres rose high but not quite high enough to apply a downward header and so nods over the bar from six yards. A let-off for Italy and England, or Itland if you want to keep it short.
5 min: Costa Rica knocked the ball around nicely for a minute but were then guilty of being too relaxed, as a lazy cross-field ball was intercepted by Marchisio, who was chopped down by Duarte. The lenient ref decides against issuing a yellow card.
3 min: Diaz loses possession in midfield and Candreva hurtles down the left - but his cross is cut out by Gonzalez, who then clears the danger. "Do you think it's telling that despite Italy and Pirlo being ace, they still aren't arrogant enough to try and play an ageing player in a midfield two, even though his passing is both more reliable and destructive than Gerrard's?" thunders Ethan Dean-Richards. "Despite how it can seem, the good teams aren't perfect either, but part of the reason they're good is that they know their weaknesses and make sure they aren't easily exploited"I don't think it was arrogance that led to that English line-up: I think it was weakness, a desire to pander to the masses instead of make hard calls.
1 min: Italy win the toss - hurrah! - and kick off. "It's team-time back home - I'm sure pasta in on the menu," says the BBC commentator, obviously keen to prolong the tradition established in 2002 by John Motson, who insisted on working food references into almost every utterance.
The Ticos' theme tune is also an upbeat one, as befits the cheeriest nation on Earth - which is the status officially bestowed upon them by the Happy Planet Index: and that was before the victory over Uruguay. The Costa Ricans look supremely chilled, smiling and chatting ahead of kick-off, so unlike the earnest seriousness of England's usual pre-game demeanour.
The Italian tune passes off without a hitch, a jaunty number with which the players sing along merrily, though Pirlo, as ever, seems to be putting to be putting in less effort than everyone else - but he probably has the voice of Pavarotti.

Mario Balotelli of Italy lines up before the match.  If Italy win today, he wants a kiss from the Queen, 'obviously on the cheek.'
Mario Balotelli lines up before the match. If Italy win today, he wants a kiss from the Queen, 'obviously on the cheek.' Photograph: Lars Baron/FIFA/Getty
Updated
The familiar Disney-like theme blasts through the stadium PA to herald the teams' arrival on to the pitch, where they will line up for the customary formalities, assuming the organisers have managed to find the correct anthems and flags, unlike in the France-Honduras match or the opening ceremony.

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