The Netherlands' 30-year wait for a victory over Italy ended in glorious fashion on Monday as Marco van Basten's side rampaged their way to a 3-0 defeat of the world champions.
A goal from Ruud van Nistelrooy that looked offside may have kickstarted the rout but there was no doubting that the Dutch, superior in every area, fully deserved a victory that was completed by Wesley Sneijder’s close-range strike and a late breakaway goal by the outstanding Gio van Bronckhorst.
“I’m very happy and proud,” van Basten said. “To beat the world champions playing football to the last minute — it was for us a very nice game and also a historical game. We have never beaten Italy by three goals.”
PHOTO: AP
“If you think we were without players like Arjen Robben and Ryan Babel, the players reacted in a wonderful way. They fought like a team and if the spirit is like it was tonight, with all the quality we have, we can have nice dreams,” he said.
Uncharacteristically shaky in defense, the Italians were given a painful reminder of the importance of their World Cup captain Fabio Cannavaro, who was ruled out of the tournament after suffering an ankle injury in training last week.
Marco Materazzi took Cannavaro’s place in the centre of defense but filling the former world player of the year’s boots was to prove beyond the Inter Milan veteran, who was substituted 10 minutes into the second half.
PHOTO: AP
Italian coach Roberto Donadoni said his men had to move on and look forward.
“The game started badly for us and ended up worse but it is already history,” he said. “We made mistakes and paid for them but now we have to look forward to the Romania game, which is going to be critical now.”
The Dutch themselves were exultant.
PHOTO: AP
“It’s a great start for us. We must keep going now,” striker Dirk Kuyt said. “We’ve given everything we’ve got and it’s a great result for us. But it’s the first match and there’s another two tough matches to come.”
Regarding the controversial first goal, Kuyt told ITV television: “We were waiting for the flag but it didn’t come.”
The chairman of Austria’s refereeing commission, Gerhard Kapl, insisted afterwards that Swedish referee Peter Frojdfeldt was “100 percent correct” to award the goal, saying defender Christian Panucci, injured moments earlier and behind the goalline as Van Nistelrooy fired home, played the forward onside.
The first clear indication of the extent to which the Italians would miss Cannavaro came after quarter of an hour, when van Nistelrooy got in behind Materazzi only to be let down by a heavy first touch as he attempted to go round Buffon.
Materazzi made partial amends by heading Sneijder’s free-kick from the left over his own bar. But there was no such let-off for the Italians when Rafael van der Vart swung in a similar delivery from the opposite flank minutes later.
Buffon could only the palm the ball away and when it was rolled back to Sneijder the midfielder unleashed a fierce low drive that van Nistelrooy turned into the net from close range.
Italy’s ensuing protests only led to a yellow card for Luca Toni.
Five minutes later the Italians found themselves in deeper trouble after a move that suggests “Total Football” is alive and well in the Netherlands.
Having cleared Andrea Pirlo’s corner off his own line, van Bronckhorst immediately sprinted forward to take possession once more in the acres of space that had opened up down the left.
The defender’s cross was knocked down by Kuyt from beyond the back post and Sneijder lashed the bouncing ball in between Buffon’s left glove and the near post.
The world champions could offer little in response, their one real moment of menace before the break coming when Antonio di Natale’s volley bounced through the legs of Khalid Boulahrouz with the result that Edwin van der Sar needed two attempts to smother the ball.
Van Nistelrooy should have extended the Dutch lead a minute before the break after Sneijder’s superb pass once again put him in behind Materazzi.
From just inside the box, the striker pushed his shot towards the bottom corner only to see it ricocheted off Buffon’s leg and up over the bar.
Within 10 minutes of the restart, Donadoni had decided radical surgergy was required for his malfunctioning back four.
Materazzi was hauled off, Fabio Grosso introduced at left-back with Gianluigi Zambrotta switching sides to allow right-back Panucci to move into the center.
Alessandro Del Piero was also thrown into the fray and the Juventus forward’s prodding helped the Italians finally display some of their true quality.
But after Toni had lifted their best chance of the night over the bar, van der Sar produced superb stops to keep out Grosso’s low drive and one of Pirlo’s trademark freekicks in quick succession.
Inevitably gaps were being left at the back and the Dutch took advantage with another counter-attack move of breathtaking fluency that finished with van Bronckhorst playing the overlapping Kuyt into space inside the box.
Buffon blocked the striker’s shot but he was able to collect the loose ball and chip it into the area for van Bronckhorst to head home.
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