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NO FOND FAREWELL FOR SCOLARI
 Posted: 05/07/06 - 22:15   World Cup 2006 email icon    World Cup 2006 print icon    World Cup 2006 save icon
By Martyn Ziegler, PA Chief Sports Reporter, Munich

So farewell Luiz Felipe Scolari and farewell Portugal from this World Cup and, it has to be said, good riddance.

Scolari may be a character, he may have his supporters, and his 12 consecutive World Cup victories before tonight shows he has many undoubted qualities, but he and Portugal have won few friends this tournament.

France may be slightly bewildered to find themselves in the final after such a poor start to this competition but they were worthy winners against Portugal in footballing and moral terms.

There are many no doubt who feel England missed out on a winner in Scolari, but the Brazilian coach is also the architect of a team who have been unrivalled in terms of cynicism and gamesmanship.

Cristiano Ronaldo may have become a convenient scapegoat to cover England's limitations but the constant theatrics have become seriously unpleasant, especially in a tournament where most teams have cleaned up their act.

Equally distasteful was the reaction of the Portuguese bench to each free-kick. Time after time, the substitutes, led by Hugo Viana, leapt off the bench brandishing imaginary cards or howling their outrage as another penalty-area dive went unrewarded.

Ronaldo was loudly booed whenever he was in possession but he was not the only culprit: Helder Postiga was if anything even worse when it came to swallow dives.

As a result there was something slightly comical about Portugal's protests when France were awarded the decisive penalty in the 33rd minute.

Chelsea defender Ricardo Carvalho's flailing leg made contact with Thierry Henry inside the box and the Arsenal striker did not need a second invitation to go down and convince Uruguayan referee Jorge Larrionda to point to the spot.

Zinedine Zidane tucked it expertly into the corner even though Ricardo got a touch.

From then on, France assumed control without ever really taking the game by the scruff of the neck, and there was a degree of fortune as they survived an intense barrage in the closing stages.

Portugal suffered for the lack of an effective frontman and Pauleta gave Lilian Thuram an easy ride on his 120th appearance for 'Les Bleus'.

Now a team who were riven by internal squabbles, with the players apparently nursing serious doubts about the aptitude of their slightly eccentric coach Raymond Domenech, find themselves one step away from repeating their triumph in 1998.

Their victorious coach then, Aime Jacquet, was in the Allianz Arena and he must have felt some pride that so many of the key players for France tonight were those he nurtured a decade ago.

Portugal and France have a controversial recent history - their Euro 2000 semi-final led to three Portuguese players being suspended, and it did not take long for feelings to run high again.

Within minutes Scolari and Domenech were swapping angry remarks from their respective technical areas - looking so like Gene Hackman and Peter Sellers in an improbable combination of Inspector Clouseau and The French Connection that it was uncanny.

France showed their intent with only 38 seconds gone when Florent Malouda latched onto a long ball but dragged a shot across goal.

Yet Italy will hardly be quaking in their boots. Zidane was impressive, but once more he failed to connect with Henry, and the Arsenal striker came closest when he seized onto a loose pass, went past Fernando Meira and nearly beat Ricardo but his touch was enough to see the ball squirm past the post.

Ronaldo, for all his play-acting, was the pick of the Portuguese and his dribble and back-heel left the space for Maniche to strike a rising drive which only just cleared the crossbar.

But the abiding memories of Portugal will be bad ones.

In the 37th minute their claims for a penalty for a push on Ronaldo caused a furious reaction on the bench - although television replays showed it was a horrendous dive by England's current public enemy number one, doing little to endear himself to the mixed Franco-German crowd either.

Scolari himself must have broken the record - or at least set a good mark in Munich's new stadium - for the number of times he turned away, arms outstretched, aghast at the referee's decision.

Ronaldo nearly had the last laugh with a free-kick which Fabien Barthez made a predictable hash of, with Luis Figo heading on to the roof of the net for a glaring miss.

Portugal, however, were out - and most of the world breathes a sigh of relief.

 
World Cup 2006 story: NO FOND FAREWELL FOR SCOLARI
Scolari rails against a perceived injustice.
 
 
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