Eurosport - Sun, 28 Jun 22:27:00 2009
Spain clinched third place in the Confederations Cup after a five-goal thriller against hosts South Africa in Rustenburg, which they won 3-2 after extra time.
Katlego Mphela, the striker who admitted he was astonished to be involved in the tournament, scored in the 73rd minute as Spain's misery after losing their unbeaten record against USA looked like being compounded.
Two goals in as many minutes from fellow substitute Daniel Guiza then turned the match full circle, to give Spain a shock lead in the 89th minute.
The sudden turnaround in fortunes prompted streams of the home fans to exit the Royal Bafokeng Stadium, but minutes later they were running back to their seats.
The supporters' horns were not rested for long as the fourth twist came via a fearsome 25 yard free kick from Mphela which levelled the match on 93 minutes, and sent the match into extra time.
Both teams pressed for a winner as the match continued, and it finally came courtesy of a hopeful free kick from Xabi Alonso which was left by countless players in the box before it found the bottom corner.
Spain coach Vicente Del Bosque made four changes to his side with Cesc Fabregas, Carlos Puyol, David Silva and Xavi all on the bench, and the Arsenal midfielder cut a forlorn figure on the bench with his match shirt draped over his chest.
Fernando Torres had warned South Africa of a backlash following his side's semi-final defeat to the United States, and the opening minutes suggested that this was to be the case.
Four minutes into the match, David Villa found room on the edge of the box to swivel and curl a delightful shot towards the far corner, but it was met with an equally good save as Itumeleng Khune tipped the ball wide.
A 35 yard free kick was floated to the back post by Macbeth Sibaya in the 13th minute where it was met by Booth, but the unmarked defender could only head wide.
An enthralling run by Torres had the crowd in raptures eight minutes later; the striker danced inside two South Africa defenders and exchanged a quick one-two with Santi Cazorla, before his shot was palmed wide by Khune.
Another good opportunity presented itself to Booth, after the imposing defender had stole in at the back post and had a free shot at goal, but he sliced his effort wide on the half hour.
At the start of the second half Spain had a goal disallowed for offside after Villa had unleashed a rasping shot from the edge of the area, and Sergio Busquets tapped home after a fine save from Khune, but his celebrations were ended abruptly by the flag.
Del Bosque withdrew Torres and Villa midway through the second half, and brought on David Silva and Guiza, the latter of whom would go on to make a very tangible impact.
Khune made another smart stop from Albert Riera in the 62nd minute, but it was South Africa who were pressing hard at the other end.
After replacing Steven Pienaar - a decision from South Africa coach Joel Santana was which was met with derision - Mphela lashed home the opener after a cross from Siphiwe Tshabalala had found him unmarked in the Spain box.
Guiza's first strike was a precise swivel and drive in the 88th minute, finding the bottom corner from the edge of the area, but his second a minute later was even more startling.
Guiza took the ball down outwide on the right and proceeded to find the far top corner of Khune's goal with a curling cross-shot which was either a brilliantly inventive shot, or a fortunately misguided cross.
When Mphela hammered a 25 yard free kick into the top corner of Casillas's goal in the 90th minute, South Africa must have believed their momentum would carry them through.
However, Alonso's strike in extra time was the crucial blow to the hosts, who could not respond after many of their side were left weary having played every minute of every game in the competition.
Finishing in third place will be scant compensation for Spain having lost in the semi-finals, while South Africa will be left to rue the fact that two fine goals were not enough to spark a final celebration.
Comment 18 - 37 of 37
African teams impress with attacking football, but defensively are leaky. For that reason they will never win the World Cup
Ah sibusiso the EURO last year, or don't you understand how people qualify for the Confed?
When last has Spain won a world event?
They are the biggest chokers. On paper they should have won this tournament.
The same is going to happen with the world cup.
Include Egypt to that list Phobia. I think the African contries are really going to make a run for the WC in 2010. But I think Brazil will be win their 6th WC.
Well done, it was the unknowns and their strikes that brought the game to life late on. Now, everyone can go and have a much deserved rest ...
now, there is Ivory coast, Nigeria and Ghana. Watch out for those three african states next year.
now, there is Ivory coast, Nigeria and Ghana. Watch out for those three african states next year.
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Spain looked lethargic in this game. They didn't want to be there, they wanted to be on holiday. At times, this game was painful to watch with the exception of the last 15mins. At least they won and can go on holiday without too much hassle from the Spanish media. At the end of the day, this tournament meant nothing to the major teams participating (Italy, Spain, Brazil). Don't read to much into the results, they won't give you any indication of how they'll perform come WC2010. This tournament benefited USA and SA the most as a confidence booster, that's all.
Im proudly to be spanish... people whoes dont think like me can be fuked jajajajaj, ARRIBA ESPAÑA!!!
INIESTA is the best player of Spain, without Iniesta Spain isn´t Spain
Spain have tried.kudos to SA for their fighting spirit at least that shows that they are ready for the world cup.congrats spain!!!
Spain is the best team in the world, and thats a fact. first loss in about 3 years againts Usa, 15 wins in a row, etc. fifa world ranking number 1.
Spain is the best team in the world, and thats a fact. first loss in about 3 years againts Usa, 15 wins in a row, etc. fifa world ranking number 1.
We've been subsisted on "disappointments" by Liverpool. In order to diversify the EPL different teams should win title year after year. Do hope Man.city will break into so called "top four" of EPL next season. More competetive squads create more interest, diversity, variety, which in turn generates interest from public.
Most succesfull players on the club level do not prefer to show off on the national side. Sadly this is the case. Maybe they are paid significantly, considerably less than on their clubs. That's they do not put on maximum performance. I used to think the otherwise.
""Well done Liverpool for beating South Africa!! good preparation for another dissapointing premier leauge campaign""
Last season wasn't 'disappointing' for Liverpool. They attained their highest points total for ages, scored the most goals, suffered the fewest defeats and butt raped both Man Utd and Chelsea home and away. They also played the best football of any side.
What was "disappointing" about Liverpool's Premier League campaign? The team is getting closer and showing more promise year by year.
Superb Alonso spares the Spain blushes. Serves Spain right for overconfidence and negligence to lower teams. I think they will extract a lesson from this tournament. But anyway defeat from USA by no means makes them mediocre.
HOO GAVES A SHIITE ABOOT THA TURD PLAS PLAYS AF??
Well done, Liverpool guys, especially Alonso!
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