Committed to PEOPLE'S RIGHT TO KNOW
Vol. 5 Num 745 Sun. July 02, 2006  
   
Sports


Ugly scenes follow quarterfinal


Players and officials from both teams clashed on the pitch and an Argentine substitute was given a red card after Germany beat Argentina 4-2 on penalties to reach the semi-finals of the World Cup on Friday.

Although German coach Juergen Klinsmann and his Argentine counterpart Jose Pekerman played down the incident, FIFA are likely to take a very dim view of it especially as TV pictures were beamed to a huge global audience.

Argentina's Leandro Cufre, an unused substitute, got the red card after the penalty shootout, FIFA said in its official match report.

German team manager Oliver Bierhoff, caught in the middle of the melee which immediately followed the penalty shootout, said he had intervened after an Argentina substitute trod on German defender Per Mertesacker.

"Per was pretty angry about what was a very unsporting thing to do and the players started going at each other. I saw that and wanted to put myself between them so the players didn't do anything stupid," Bierhoff told reporters.

"I'm very sad in a way that a picture like that has gone out into the world," the former international striker said.

Klinsmann put it down to the heat of the moment.

"I'd like to remind people that in football there is so much tension, so many emotions and if it goes all the way to penalties someone can lose control.

"Football is just so emotional. It's just normal. It's no big deal, no problem at all."

Pekerman added: "At times emotions run away with themselves at a match and it's not what we feel.

"Germany and ourselves have great respect for each other and this was a thing in the heat of the moment."

FIFA officials and referee Lubos Michel were all caught up in the chaos and punches and kicks appeared to be thrown in scenes which went on for approximately 90 seconds in front of a 72,000 crowd.

The trouble appeared to start when midfielder Tim Borowski gestured towards the Argentina players to "keep quiet" having scored his penalty to make it 4-2 in Germany's favour.

Several of the South American players walked towards him and when German goalkeeper Jens Lehmann saved Esteban Cambiasso's final Argentina spot-kick, the Argentina defender Fabricio Coloccini approached Germany's Oliver Neuville.

Borowski said Argentinean players had made "certain movements" to try to provoke him before he took his penalty.

"I don't want to go into details but the movements were there and the Argentineans can't exactly declare themselves innocent," he told reporters. "They're not exactly saints."

FIFA will examine video footage of the incident and both teams could be liable for heavy fines or other sanctions.

Picture
IT'S NOT FOOTBALL: Players of both Argentina and Germany, including German head coach Juergen Klinsmann (R) and manager Oliver Biefhoff (above Klinsmann) are involved in a scuffle after the teams' World Cup quarterfinal at Berlin on June 30. PHOTO: AFP