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Germany beats England 4-1 in World Cup

2010-06-28 11:01:49

By NESHA STARCEVIC, AP Sports Writer Nesha Starcevic, Ap Sports Writer Sun

Jun 27, 4:22 pm ET

BLOEMFONTEIN, South Africa Germany's latest World Cup victory over England

will be remembered not for any of the brilliant goals, but for the one that

didn't count.

Ask anyone players, coaches, thousands of fans in the stadium and millions

more watching on television and there's little question that Frank Lampard

put a shot in the net late in the first half that would have tied the score.

But referee Jorge Larrionda waved play on, and Germany used two second-half

goals by Thomas Mueller for a 4-1 victory Sunday. The Germans are headed to the

quarterfinals. The English are shaking their heads in disbelief.

"It's incredible," England coach Fabio Capello said. "We played with five

referees and they can't decide if it's a goal or no goal. The game was

different after this goal. It was the mistake of the linesman and I think the

referee because from the bench I saw the ball go (in)."

Germany coach Joachim Loew couldn't argue that point.

"What I saw on the television, this ball was behind the line," Loew said. "It

must have been given as goal."

It wasn't.

"The goal was very important," Capello said. "We could have played a different

style.

"We made some mistakes when they played the counterattack. The referee made

bigger mistakes."

Larrionda and assistant referee Mauricio Espinosa were not made available to

comment. FIFA said in a statement that it "will not make any comments on

decisions of the referee on the field of play."

Soccer's rules-making panel agreed last March not to pursue experiments with

technology that could help referees judge goal-line decisions.

Germany went up on goals by Miroslav Klose and Lukas Podolski before England's

Matthew Upson made it 2-1 in the 37th minute.

Lampard's non-goal came a minute later. After the ball landed across the line,

it spun back into the arms of Germany goalkeeper Manuel Neuer. Capello

initially celebrated what he thought was an equalizer by clenching his fists

and shaking his arms. But his face changed when he realized the goal had not

been given.

As the players headed off the field at halftime, Wayne Rooney walked over to a

linesman and gestured with his hands how far he thought the ball crossed the

goal line.

In 1966, England and Germany were 2-2 in extra time in the World Cup final when

Geoff Hurst's shot struck the underside of the crossbar, bounced down and spun

back into play. That time, the referee consulted his linesman, who awarded the

goal.

Hurst went on to score a third goal in England's 4-2 victory at Wembley.

This time, it was Mueller getting two goals.

"We heard that the ball was behind the line, that we were fortunate," Mueller

said of Lampard's shot. "Before the last two goals, the game hung in the

balance, England was putting on the pressure."

The 20-year-old forward finished two quick German counterattacks within 3

minutes to sink England's hopes of beating Germany at the World Cup for the

first time since that '66 final.

Germany plays Argentina, which beat Mexico 3-1, in the quarterfinals on

Saturday in Cape Town.

"In the knockout stages, Germany is always there," Podolski said. "We fought

and ran a lot, just fantastic today."

Added Klose: "We were aggressive from the first minute and it was a deserved

victory. Our target was to reach the semifinals and that's what we want to

achieve."

It was the most lopsided England loss in a World Cup.

Mueller scored on the counterattack in the 67th minute, having started the move

after a long clearance by Jerome Boateng. Mueller passed to Bastian

Schweinsteiger, who patiently dribbled upfield and ran across the 18-yard line

to feed the unguarded Mueller. His shot hit the hand of England goalkeeper

David James and went in.

Three minutes later, Mueller struck again after a break on the left wing by

Mesut Oezil.

"We played I think well at 2-1, but after the third goal it was a little bit

disappointing," Capello said. "Germany is a big team. They played a good game."

Klose scored his 50th goal in 99 games for Germany his 12th World Cup goal

by outmuscling defender Upson to a bouncing ball off a goal kick. Podolski gave

the three-time champions a 2-0 lead, putting the ball through James' legs.

Upson headed in a cross from Steven Gerrard to make it 2-1, then Lampard's shot

was not rewarded a decision sure to be debated for as long as international

soccer has no video replay.

"I think if you look back at the game as a whole, we've been beaten by the

better team," England captain Steven Gerrard said. "At 2-1, if Frank's ball had

stayed I think it would have been a nice turning point in the game."