England saw a clear goal not being validated against Germany.Argentina made 1-0 , in clear offside against Mexico.
The17. day of competition, two serious errors of arbitration came to mark the 2010 World Cup. Thanks to a goal not validated against Germany and another done in offside for Argentina (3-1 win over Mexico) the world will see, in the quarter-final, the reissue of the final championships in 1986 and 1990: Germany-Argentina.
Until yesterday, the event took place without major refereeing errors. The U.S. saw a goall being anulated againt a 2-2 draw with Slovenia, but this has not prevented them going to the quarter-final. The "scandal" arose, even with the goal annulled to evil Frank Lampard in the England-Germany - and then backed up by 1-0 Tevez, in clear offside , in Argentina and Mexico.
Germany won 2-1 on 38 minutes when Lampard shot, by far, the goal of Neuer. The ball hit the bar and passed the finish line, but the Uruguayan referee Jorge Larrionda nothing said. The move has reopened the debate on the use of new technologies in football and left the FIFA under fire. "The ball went in one meter ... all former professional players advocate the use of technology, except for one person [the president of FIFA]. We can not all be wrong," asked Alan Shearer, former England captain on the BBC .
After the goal is not validated, England was thrashed and no one forgave the referee."We played well until 2-2. The mistake changed the game," said the coach Fabio Capelo "Supporting technologies, especially after this afternoon," said Lampard.And until the goalkeeper Neuer and coach of Germany, Joachim Löw, admitted that "the ball passed the line" and "the goal should have been validated."
This controversy has reminded episodes of other world cups (the "ghost goal" Hurst in 1966 or the "hand of God" Maradona in 1986), but the day did not end without another case: Tevez scored to Mexico after receiving a pass from Messi almost a meter ahead of the defense. The Italian judge Roberto Rosetti.did nathing And the Mexican coach, Javier Aguirre, lamented at the end of the game "this costed us! [the game ended 3-1]."
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