Dutch dazzle World Cup with great win over Spain

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SAO PAULO — When no one expected it, the Dutch turned on the style with a barrage of spectacular World
Cup goals and a 5-1 victory on Friday that totally humiliated defending champion Spain.
Rain and clouds may have shrouded Salvador, but the orange shirts of the Dutch fans brightened up the
Arena Fonte Nova as they celebrated one of the Netherlands’ most famous World Cup victories in a rematch
of the 2010 final.
Even more so than Brazil’s opening win on Thursday, or Mexico’s rain-soaked 1-0 win over Cameroon earlier
Friday, the Dutch put the World Cup on a festive footing.
Fellow veterans Robin van Persie and Arjen Robben produced two superb each and showed the host nation why
the Dutch have often been called the Brazilians of Europe.
“It was inexplicable,” said Van Persie, the leader of a team which has come to Brazil carrying few
expectations from a nation that has all too often been spoilt for sparkling football. The veterans were
thought too old, the rookies too inexperienced.
Players openly said that just avoiding defeat against Spain would be enough, never mind beautiful play.
However, the game yet again lived up to its reputation for unpredictability.
“This is why you play football,” the Netherlands’ beaming coach Louis van Gaal said after his disputed
move to a 5-3-2 lineup proved a masterstroke.
Spain was always going to try to dominate possession, as in the 2010 World Cup final, but this time the
Dutch knew how to hit back.
The defending champion started Diego Costa but the striker was as ineffectual as the rest of the aging
team, highlighted by a massive blunder by Iker Casillas that led to Van Persie’s second goal, a symbol
of Spain’s fate on an infamous Friday 13th.
“A debacle. We did everything wrong,” said Xavi, at 34 a shadow of his former self in the second half of
Friday’s game.
Later Friday, Chile drew level on points with the Netherlands in Group B after beating Australia in a
tighter game than the 3-1 scoreline suggests.
The match looked like it might turn into the second rout of the day when Alexis Sanchez poked home from
close range in the 12th minute, before setting up Jorge Valdivia to score just two minutes later.
However, Australia pulled a goal back through Tim Cahill in the 35th and kept it close until Jean
Beausejour sealed the points for Chile in injury time.
Best news of all? The goals are flying in — with 15 in just four games for an average of 3.75.
The Dutch romp was not the only surprise on the second day of the World Cup. When people around the world
expected a sun-soaked tournament, torrential rain dominated Natal and Mexico’s victory over Cameroon,
courtesy of a goal from Oribe Peralta that moved the Central Americans level with Brazil in Group A.
Casillas was not the only football star to suffer ignominy on Friday.
Franz Beckenbauer, who won the World Cup both as a player and coach, was banned from football for 90 days
by FIFA for not cooperating with a fraud investigation into the 2018 and 2022 World Cup bids.
Beckenbauer was the first person to be punished as a result of the investigations.
On the pitch, the day was almost as black for the ashen-faced Vicente Del Bosque, who only four years ago
coached Spain to its first World Cup win before following it up with the 2012 European championship
title.
Instead it was Spain’s worst World Cup loss since losing 6-1 to Brazil when the tournament was last held
here, 64 years ago.
“All of us have to find a way to solve it,” Del Bosque said.
One fact to bear in mind, though: Spain also lost its opening game four years ago before lifting the cup.

On Saturday, the showcase game will pitch England against Italy, while Uruguay faces Costa Rica in the
other Group D match.
Group C kicks off with Colombia against Greece.

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