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Bastian
Schweinsteiger celebrates after giving Germany the lead.
Germany
progressed to the semi-finals of the UEFA European
Championship for the first time since 1996 as goals from
Bastian Schweinsteiger, Miroslav Klose and Michael Ballack
secured a 3-2 victory over Portugal in Basel.
Heads,
you win
The
Mannschaft ended up lifting the Henri Delaunay trophy that
year and the way they raised their game to meet the
challenge of a Portugal side that refused to lie down –
halving a two-goal deficit twice through first Nuno Gomes
and then, in the dying minutes, Hélder Postiga – augurs well
for Joachim Löw's team. By contrast, it was a night when the
worst fears of Portugal's Chelsea FC-bound coach Luiz Felipe
Scolari were realised, his pre-match nightmares about
Germany's aerial superiority materialising in the form of
headed goals by Klose and Ballack. Portugal were
semi-finalists in 2000 and runners-up in 2004 and Scolari
had hoped to take that final step at UEFA EURO 2008™ but his
farewell party fell flat at St. Jakob-Park, where Portugal
were overpowered by opponents who shrugged aside
impressively their occasional first-stage torpor.

Miroslav
Klose doubled Germany`s advantage.
Debt
paid
With Simão
probing down the right, Scolari's men appeared to be finding
their stride as they offered the first threat on goal when
Bosingwa crossed and João Moutinho, free of his marker but
seemingly caught in two minds, steered the ball over at the
near post with his knee. Yet in the 22nd minute they fell
behind. It was a wonderfully worked goal too, swift passing
between Philipp Lahm, Ballack and Lukas Podolski advancing
the ball down the left, with Podolski bursting clear to
drive in a low cross which Schweinsteiger converted with a
sliding finish. Schweinsteiger's coach Löw had told the
midfielder he had a "debt" to his team-mates after his red
card against Croatia and here, in his first start of the
finals, he resembled a man on a mission.
Scoring
feat
Scorer of
two goals against Portugal at the 2006 FIFA World Cup,
Schweinsteiger was the architect of their second here too,
drifting a free-kick into the Portugal box which Klose,
ghosting clear of the red shirts, headed past Ricardo. Raul
Meireles replaced the injured Moutinho and Portugal went in
search of a lifeline. It came via captain Nuno Gomes five
minutes before the break. Simão's crossfield ball sent
Ronaldo racing clear of Per Mertesacker down the inside-left
channel and though Jens Lehmann blocked his shot, Gomes was
first to the rebound, striking first time into the net via
the foot of Christoph Metzelder, defending desperately on
the line. It was Gomes's sixth goal on the European stage
over three tournaments – a scoring span only achieved by
Jürgen Klinsmann, Thierry Henry and Vladimír Šmicer before
him.
Tense
finish

Hélder
Postiga`s late reply set up a tense finish.
Ronaldo was
a whisker away from an equaliser moments before half-time,
flashing the ball past Lehmann yet just wide of the far
post. Deco did find the net shortly after the interval but
was in an offside position and the little midfielder then
flicked on a Simão corner to set up Pepe, only for the
defender to nod over. Ballack showed him how it should be
done in the 61st minute when – to the displeasure of his
future manager – he shrugged off Chelsea FC team-mate Paulo
Ferreira and beat Ricardo to another Schweinsteiger
free-kick to head home. Scolari sent on Nani and Postiga as
Portugal chased the game and the pair combined to ensure a
nervy finale when Postiga headed in from Nani's left-wing
delivery but the glimmer of hope was soon extinguished.
(euro2008.com) |