WC 2010 writes legacy in sport's vocabulary
TOM WILLIAMS
In years to come, the impact of the 2010 World Cup may be gauged by
the words that it introduced to the footballing lexicon.
'Vuvuzela', 'Jabulani' and 'tiki-taka' would have meant little to
football fans at the dawn of the year, but at the end of the month-long
extravaganza in South Africa they were on the tips of every tongue.
The ubiquitous noise of the vuvuzela - a plastic horn blown by fans
that emitted a sound not dissimilar to a swarm of hornets - was the
first indication that Africa's first World Cup would dance to a
different rhythm.
The cacophony created by the trumpets was such that some broadcasters
developed technology to block it out of their coverage, while the Adidas
Jabulani - the official tournament ball - proved similarly
controversial.
History
Designed to be more perfectly spherical than any ball in history, it
proved an irritant to goalkeepers and was derided as "horrible" by
Spain's Iker Casillas and his Italian counterpart Gianluigi Buffon.
It was England's Robert Green who suffered the greatest
embarrassment, however, letting a tame Clint Dempsey shot squirm through
his grasp and into the net in his side's opening game, a 1-1 draw with
the United States.
The vuvuzela and the Jabulani may ultimately become little more than
footnotes in the story of South Africa 2010, but the tiki-taka style of
slick passing football that swept Spain to their first ever World Cup
triumph will provide a more enduring monument.
Favourites
Success at the 2008 European Championship had made Spain one of the
pre-tournament favourites, but they fell to a shock 1-0 defeat against
Switzerland in their first match.
La Roja battled into the knockout rounds, however, before consecutive
1-0 wins against Portugal, Paraguay and Germany took them to the final.
The margins of victory may have been slender but Spain's modus
operandi remained the same: patient inter-changes of passes,
orchestrated by Barcelona playmaker Xavi, punctuated by rapier-like
bursts into opposition territory.
The Netherlands barred Spain's path to glory, having disposed of
Dunga's heavily backed but ultimately one-dimensional Brazil in the last
eight.
Slow-burning
A slow-burning final at Johannesburg's Soccer City Stadium was
initially remarkable for a succession of robust Dutch challenges,
including a chest-high assault on Xabi Alonso by Nigel de Jong that
somehow failed to draw a red card from English referee Howard Webb.
Spain would not be cowed, however, and with four minutes of extra
time remaining Andres Iniesta gathered Cesc Fabregas's pass before
drilling an unerring drive into the bottom-left corner.
"Spain deserved to win this World Cup," said Iniesta afterwards.
"It's something we have to remember and enjoy, and we should feel
very proud of everyone in this squad. To win the World Cup - there are
no words to describe it."
Winners
Vicente del Bosque's team were acclaimed as worthy winners, but there
were also plaudits for Joachim Loew's effervescent young Germany, who
thrashed old foes England 4-1 in the last 16 before overwhelming Diego
Maradona's Argentina 4-0 in the quarter-finals. PARIS, Friday (AFP) |