The Dutch press expressed disappointment and sadness on Monday after the Netherlands' 1-0 FIFA World Cup™ Final loss to Spain, but paid tribute to the national team that one paper said fought "like lions".
"The 'Oranje' cry," said a headline in orange in the popular AD daily over a full-page photograph of Wesley Sneijder lying on the grass at the Soccer City stadium, his face hidden in his arms. "Proud after a disappointment, it is possible," the paper said in an editorial. "Even if the defeat in the final put a rude end to the joy that reigned over the weekend in this country, the Dutch team can be proud of its performance in South Africa."
"Still not," headlined the left-leaning daily Volkskrant of the Netherlands' third defeat in a Final of football's FIFA World Cup, using the same photograph of the crushed Sneijder. "The Spanish were better," the paper admitted, "but the Dutch team of 2010 is a machine of war in orange which has refused to bow down."
"And now the hangover," said the NRC.Next, the morning edition of economic daily Handelsblad, over another photograph of the goalkeeper, this time crouched with his head dropped forward. "A new generation of Dutch footballers has made a name for themselves these past four weeks in South Africa but the smack of the final defeat will resonate for a long time yet," it said.
The popular daily De Telegraf paid a glowing homage to the team, saying they had fought "like lions". "What will it take for the Netherlands to one day finally become champions of the world of football?" it asked.
Robin van Persie knows his Holland team-mates have the chance to become immortal on Sunday.
Victory over favourites Spain in the FIFA World Cup™ final at Soccer City would finally erase the bitter taste of defeat from 1974 and 1978. Yet the Total Football created by coach Rinus Michels and put into practice by Johan Cruyff has become a millstone round Dutch necks. Even now, as they approach their date with destiny, there are some who argue this is not a true Holland team because Bert van Marwijk's well-drilled outfit lack the same stardust.
But Van Persie knows all that will be forgotten on the streets of Amsterdam and Rotterdam on Sunday night if Holland can win. "It is a bit difficult because you have to fight against the generation of 1974 and 1978," said the Arsenal forward.
"They were unbelievable. They are legends, Cruyff, Johan Neeskens and so on. You grew up with their names in your face. When those people say anything in the press or on a TV programme everybody listens because of what they have achieved. But somehow, we have a chance to do it. If we win it for the first time it will be unbelievable because basically it means that we have done better than them."
The Netherlands only major triumph remains the one achieved at UEFA Euro 88 by a team containing Ruud Gullit and Marco van Basten. The current Dutch line-up lacks that immense individual talent but one reason put forward for their success is the close-knit bond Van Marwijk has been able to create.
On so many occasions in the past the Dutch have been riven with infighting. There was supposedly one argument this time around involving Van Persie and star man Wesley Sneijder but coach Van Marwijk quickly put a lid on the trouble before it could escalate into anything more serious. And, having come so far, it would be counter-productive to rock the boat now.
"I was not here when people spoke about the former sides," said Van Persie. "But I know do know this team has an unbelievable spirit. If you put a camera inside our hotel you would see us playing table tennis or making jokes. Everybody is playing cards and talking to each other which is important in order to achieve things. When you have a group of players where half of the team is not talking to each other, when one man does not like another, or when someone is not happy when someone else scores, you are not going anywhere."
The prospect of a Uruguay versus Netherlands semi-final was scarcely mentioned in the long build-up to the 2010 FIFA World Cup South Africa™, yet these are the teams who meet in the last four on Tuesday evening in Cape Town. Both are there on merit too, as they have performed consistently well from the first day, defended resolutely, and taken their chances efficiently at the other end. The winners go forward to the Final, while the consolation prize for the losers is the third-place play-off.
After the drama and tension of their penalty shoot-out victory over Ghana in the quarter-finals, Uruguay are in the last four at the FIFA World Cup for the first time in 40 years. La Celeste fell 3-1 to eventual winners Brazil at Mexico 1970, and went on to finish fourth. The Netherlands, who staged a remarkable second-half comeback to defeat five-time winners Brazil in the last eight, previously fought through to the semis in 1974, 1978 and 1998.
The teams’ solitary previous meeting at the FIFA World Cup came in the 1974 tournament. Johnny Rep fired a brace as the celebrated Dutch ensemble spearheaded by the great Johan Cruyff won the group stage encounter 2-0. The Uruguay squad that day included defender Pablo Forlan, father of current La Celeste marksman Diego Forlan.
Ahead of Tuesday’s clash, Uruguay boss Oscar Tabarez and Netherlands supremo Bert van Marwijk are both mulling over enforced changes to their winning teams. For the South Americans, Jorge Fucile and Luis Suarez are suspended, and captain Diego Lugano is rated very doubtful with bruising and a stretched knee ligament. Young Nicolas Lodeiro will play no further part in South Africa after breaking a foot. For the Dutch, Van Marwijk is without suspended pair Gregory van der Wiel and Nigel de Jong.
Players to watch
Diego Forlan (URU) v Wesley Sneijder (NED)
Our two players to watch may not cross paths that often on the field of play, but the spotlight still falls on the respective teams’ leading scorers. Forlan shares top spot in the Celeste goalscoring list with Suarez, but the latter can only watch from the stands after his red card against Ghana. The task of piercing the Dutch defence thus falls fairly and squarely to Forlan, now up to 27 goals for his country, and whose three strikes at the current tournament have all come against African sides.
His Netherlands counterpart Sneijder also has four goals, and rates as an equally creative orchestrator of the Oranje’s versatile forward line. The world already knew all about Sneijder’s flawless technique and visionary passing, but his lethal finishing has taken many people by surprise.
The stat
100 – No-one can fail to be impressed by the Netherlands’ current run of form. Since the start of 2010, Van Marwijk’s men boast a 100 per cent record, with nine wins in nine matches, extending their unbeaten run to 24 games. Uruguay are themselves unbeaten in nine, winning five and drawing two of their seven games in 2010, giving them a win ratio of 77.7 per cent.
What they said
"It will be a very dangerous match. The euphoria at home is massive at the moment and maybe it's good that we're so far away and can't witness it. We really need to concentrate on Uruguay and that won’t be easy. They didn't reach the semi final for nothing, so we have to really focus again and not think that we're already there," Bert Van Marwijk, Netherlands coach.
"Holland are tough opponents. They’ve not lost for almost two years. This generation is a little different to the traditional Holland - they are a very balanced side. At the back they give nothing away, they link well in midfield, and up front, they have hard-running, technically capable players like Van Bommel, Sneijder and Robben. They’re always on the front foot, looking to attack. It’ll be very difficult - but not impossible," Oscar Tabarez, Uruguay coach.
Voice of the fans
"Bert van Marwijk’s analysis is spot on. Euro 2008 showed us the biggest danger for Oranje, which is thinking the World Cup is already won. In fact, they have to win twice more before getting their hands on the cup. Holland need to concentrate totally on their next two games, and then maybe they’ll earn their first star," FIFA.com-User Saitou (Germany)
Have Your Say
The Netherlands have contested the FIFA World Cup Final twice in the past. Will all good things come in threes – at Uruguay’s expense?
Still the only Netherlands captain to ever lift a major trophy, Ruud Gullit is full of praise for the current incarnation of the Oranje, who face Uruguay in the 2010 FIFA World Cup™ semi-finals on Tuesday in Cape Town. But the 1988 UEFA European Championship winner said on Monday that fortune had played a big part in the team reaching the last four.
“I think we've played well, but we've had luck at the right moments,” said the 1987 FIFA World Player of the Year. “The own goal against Denmark was lucky, the goal against Japan was so-so, and of course the own goal [which was later ruled to have been scored by Wesley Sneijder] against Brazil helped us to get confidence. We have played well and had a little bit of luck – that's the difference.”
The former Feyenoord, PSV, AC Milan and Chelsea star said that things could have been very different against the Brazilians, and that the Dutch couldn't take all of the credit for the famous quarter-final victory. “I was surprised by the outcome against Brazil,” he admitted. “In the first half, I think Brazil played much better than the Dutch team. If [Maarten] Stekelenburg didn't save that shot into the top corner and it had become 2-0, I think the game would have been over.
“Holland came out a little bit differently [in the second half], but I think the key moment was the own [Sneijder] goal. It was a gift. I was surprised that the Brazilians lost the plot. They lost their confidence, they lost their heads. We took advantage of them by playing our own game,” he said.
But Gullit, who has also managed four clubs in three countries and is now working on the Netherlands/Belgium bid for the 2018 or 2022 FIFA World Cups, said the opportunity now was huge and that Bert van Marwijk's side needed to take the chance in front of them. “Everybody expects this to the moment. We have been twice to the Final,” he said. “The difference is with this time we won't play the hosts – because in Germany [1974], we had to play against Germany and in Argentina [1978] we had to face Argentina. This is a great opportunity to reach the Final.”
"Attacking teams have been rewarded"
Turning to the stand-out Oranje players, Gullit was full of praise for the dynamic Dutch midfield duo of Sneijder and Arjen Robben. “Sneijder is key and Robben has been a vital player,” he said. “A player of [Robben's] quality is important because he makes defenders go on their heels, they don't know what they're doing, they have to double up and other players can take advantage that. He's so quick and agile, so we're happy he is back. Of course Sneijder has been very important until now, scoring goals and providing goals. He's not particularly a goalscorer, he's a guy who usually makes other players score goals. Sneijder has not been a surprise for me, but it's a surprise for me that he has scored so many goals here.”
In terms of other players that have impressed him, Gullit mentioned Spain's David Villa as his pick for top scorer and Germany's Mesut Ozil as the biggest revelation. He also went out of his way to back struggling Spain striker Fernando Torres. But the 47-year-old said the tournament had already been a success on the pitch. “The teams that have reached the last four are the strongest teams at the moment. I hope that Holland will go to the Final and we will see two teams that want to attack with their own identity.
"For me, luckily, the teams that played more attacking football have come to the finals. Destructive football is not going to survive, it's not going to win. I am proud that Spain, Holland, Uruguay and of course Germany – because Germany have been a revelation in the way they play – all the attacking teams have been rewarded, so for me that's what I will remember from this tournament.”
There was worse to come as Brazil found their stride swiftly. Robinho had already had one effort ruled offside when he broke the deadlock in the tenth minute. Advancing unchecked from inside his own half, Felipe Melo played a ball straight through the centre of the Dutch defence from the halfway line. Robinho, free of his marker Van der Wiel and played onside by Ooijer, was in the clear and he tucked a first-time finish beyond Maarten Stekelenburg.
The Dutch sought an immediate reply when Kuyt tested Julio Cesar with a low drive but Brazil were carrying the greater goal threat and, after 25 minutes, they came close to a second. From a half-cleared corner, Dani Alves, out on the right, drove in a low cross and Juan got there first only to shoot over from close range. Robinho then wriggled away from two orange shirts on the left, gave the ball to Luis Fabiano and his flick set up Kaka whose curling shot was bound for the top corner before Stekelenburg reached out his right arm to palm the ball away. While the Netherlands had barely tested Julio Cesar, Stekelenburg had to react sharply again before the half-time whistle, Maicon's first-time drive from the right corner of the box drawing another fingertip stop.
The teams' 1994 quarter-final, won by Brazil, produced five second-half goals and this game grew as a contest after the restart. Second-best in the first half, the Dutch drew level within eight minutes. Sneijder had already miscued an attempted volley when, following a short free-kick with Robben, the Inter midfielder swung in a cross from out on the right. Julio Cesar and Felipe Melo got in each other’s way with the midfielder unwittingly flicking the ball on into the net.
Michel Bastos, booked before the break and under pressure from Robben, now made way for Gilberto Melo but Brazil were looking self-assured than in the first period. Although Kaka guided a volley just past the post, the Dutch soon had their second goal. It came from an unlikely source, the head of Sneijder who profited from slack marking in the six-yard box to nod home his third goal of the finals after Kuyt had flicked on Robben's flag-kick.
Brazil’s prospects dimmed further with 17 minutes remaining with Felipe Melo’s red card for a stamp on Robben. Kuyt made a vital clearing header when Stekelenburg failed to deal with one Maicon corner though in a frantic finish the Oranje might have added to their advantage, notably when Sneijder scuffed a shot at Julio Cesar.
It will be difficult for sure, but not impossible for The Netherlands that I of course place as my...
Uruguay - Netherlands preview
Rhyze on 07-06-2010