They say in Brazil that football is second only to breathing in
importance. On Tuesday, 200 million people in the World Cup host nation had
their breath stolen away from them in a dazzling, dizzying display of scoring
by the No. 2 team in the world, Germany.
No one could have predicted a 7-1 scoreline.
That's something from qualifying when a big fish hosts a minnow. It's not the
result of a match between the top powers of the sport.
Here's a look at some of the record-setting
numbers that came from the rout of all routs:
1. They were in it -- for 10
minutes
You'd have to be almost 100 years old to have
been in attendance for the last time Brazil was thumped this badly.
At least we think it was Brazil. It certainly
didn't look like the product of a nation that has won five World Cups.
The funny thing is Brazil was pretty good for
the first 10 minutes. They pressed the Germans, mostly kept the ball in the
German half.
But Germany scored in the 11th minute when
Thomas Mueller was left so alone he could have set up a grill in the penalty
area and made steaks for everyone.
And then the Germans made a meal of the
Brazilian defense, stuck in first gear, while the Germans were zipping both
ball and strikers artfully through the confused Brazilians.
A tearful David Luiz apologized to his countrymen.
"I just wanted to see my people smile.
We all know how important it was for me to see all of Brazil be happy, at least
because of football," the defender said.
2. Step aside, Ronaldo
It was a triple disappointment for Brazil on
Tuesday. Not only was the Selecao beaten badly, but famed goal scorer Ronaldo
was bumped off the top of the all-time World Cup goal scoring list.
German striker Miroslav Klose scored his
team's second goal, giving him 16 in World Cup matches, one more than Ronaldo.
"If you've scored the most goals in the
history of the World Cup, you've had to earn it. He's still playing at the
highest level and scoring goals," German coach Joachim Low said.
A more inexperienced player might not have
scored. Klose's first shot was saved by a sprawling Brazil keeper. The
36-year-old pounced on the rebound and knocked it into the goal.
And there was more disappointment. Germany
now also lays claim to most goals by one nation in its World Cup history --
223. In second, Brazil at 220.
3. That sure did escalate
quickly
Brazil survived the first knockdown. But like
a boxer sensing he can knock his opponent out with a flurry of well-targeted
body blows, Germany unleashed hell on Brazil midway through the first half.
Minute 23 and 24. Bam. Bam.
Minute 26. Bam.
Minute 29. Meet the canvas.
It was 5-0 before the first half hour.
Germany scored a quartet in six minutes. You don't even do that in training.
"We couldn't react to going behind. We
got disorganized and panicked after the first goal and then it all went wrong
for us," Brazil coach Luiz Felipe Scolari said.
4. Where's the defense?
You think semifinal, and you imagine two
teams playing cautiously, worried to give up a first goal that would doom them.
Of the previous six semifinals, four of them
had ended 1-0. Another was 0-0 after 90 minutes and didn't see a goal until
Minute 119.
Not these guys. They went forward with spirit.
And it ended with a scoreline from the early
days of the World Cup.
Germany appeared content to cruise after
holding a 5-0 halftime lead, but the Brazilian defense was so lame, the
Europeans went ahead and sent two more in to claim another couple of records.
They became the first team to score seven
goals in a semifinal and to hold the largest margin of victory in such a game.
5. By the way, you guys get
one more
Don't pack away the boots just yet, lads. You
still have to play in everyone's (very least) favorite contest -- the
third-place match.
What do you get if you win that, a gift certificate for
dinner for two at Rio's best steakhouse?
Can you imagine what the scene will
be like if Argentina loses to the Netherlands and has to play its archrival in
what is usually meaningless match?
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