| Leo La Valle /EFE |
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| Cannavaro lifts the World Cup. |
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That belongs to the Azzurri, 5-3 in a shootout after a 1-1 draw.
Outplayed for an hour and into extra time, the Italians won it after French captain Zinedine Zidane was ejected in the 107th for a vicious butt to the chest of Marco Materazzi. It was the ugliest act of a tournament that set records for yellow and red cards, diving and, at times, outright brutality.
It was the last move for Zidane, who is retiring.
Without their leader for the shootout, the French only missed once. But Italy, rarely strong in such situations, made all five. Fabio Grosso clinched the Azzurri's fourth championship, and his teammates had to chase him halfway across the pitch to celebrate.
Only Brazil has more World Cups, five.
Until now, no team since the last Azzurri champions in 1982 had to endure the stress and anguish of a soccer scandal. Rather than be disrupted by the current probe ripping apart the national sport back home, the Italians survived.
In the final, they outlasted France, which underwent a renaissance of its own in the last month. The French controlled the flow of play, only to fail to finish through 120 minutes.
Their only goal, Zidane's penalty kick in the seventh minute, was the lone score by an Italy opponent in seven games.
But the Italians put the ball into the net 12 minutes later on Materazzi's header off a corner kick. And then they held on in a game marked by sloppiness and venom.
With a 25-game unbeaten streak dating back nearly two years, the Italians added this title to their championships in 1934, 1938 and '82, when another match-fixing investigation plagued Serie A.
The hero then in Spain was striker Paolo Rossi, fresh off a two-year suspension for his role in match-fixing. This time, there were a dozen stars and a coach, Marcello Lippi, who seemed to make all the right moves.
Italy won its first-round group over the higher-ranked United States and Czech Republic, and Ghana. Then it beat Australia on a controversial penalty in the second-half extra time that Francesco Totti converted.
It routed Ukraine 3-0 before depressing the host nation with two stunning goals in the final minutes of extra time for a semifinal win over Germany.
Lineups:
Italy: Gianluigi Buffon; Gianluca Zambrotta, Marco Materazzi, Fabio Cannavaro, Fabio Grosso; Marco Camoranesi (Alessandro del Piero, m. 87), Gennaro Gatusso, Andrea Pirlo, Andrea Perrotta (Vincenzo Iaquinta, m. 61); Francesco Totti (Daniele de Rossi, m. 61); and Luca Toni.
Coach: Marcello Lippi.
France: Fabien Barthez; Willy Sagnol, Lilian Thuram, William Gallas, Eric Abidal; Patrick Vieira (Alou Diarra, m. 56), Claude Makelele; Frank Ribery (David Trezeguet, m. 101), Zinedine Zidane, Florent Malouda; Thierry Henry (Sylvain Wiltord, m. 107).
Coach: Raymond Domenech.
Goals: 0-1 m. 7: Zidane, 1-1, m. 19: Materrazi
Penalties: Italy, 5 - France, 3
Italia: Pirlo (goal), Materazzi (goal), De Rossi (goal), Del Piero (goal), Grosso (goal).
France: Wiltord (goal), Trezeguet (post), Abidal (goal), Sagnol (goal).
Referee: Horacio Elizondo (Argentina).
Bookings: Italy: Zambrotta (m. 5) and for France Sagnol (m. 11), Diarra (m. 76), Makelele (m. 77), Malouda (m. 111)
Red Card: Zidane min 110
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