Italy held, Cameroon shocked

JOHANNESBURG, (Reuters) – Holders Italy came from  behind to avoid an upset against Paraguay yesterday but unfancied Japan broke African hearts with their first World Cup  win on foreign soil against a Samuel Eto’o-led Cameroon.

Day Four’s on-field excitement put the attention firmly back  on soccer after the first serious unrest of the tournament when  South African police in Durban used teargas and rubber bullets  in the early hours to quell a protest by stadium stewards.

Italy, whose ageing team has been largely written off  despite their No. 5 world ranking, were stunned by a first-half  opener from Paraguay. The South Americans were dreaming of  another upset after qualifying wins over Brazil and Argentina.

But the resilient “Azzurri” (Blues) squared the game in the  second half through a scrambled goal from Daniele De Rossi.

One of the poorest nations in Latin America and with a  population of just 6 million, Paraguay have had to overcome the  loss of striker Salvador Cabanas, who is in rehabilitation after  being shot in the head at a Mexican night club in January.

JAPAN SHOCK CAMEROON

Another underdog, Japan, did pull off a minor upset, shaking  off a run of miserable form to defeat Cameroon, one of the  brightest hopes for African success, 1-0.

So far, only Ghana from the continent have won in the  opening round of games in Africa’s first World Cup.

In yesterday’s other match, the Dutch notched a comfortable 2-0  victory against Denmark but failed to show the exciting,  attacking football for which they are renowned.

Netherlands went ahead courtesy of a freak own goal when   Simon Poulsen’s header from a Dutch cross rebounded off fellow  defender Daniel Agger and rolled into the net.

Dirk Kuyt scored the second in the dying moments.

The surprise of the day, though, was Japan, whose terrible  form in the build-up had led to assumptions the Asians would be  easily dealt with by Cameroon’s “Indomitable Lions”, including  three-times African Player of the Year Eto’o.

Cameroon, hoping to recapture the form that took them to the  quarter-finals in 1990 and one of Africa’s best hopes for a long  run in the tournament, were largely a disorganised mess and  repeatedly failed to feed their front three.

Japan came to the game in the chilly central city of  Bloemfontein after a run of just one goal from their previous  five matches including a 0-0 draw against Zimbabwe last week,  organised at late notice supposedly to chalk up a comfortable  confidence-building win for the Asians.

When not playing or training, players were being pampered  like royalty at their luxury hideaways.

Chef Geoffrey Murray said he was baking about 120 baguettes  a day, while croissants, crepes and brioche were also in hot  demand at the coastal hotel housing the French squad.

Celebrity cook Tim De’Ath, who has previously been personal  caterer to Hollywood luminaries like Leonardo DiCaprio,  was  cheering up the English — after their goalkeeping howler  against the United States — with afternoon hot chocolate.

Argentina’s manager Diego Maradona was not so lucky,  however. Agriculture officials stopped his team from flying in  prime steak from South America.

Around the world, fans were cramming round TV screens in  bars, homes, offices and parks to enjoy the Beautiful Game.

Power-cuts, though, have enraged Zambians and provoked riots  in Bangladesh. In the developed world, too, there have been  problems, English fans outraged when broadcaster ITV  inexplicably cut to a commercial during a goal by their team.