Germany, Argentina storm to last eight

JOHANNESBURG, (Reuters) – Germany thrashed England  and Argentina subdued a tough Mexico side yesterday to storm  into the World Cup quarter-finals in matches both marred by  controversial refereeing decisions.

Germany, superior in speed, tactics and skill, tore apart   pedestrian rivals England 4-1, while Argentina had to work   harder to defeat Mexico 3-1.   The first refereeing blunder came in the opening match when  Uruguayan referee Jorge Larrionda ruled out a Frank Lampard shot  that had clearly crossed the goal line and would have put  England level 2-2, before Germany took them apart in the second  half.

In the Argentina v Mexico match, a first goal from Carlos  Tevez looked clearly offside and sparked a brief clash between  rival substitutes at half time which was quelled by officials  including Argentina coach Diego Maradona.

Argentina made sure of the match when Gonzalo Higuain  exploited a defensive error to neatly go round Mexican keeper  Oscar Perez in the 33rd minute and Tevez scored his second with  a 25-metre thunderbolt early in the second half.

Javier Hernandez pulled one back for Mexico on 71 minutes in  a packed Soccer City stadium in Johannesburg.

It was the second consecutive World Cup in which Argentina  had put out Mexico at the same stage.

Argentina and Germany will now meet in the quarter-finals on  Saturday in a repeat of the 1986 and 1990 World Cup finals, the  first won by Maradona’s team and the second by Germany.

In an incident-packed game earlier at Bloemfontein’s Free  State Stadium, Miroslav Klose and Lukas Podolski took advantage  of some shambolic English defending to put Germany 2-0 up after  32 minutes before Matthew Upson headed one back.

OUT OF REACH
Thomas Mueller scored two to put the game out of reach of  England in the second half, both the result of lightning  counter-attacks as the Three Lions pressed to equalise.   German coach Joachim Loew revealed after the match that his  young side had followed a strategy to exploit England’s lack of  pace, luring experienced central defender John Terry forward to  handle Klose and creating wide spaces for Mueller and Podolski.

The victory brought jubilant German soccer fans onto the  streets at home, honking car horns and letting off fireworks.

England’s coach Fabio Capello was devastated but realistic.

“We made some mistakes and the referee made one big  mistake,” he told the BBC. He added at a news conference that he  would seek reassurance from the Football Association that he  would keep his job although he had no intention of resigning.

Germany revelled in victory. “We were on top of things from  the start, we were totally into the match and we deserved to  win,” said Klose.

Maradona, whose brilliant playing career was tarnished by  drug problems, is enjoying a personal renaissance as coach and  has nurtured a devastating strike force with World Player of the  Year Lionel Messi, who frequently tied up three Mexican players,  Tevez and Higuain.

“All my life I’ve picked up the experience that today I’m  giving my players with all my soul and heart, saying to the lads  ‘that’s how it was for me’,” said Maradona, who has a powerful  impact in motivating his team.

Africans were still jubilant yesterday that Ghana, their  only survivor from six teams that started the finals, were in  the quarter finals of the continent’s first World Cup, after  defeating the United States 2-1 in extra time on Saturday.

The victory by a solid and mature Ghana gave hope that they  could better the previous most successful African sides,  Cameroon and Senegal, who also reached the quarter-finals.

“Ghana has lifted dampened hearts,” said farmer Klu  Borboley, offering free drinks to youths who had watched the  game through the window of a pub in the town of Keta, east of  the capital Accra.

Taxi drivers offered special half-fares, drinks flowed and  one group of Ghanaians held a mock funeral of a U.S. effigy.

There has been no evidence of a security threat to the World  Cup so far. But neighbouring Zimbabwe said it had detained two  Pakistani men en route to South Africa, one of them under an  international warrant that state media said was for terrorism.