Samba Power!

JOHANNESBURG, (Reuters) – The Netherlands clinically  ended Slovakia’s giantkilling run at the World Cup yesterday  while Brazil finally turned on the style to crush Chile and set  up an enticing clash with the Dutch in the quarter-finals.

The Netherlands joined fellow Europeans Germany in the last  eight with a 2-1 win over the Slovaks before Brazil switched on  the Samba turbo power their fans had been waiting for to beat  Chile 3-0, despite a spirited fight by the Latin American  underdogs.

Brazil, accused of being insipid up to now, spiced up their  game to stand comparison with their great rivals and fellow  quarter-finalists Argentina.

Fine goals from Juan and Luis Fabiano in the first half and  Robinho after the break continued the torment of Chile at the  hands of the five-times champions, who have now beaten them  eight matches in a row.   The Dutch were dominant throughout and tiny Slovakia rarely  came close to repeating their shock elimination of holders Italy  last week, although Robert Vittek scored a consolation penalty  just before the whistle.

Arjen Robben, making his first start, picked up a superb  long ball from Wesley Sneijder and slammed in a left-footed shot  in the 18th minute. Sneijder doubled the score six minutes from  the end at the match in Durban.

Slovakia coach Vladimir Weiss said Robben was “an absolute  genius” although there remains a suspicion his skill raises the  quality of a fairly ordinary Dutch side. They will face a much  sterner test against the Brazilians on this form in Port  Elizabeth on Friday.

SAMBA POWER

The Samba Boys looked brilliant in attack and solid in  defence to almost mirror the panache that swept Diego Maradona’s  Argentina into the quarters with a 3-1 defeat of a tough Mexican  side on Sunday.

There are now three Latin American sides in the last eight  including Uruguay.

While Netherlands went through comfortably after maintaining  their perfect record, England wallowed in shame after a  humiliating 4-1 defeat on Sunday by Germany, which resulted in a  torrent of British press abuse.

Their shaken Italian manager Fabio Capello said he wanted to  stay in the job, despite England’s worst defeat at a World Cup,  but told reporters his future would be decided after two weeks  reflection by the Football Association.

Seasoned observers said England’s showing was one of the  worst seen by the country in a World Cup.

The humiliation of another European soccer power, France,  claimed the head of the president of their federation yesterday  when Jean-Pierre Escalettes resigned.

France, runners-up in 2006, went out bottom of their group  following a chaotic players’ revolt. French Sports Minister  Roselyne Bachelot said last week Escalettes should quit although  FIFA had warned against political meddling.

Argentina’s defeat of Mexico set up a quarter-final clash  with Germany.

REFEREEING BLUNDER

The Germans’ quashing of the over-ambition that seems to  accompany England to every international tournament unleashed a  wave of criticism in the British press both of the failing  Premier League millionaires and Capello, considered the team’s  saviour until the miserable World Cup showing.

Commentators agreed that a refereeing error that disallowed  a clear first half goal from Frank Lampard was no excuse.

“You let your country down,” the mass circulation Sun said  on its front page.

The refereeing blunder over Lampard’s disallowed goal and a  clear offside in Carlos Tevez’s first goal for Argentina revived  heated debate over FIFA’s stubborn refusal to use the technology  adopted by almost all international sports to help decide on  vital close calls.

To add insult to England’s injury, four men and a woman were  sentenced to three years in jail by a special World Cup court  for stealing money and other items from some of the players’  hotel rooms.