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Ronaldo’s two second-half goals gave Brazil their fifth FIFA
World Cup™ championship and firmly put the ghosts of the France
98 final to rest. It was a hard-fought and equally played match
befitting a clash of world football’s biggest titans, but
Ronaldo had the touch of greatness that separated the two teams in
Yokohama, Japan.
Ronaldo also lifts the Golden Shoe with eight goals in the
finals, three more than his next closest competitors, Rivaldo and
Miroslav Klose. Both countries offered opposing but no less
effective styles as each hit the woodwork once and created a fair
number of chances. The first-ever confrontation between the two
teams was an entertaining and dramatic end to the Asian FIFA World
Cup.
Germany came out looking very good in the attack. Their first
truly dangerous moment came when Bernd Schneider served a low
cross from the right intended for Miroslav Klose that the
confused-looking Brazilian defenders desperately cleared out for a
corner kick (10’).
Germany continued to press the Brazilian defence, and when
Brazil seemed to be playing some of their worst football of the
tournament, a wonderful through ball by Ronaldinho sent Ronaldo
loose on German goalkeeper Oliver Kahn. However, the Inter Milan
striker’s cheeky shot with the outside of his left foot slid
well wide of the far post (19’).
Ronaldo missed another gem of a chance minutes later. Again it
started with a pass from Ronaldinho, this time a short chip over
the top. Ronaldo’s first touch pushed the ball too far forward,
and Kahn was able to come off his line to swallow up the
Brazilian’s weak toe poke (30’).
With the half winding down, Brazil had a flurry of chances.
Kleberson had a good look at goal on the counter-attack, but his
left-foot shot rolled slowly wide of the right post (42’). Then
it was Kleberson again going close, this time with a shot from 25
metres that hit the crossbar (45’). Then in stoppage time,
Roberto Carlos picked out Ronaldo at the penalty spot with a low,
driven cross, but Kahn made a spectacular save to deny the
“phenomenon” (46’+).
After going the entire first half without putting a shot on
goal, Germany almost put one in the net two minutes into the
second half. It came when a corner kick form the left found the
head of Jens Jeremies, but Edmilson saved the day for Brazil,
stopping the powerful header with a stab of his right foot
(47’).
Minutes later, Oliver Neuville gave Brazil a fright with a
powerful free kick from 30 metres that caromed off the right post
after Marcos stretched to get his hand on it (49’).
With the famed Brazilian “R’s” looking frustrated and
Kahn looking unbeatable, fortunes took a turn in favour of the
South Americans. Ronaldo won the ball from Dietmar Hamann in the
German half and laid it off for Rivaldo, who fired a shot from 25
metres right at Kahn. The previously infallible keeper could not
hold onto the seemingly harmless shot, and the ball spilled out in
front of the goal for Ronaldo, who pounced to slot it into the net
(0:1, 67’).
Ronaldo needed no mistake from Kahn on the next chance.
Kleberson started the sequence with a run down the right side. He
sent a pass into the middle that seemed destined for Rivaldo, but
he dummied brilliantly, drawing a defender and letting the ball
roll to Ronaldo, who shot perfectly from the edge of the area into
the lower-right corner of the net (0:2, 79’).
Oliver Bierhoff almost pulled one back for Germany with a
powerful first-time shot from 15 metres, but Brazil goalkeeper
Marcos stretched well for the one-handed save (83’).
And as time expired, Ronaldo could be seen shedding tears at
the joy of his Cup glory.
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