France vs. Uruguay: World Cup gets its first 0-0 tie as Uruguay imitates Italy
Uruguay鈥檚 鈥楲a Celeste鈥 frustrates France by stacking the defense and playing for a tie just the way Italy normally does.
France's Thierry Henry, second from right, speaks with Uruguay's Diego Forlan, left, and France's Franck Ribery, right, during the World Cup group A soccer match between Uruguay and France in Cape Town, South Africa, on Friday.
Francois Mori/AP
South American minnows Uruguay did their best to irritate a mighty France team today by imitating the team that edged out France in the last World Cup championship match four years ago: Italy.
A cautious 鈥淟a Celeste鈥 flooded the area in front of its goal with defenders, allowing France to control the ball and hoping its dynamic duo up front could capitalize on the counterattack.
The problem? Uruguay doesn鈥檛 quite have the top-caliber attackers that Italy does, so it can鈥檛 count on scoring on the few chances it gets.
IN PICTURES: Top Ten Players to Watch
Another problem, it didn鈥檛 make for exciting soccer.
This is the traditional criticism of Italy as well: They play for ties, not wins.
鈥淯ruguay would do cartwheels if they got a point out of this,鈥 said ESPN announcer Ian Darke. 鈥淕oodness knows what they鈥檇 do if they got a win.鈥
This brand of soccer is one reason open-minded Americans are consistently stymied when they try to get into the World Cup. Why would you want to watch 90 minutes of a game that one of the teams is not even trying to win?
France did its best to change the course of events, putting in striker Thierry Henry and attacking midfielder Florent Malouda with about 20 minutes left in the match.
But the effort to bring some spark to the French team could not produce a goal. They created more chances, but were unable to crack Uruguay鈥檚 stifling defense.
鈥淯ruguay may be negative, but defensively brilliant,鈥 said Mr. Darke at the end of the game, his voice full of resignation.
La Celeste wore him down. They wore us all down.
World Cup 101: Why is the World Cup such a big deal?
World Cup 101:
- World Cup 101: Why is the World Cup in South Africa?
- World Cup 101: Is South Africa really prepared to host the World Cup?
Related:
- As World Cup 2010 kicks off, where South Africa stands 16 years after apartheid
- World Cup news coverage
[Editor's note: In the original version, the caption of the photo had the wrong last name for Diego Forlan.]