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June 16, 2006 Friday Jumadi-ul-Awwal 19, 1427

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Last-gasp goal breaks Polish hearts


Germany 1 Poland 0

DORTMUND, June 15: Germany grabbed a late winner to defeat gutsy Poland 1-0 thanks to an Oliver Neuville goal in injury time in a tense, bruising Group A encounter on Wednesday.

The hosts, looking for a second successive win, had a series of chances and hit the bar twice through Miroslav Klose and captain Michael Ballack in a desperate late attempt to score.

Just when it looked as if they would have to settle for a draw, substitute Neuville popped up in the area to score and leave Germany top of the group with six points from two wins.

“These are very special moments, also for the coach,” said Germany's Juergen Klinsmann, who had suffered criticism before the finals. “When everything comes together like this it's like a big burst, one feels the emotion of the players.”

It was Germany's first tournament win over European opposition since beating Czech Republic in the Euro 96 final.

Poland, who played the last 15 minutes with 10 men, battled gamely against their near neighbours but were left heartbroken by Germany's last-gasp goal.

The Poles, who succumbed weakly 2-0 to Ecuador in their opener, battled manfully but never looked like scoring and with one group game left face another first round exit.

It was a World Cup occasion to savour as the two sets of fans in the 65,000 capacity stadium produced a wall of noise.

Poland, who had not beaten their neighbours and fierce rivals in 14 attempts spanning 85 years, snapped into the tackle at every opportunity in a high-paced opening.

However Germany had much the better of the first half.

Miroslav Klose, who scored twice in Germany's 4-2 victory over Costa Rica in the tournament's opening match, should have had his third when he glanced a header just wide from a Philipp Lahm cross after 21 minutes.

Lukas Podolski, like Klose Polish-born, then put the ball in exactly the same place in first half injury time after another Lahm cross and the chance went begging.

Poland, desperate to avoid a second successive first round exit, showed plenty of aggression but there was a lack of quality about their attacks and they rarely threatened.

After a low-key start, Ballack, who missed the first game with a calf strain, gradually began to exert an influence with his probing passes forcing the Poles to defend ever more desperately.

It became even tougher for them in the last 15 minutes when Radoslaw Sobolewski was sent off for a second booking.

Poland goalkeeper Artur Boruc made two outstanding saves to deny Lahm and Neuville in a furious finale.

But he could do nothing to keep out Neuville's smartly taken close range goal from fellow substitute David Odonkor's cross.

“I can't even describe the feeling it's so incredible,” said Odonkor. “I'm happy Olli scored and we won the game. I'm thrilled I got to play for half an hour. It's a great feeling.”

Scorer: Germany -- (Oliver Neuville 90+1)

Halftime: 0-0.

Teams:

GERMANY: 1-Jens Lehmann; 3-Arne Friedrich, (22-David Odonkor, 63), 21-Christoph Metzelder, 17-Per Mertesacker, 16-Philipp Lahm; 19-Bernd Schneider, 8-Torsten Frings, 13-Michael Ballack (captain), 7-Bastian Schweinsteiger, (18-Tim Borowski, 77); 20-Lukas Podolski, (10-Oliver Neuville, 71), 11-Miroslav Klose.

POLAND: 1-Artur Boruc; 4-Marcin Baszczynski, 6-Jacek Bak (captain), 19-Bartosz Bosacki, 14-Michal Zewlakow, (17-Dariusz Dudka, 83); 8-Jacek Krzynowek, (18-Mariusz Lewandowski, 77), 16-Arkadiusz Radomski, 7-Radoslaw Sobolewski, 21-Ireneusz Jelen, (23-Pawel Brozek, 90+1), 9-Maciej Zurawski; 15-Euzebiusz Smolarek.

Referee: Luis Medina Cantalejo (Spain).—Reuters






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