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The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

England runs into roadblock


Portugal goalkeeper Ricardo Pereira makes a save on a penalty kick by England's Frank Lampard. His three saves clinched the shootout victory. 
 (Associated Press / The Spokesman-Review)
Grahame L. Jones Los Angeles Times

GELSENKIRCHEN, Germany – Walking fast and staring straight ahead, Wayne Rooney marched out of the locker room and onto the England team bus Saturday evening, pausing not even once to tell his side of the tale.

Walking with a limp and with eyes red-rimmed from crying, David Beckham made the same march. There would be no comment, said Beckham’s minders. News conference Sunday. Then he’ll talk.

And so two of the principal reasons why England crashed out of the World Cup left the stadium. They just boarded the bus, the one with the six words on its side: “One Team. One Trophy. Eleven Lions.”

There are new words for today: “One Injury. One Red Card. Three Penalty Saves.”

Add them up and they spelled England’s exit.

The English and Portuguese played 120 minutes of scoreless and pretty much sterile soccer in their quarterfinal Saturday, and the largely pro-England crowd of 52,000 became increasingly restless as matters dragged on.

Finally, it came down to penalty kicks and England, following a pattern set years ago, made a hash of them and lost, 3-1.

Portugal thus advanced to play upstart France in the all-European semifinals Wednesday. Germany will play Italy in the other semifinal Tuesday.

The Portuguese, understandably ecstatic, have not gone this far since 1966, when they lost to England in the semifinals. For England, the drought goes on, and its 1966 title seems an ever-dimming memory, receding in the distance.

An injury to Beckham, a red card to Rooney and three penalty saves by Ricardo. That was the difference.

Oh, yes, and a Portuguese player by the name of Cristiano Ronaldo.

First, Beckham. He was banged up in the first half, banged up some more early in the second half, and came off the field limping after 52 minutes, with the much livelier Aaron Lennon taking his place.

Ten minutes later, Rooney was gone too. The combative forward was involved in a tussle with defender Ricardo Carvalho and playmaker Luis Figo, during which Rooney stepped on the fallen Carvalho’s groin, apparently by accident.

Carvalho’s understandably anguished reaction caused Ronaldo to run to Argentine referee Horacio Elizondo and demand that Rooney be cautioned. Rooney then shoved Ronaldo and Elizondo immediately ejected him. No one was clear whether it was for the original infraction or for the shove.

Either way, England was down to 10 men with half an hour to play. It survived that and also the half an hour of extra time. But the penalty kicks were its undoing.

Simao Sabrosa scored for Portugal, but Ricardo dived to his left to make the save on Frank Lampard. Hugo Viana hit the left post and Owen Hargreaves scored for England to make it 1-1 after two rounds.

Petit missed wide left, giving England the chance to take the lead, but Steve Gerrard’s shot was saved by Ricardo, again diving left. Helder Postiga scored for Portugal and Jamie Carragher’s shot was pushed up and onto the crossbar by Ricardo.

That brought up Ronaldo, who milked the moment. He tamped down the penalty spot, he kissed the ball, he looked at goalkeeper Paul Robinson, and then he beat him from 12 yards.

Portugal was moving on. England was out.

“It was an electrifying match,” said coach Luiz Felipe Scolari, whose Brazil team knocked England out in the quarterfinals of the 2002 World Cup and whose Portuguese team did the same in the quarterfinals of Euro 2004, which Portugal staged.