5/13/2019

2006 Fifa World Cup Wiki

Play in Group E of the 2006 FIFA World Cup began on 12 June and completed on 22 June 2006. Italy won the group, and advanced to the second round, along with Ghana. The Czech Republic and the United States failed to advance.

  • 2Matches

Standings[edit]

PosTeam
[ ]
PldWDLGFGAGDPtsQualification
1Italy321051+47Advance to knockout stage
2Ghana320143+16
3Czech Republic310234−13
4United States301226−41
Source: FIFA
Rules for classification: Tie-breaking criteria
  • Italy advanced to play Australia (runner-up of Group F) in the round of 16.
  • Ghana advanced to play Brazil (winner of Group F) in the round of 16.

Matches[edit]

All times local (CEST/UTC+2)

United States vs Czech Republic[edit]

United States0–3Czech Republic
Report
  • Koller5'
  • Rosický36', 76'
Attendance: 52,000
GK18Kasey Keller
RB6Steve Cherundolo46'
CB23Eddie Pope
CB22Oguchi Onyewu 5'
LB7Eddie Lewis
RM17DaMarcus Beasley
CM10Claudio Reyna (c) 60'
CM4Pablo Mastroeni46'
LM15Bobby Convey
AM21Landon Donovan
CF20Brian McBride77'
Substitutions:
FW9Eddie Johnson46'
MF5John O'Brien46'
FW16Josh Wolff77'
Manager:
Bruce Arena
GK1Petr Čech
RB2Zdeněk Grygera 88'
CB22David Rozehnal 16'
CB21Tomáš Ujfaluši
LB6Marek Jankulovski
DM4Tomáš Galásek (c)
RM8Karel Poborský82'
CM10Tomáš Rosický 81'86'
CM11Pavel Nedvěd
LM20Jaroslav Plašil
CF9Jan Koller45'
Substitutions:
FW12Vratislav Lokvenc 59'45'
MF19Jan Polák82'
MF17Jiří Štajner86'
Manager:
Karel Brückner
Wikinews has related news: Czech Republic coast to 3-0 win over USA in Group E

Man of the Match:
Tomáš Rosický (Czech Republic)

Assistant referees:
Amelio Andino (Paraguay)
Bernal Manuel (Paraguay)
Fourth official:
Carlos Chandía (Chile)
Fifth official:
Rodrigo González (Chile)

Italy vs Ghana[edit]

Italy2–0Ghana
  • Pirlo40'
  • Iaquinta83'
Report
Attendance: 43,000
GK1Gianluigi Buffon
RB2Cristian Zaccardo
CB13Alessandro Nesta
CB5Fabio Cannavaro (c)
LB3Fabio Grosso
RM20Simone Perrotta
CM21Andrea Pirlo
LM4Daniele De Rossi 10'
AM10Francesco Totti56'
CF11Alberto Gilardino64'
CF9Luca Toni82'
Substitutions:
MF16Mauro Camoranesi 62'56'
FW15Vincenzo Iaquinta 88'64'
FW7Alessandro Del Piero82'
Manager:
Marcello Lippi
GK22Richard Kingson
RB15John Paintsil
CB5John Mensah
CB4Samuel Kuffour
LB6Emmanuel Pappoe46'
RM10Stephen Appiah (c)
CM18Eric Addo
CM8Michael Essien
LM11Sulley Muntari 41'
CF3Asamoah Gyan 65'89'
CF14Matthew Amoah68'
Substitutions:
DF7Illiasu Shilla46'
FW19Razak Pimpong68'
FW12Alex Tachie-Mensah89'
Manager:
Ratomir Dujković
Wikinews has related news: Italy shut out Ghana for 2-0 win in Group E

Man of the Match:
Andrea Pirlo (Italy)

Assistant referees:
Aristeu Tavares (Brazil)
Ednílson Corona (Brazil)
Fourth official:
Khalil Al Ghamdi (Saudi Arabia)
Fifth official:
Hamdi Al Kadri (Syria)

Czech Republic vs Ghana[edit]

Tomáš Ujfaluši was sent off in the 65th minute after tripping Matthew Amoah in the penalty box from behind. Asamoah Gyan took the penalty kick but struck the post, and then received a yellow card for taking the shot without the referee's permission.[1]

Czech Republic0–2Ghana
Report
  • Gyan2'
  • Muntari82'
Attendance: 45,000
GK1Petr Čech
RB2Zdeněk Grygera
CB22David Rozehnal
CB21Tomáš Ujfaluši65'
LB6Marek Jankulovski
DM4Tomáš Galásek (c)46'
RM8Karel Poborský56'
CM10Tomáš Rosický
CM11Pavel Nedvěd
LM20Jaroslav Plašil68'
CF12Vratislav Lokvenc 49'
Substitutions:
MF19Jan Polák46'
MF17Jiří Štajner56'
FW7Libor Sionko68'
Manager:
Karel Brückner
GK22Richard Kingson
RB15John Paintsil
CB5John Mensah
CB7Illiasu Shilla
LB13Habib Mohamed 90+3'
RM20Otto Addo 18'46'
CM8Michael Essien 37'
CM10Stephen Appiah (c)
LM11Sulley Muntari 84'
CF14Matthew Amoah80'
CF3Asamoah Gyan 66'85'
Substitutions:
MF9Derek Boateng 75'46'
MF18Eric Addo80'
FW19Razak Pimpong85'
Manager:
Ratomir Dujković
Wikinews has related news: Ghana surge past Czech Republic in Group E

Man of the Match:
Michael Essien (Ghana)

Assistant referees:
Darío García (Argentina)
Rodolfo Otero (Argentina)
Fourth official:
Jerome Damon (South Africa)
Fifth official:
Enock Molefe (South Africa)

Italy vs United States[edit]

Italy midfielder Daniele De Rossi was sent off in the 28th minute after elbowing U.S. striker Brian McBride in a rash challenge that left the American with blood all over his face and requiring three stitches under his left eye. FIFA banned De Rossi for four matches (allowing him to return in the final) and fined him 10,000 CHF (£4,500).[2]

Italy1–1United States
  • Gilardino22'
Report
Attendance: 46,000
GK1Gianluigi Buffon
RB2Cristian Zaccardo54'
CB13Alessandro Nesta
CB5Fabio Cannavaro (c)
LB19Gianluca Zambrotta 70'
RM20Simone Perrotta
CM21Andrea Pirlo
LM4Daniele De Rossi28'
AM10Francesco Totti 5'35'
CF9Luca Toni61'
CF11Alberto Gilardino
Substitutions:
MF8Gennaro Gattuso35'
FW7Alessandro Del Piero54'
FW15Vincenzo Iaquinta61'
Manager:
Marcello Lippi
GK18Kasey Keller
RB6Steve Cherundolo
CB23Eddie Pope21'47'
CB22Oguchi Onyewu
LB3Carlos Bocanegra
RM8Clint Dempsey62'
CM10Claudio Reyna (c)
CM4Pablo Mastroeni45'
LM15Bobby Convey52'
CF21Landon Donovan
CF20Brian McBride
Substitutions:
DF13Jimmy Conrad52'
MF17DaMarcus Beasley62'
Manager:
Bruce Arena
Wikinews has related news: USA hold Italy to 1-1 draw in Group E

Man of the Match:
Kasey Keller (United States)

Assistant referees:
Wálter Rial (Uruguay)
Pablo Fandino (Uruguay)
Fourth official:
Khalil Al Ghamdi (Saudi Arabia)
Fifth official:
Hamdi Al Kadri (Syria)

Czech Republic vs Italy[edit]

Czech Republic0–2Italy
Report
  • Materazzi26'
  • Inzaghi87'
Attendance: 50,000
GK1Petr Čech
RB2Zdeněk Grygera
CB5Radoslav Kováč78'
CB22David Rozehnal
LB6Marek Jankulovski
DM19Jan Polák35'45+2'
RM8Karel Poborský46'
CM10Tomáš Rosický
CM11Pavel Nedvěd (c)
LM20Jaroslav Plašil
CF15Milan Baroš64'
Substitutions:
MF17Jiří Štajner46'
MF14David Jarolím64'
FW18Marek Heinz78'
Manager:
Karel Brückner
GK1Gianluigi Buffon
RB19Gianluca Zambrotta
CB13Alessandro Nesta17'
CB5Fabio Cannavaro (c)
LB3Fabio Grosso
RM8Gennaro Gattuso 31'
CM21Andrea Pirlo
LM20Simone Perrotta
AM16Mauro Camoranesi74'
AM10Francesco Totti
CF11Alberto Gilardino60'
Substitutions:
DF23Marco Materazzi17'
FW18Filippo Inzaghi60'
MF17Simone Barone74'
Manager:
Marcello Lippi
Wikinews has related news: Italy sink Czech Republic 2-0 in Group E

Man of the Match:
Marco Materazzi (Italy)

Assistant referees:
José Ramírez (Mexico)
Héctor Vergara (Canada)
Fourth official:
Óscar Ruiz (Colombia)
Fifth official:
José Navia (Colombia)

Ghana vs United States[edit]

Ghana2–1United States
  • Draman22'
  • Appiah45+2' (pen.)
Report
Attendance: 41,000
GK22Richard Kingson
RB15John Paintsil
CB5John Mensah 81'
CB7Illiasu Shilla 32'
LB13Habib Mohamed
RM9Derek Boateng46'
CM10Stephen Appiah (c) 90+1'
CM8Michael Essien 5'
LM23Haminu Draman80'
CF14Matthew Amoah59'
CF19Razak Pimpong
Substitutions:
MF20Otto Addo46'
MF18Eric Addo59'
FW12Alex Tachie-Mensah80'
Manager:
Ratomir Dujković
GK18Kasey Keller
RB6Steve Cherundolo61'
CB22Oguchi Onyewu
CB13Jimmy Conrad
LB3Carlos Bocanegra
RM8Clint Dempsey
CM21Landon Donovan
CM10Claudio Reyna (c)40'
CM17DaMarcus Beasley
LM7Eddie Lewis 7'74'
CF20Brian McBride
Substitutions:
MF14Ben Olsen40'
FW9Eddie Johnson61'
MF15Bobby Convey74'
Manager:
Bruce Arena
Wikinews has related news: Ghana beat United States 2-1 in Group E

Man of the Match:
Stephen Appiah (Ghana)

Assistant referees:
Christian Schraer (Germany)
Jan-Hendrik Salver (Germany)
Fourth official:
Toru Kamikawa (Japan)
Fifth official:
Yoshikazu Hiroshima (Japan)

References[edit]

  1. ^'Czech Republic 0-2 Ghana'. BBC.co.uk. BBC. 17 June 2006. Retrieved 9 August 2014.
  2. ^'De Rossi slapped with four-match ban'. TheGuardian.com. Guardian News and Media Limited. 23 June 2006. Retrieved 7 August 2014.
Retrieved from 'https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=2006_FIFA_World_Cup_Group_E&oldid=898529057'

At the 2006 FIFA World Cup, Brazil participated for the 18th time in the event. The country remained as the only national team to have participated in every installment of the FIFA World Cup.

The Brazilian team played until the quarter-finals, where they were defeated by France, finishing the tournament in the fifth place — for the third time in history (1954 and 1986 were the previous instances).

  • 3Draw
  • 5Matches

Qualifying[edit]

Brazil's qualifying for the event marked the first time in history in which a returning champion (the country had won the 2002 World Cup) had to play for a berth in the next World Cup — that had a direct effect in the organization of the 2006 World Cup: since the 1990 World Cup, the competition has had an opening match, which is played immediately after the Opening Ceremonies; until the last World Cup, this match was a privilege of the winner of the previous World Cup, who would play its first match as the first match of the given World Cup, against an opponent from its group, as decided by the official draw (in the 1990 World Cup, Argentina, winner of the 1986 FIFA World Cup, played Cameroon in the opening match; in 1994, Germany, winner of the 1990 World Cup, played Bolivia; in 1998, Brazil played Scotland and in 2002 France played Senegal). As of the 2006 World Cup, because of the change in the rules, with the last champion no longer having a secured berth in the competition, the opening match has become another privilege of the host nation (in the 2006 World Cup, Germany, as the host nation, played Costa Rica in the opening match). Despite being the returning champion, the Brazilian team debuted, against Croatia, only four days after the Opening Ceremonies and the opening match.

The national team qualified with more ease than in previous years — for the 1994 World Cup, Brazil only qualified in the very last match, against Uruguay, where a defeat would have meant missing the finals; For the 2002 FIFA World Cup, Brazil had four different managers, and was once in serious jeopardy of being left out of the event.

The Qualifying for the 2006 World Cup repeated the format installed for the previous Qualifying tournament, in 2000 and 2001 (for the 2002 World Cup): all ten South American countries played each other, in two-leg matches, with the top four teams qualifying automatically for the World Cup, whereas the fifth best team would play the champion of Oceania, which was Australia, for a berth in the World Cup.

Brazil finished first, winning the Qualifying tournament. The results were the following:

Results
DateVenueOpponentScore
September 7, 2003Estadio Metropolitano,
Barranquilla
Colombia2:1
September 10, 2003Vivaldão,
Manaus
Ecuador1:0
November 16, 2003Estadio Nacional,
Lima
Peru1:1
November 19, 2003Pinheirão,
Curitiba
Uruguay3:3
March 31, 2004Defensores del Chaco,
Asunción
Paraguay0:0
June 2, 2004Mineirão,
Belo Horizonte
Argentina3:1
June 6, 2004Estadio Nacional,
Santiago
Chile1:1
September 5, 2004Morumbi,
São Paulo
Bolivia3:1
October 9, 2004Estadio José Pachencho Romero,
Maracaibo
Venezuela5:2
October 13, 2004Estádio Rei Pelé,
Maceió
Colombia0:0
November 17, 2004Estadio Olímpico Atahualpa,
Quito
Ecuador0:1
March 27, 2005Serra Dourada,
Goiânia
Peru1:0
March 30, 2005Centenario,
Montevideo
Uruguay1:1
June 4, 2005Beira-Rio,
Porto Alegre
Paraguay4:1
June 7, 2005Monumental de Nuñez,
Buenos Aires
Argentina1:3
September 3, 2005Estádio Mané Garrincha,
Brasília
Chile5:0
October 8, 2005Estadio Hernando Siles,
La Paz
Bolivia1:1
October 11, 2005Mangueirão,
Belém
Venezuela3:0

The final standings were the following:

Final Standings
CountryPtsPldWDLGFGAGD
Brazil3418972351718
Argentina34181044291712
Ecuador281884623194
Paraguay281884623230
Uruguay25186752328-5
Colombia241866624168
Chile22185761822-4
Venezuela181853102028-8
Peru18184682028-8
Bolivia141842122037-17

World Cup preparation[edit]

The Brazilian squad preparing for the World Cup in Weggis, Switzerland

A month before the start of the competition, the Brazilian national team took quarters in the small Swiss town of Weggis, at the Weggis Park Hotel. The objective was to get the team accustomed to Germany's climate while maintaining the focus on the competition. The preparation started on May 22 and ended on June 4.

During this time, the Brazilian team played two friendly matches. The first was on May 28, against the under-20 team of the Brazilian club Fluminense, which was in Europe to play a tournament and took a detour to Switzerland to meet and play the national team; this match ended 13–1 in favour of the national team.[1] The second match was played against the state team of the Swiss Lucerne. The match took place in Basel, at the St. Jakob Stadion and was won by the Brazilian team with a score of 8 goals to nul.[2]

For this period in Switzerland, the Brazilian Football Confederation sold the rights to explore the presence of the national team to a Swiss events enterprise. In exchange for the declared amount of US$1.2 million, the Swiss company was allowed to sell tickets for the practice sessions — which were sold at €40 each, for about 5,000 people per session —, negotiate permissions for vending points to operate within the training facility and surrounding area — which were sold for about €2,000 plus 10% of the profit — and to organize and explore the friendly matches that the national team was to play during its preparation in Switzerland.

On May 31, only 13 days away from the team's debut in the World Cup, defender Edmílson was cut from the squad due to a knee injury he had sustained during the practice session the day prior. São Paulo's Mineiro was called to take his place.

Upon leaving Weggis, on June 4 the national team made a stop in Geneva on June 5 to play its last friendly match before arriving in Germany. There, the team played New Zealand at the Stade de Genève – refereed by Jerome Laperriere – defeating New Zealand 4–0.[3]

Finally, the team travelled to the German town of Königstein im Taunus, which invested the declared amount of €500,000 in order to prepare for receiving the Brazilian team.

Draw[edit]

Traditionally, the host nation (in this case, Germany) is the first seed, being placed in Group A. On December 6, 2005, so as to prevent a possible match between Brazil and Germany before the final, FIFA placed the previous competition champion as the sixth seed, in Group F. The opponents of the Brazilian team in the first stage were, respectively, Croatia, Australia and Japan.

History[edit]

Round Robin

The Brazilian team had never faced any of its first round opponents before in World Cups. But other matches, both official and friendly ones, have taken place. The history of those matches until, but not including, the 2006 World Cup is as follows:

OpponentMatchesVictoriesTiesDefeatsGoals scoredGoals concededFirst
match
Last
match
Croatia1010111:1(on August 17, 2005 at Poljud, Split)1:1(on August 17, 2005 at Poljud, Split)
Australia5311911:0(on July 7, 1988, at Melbourne Cricket Ground, Melbourne)0:1(on June 9, 2001 at Munsu Cup Stadium, Ulsan, South Korea)
Japan75201631:0(on July 23, 1989, at Estádio São Januário, Rio de Janeiro)2:2(on June 22, 2005 at RheinEnergieStadion, Cologne, Germany)

Round of 16

Prior to their meeting in the Round of 16 of the 2006 FIFA World Cup, Brazil and Ghana had played only one friendly match. Although this was officially a match between the two main teams, Brazil played it using its under-23 team (the so-called 'Olympic squad'), as the match was a part of the preparation for the football competition of the 1996 Summer Olympic Games.

OpponentMatchesVictoriesTiesDefeatsGoals scoredGoals concededFirst
match
Last
match
Ghana1100828:2(on March 27, 1996, at Estádio Benedito Teixeira, São José do Rio Preto, São Paulo, Brazil)8:2(on March 27, 1996, at Estádio Benedito Teixeira, São José do Rio Preto, São Paulo, Brazil)

Quarterfinal

Both the first and the last matches between Brazil and France prior to their 2006 World Cup quarterfinal encounter were friendly matches. The last one was a commemorative display for FIFA's centennial anniversary.

OpponentMatchesVictoriesTiesDefeatsGoals scoredGoals concededFirst
match
Last
match
France1254321173:2(on August 1, 1930, at Estádio das Laranjeiras, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil)0:0(on May 20, 2004 at Stade de France, Saint-Denis, France)

Sources:[4] /[5]

World Cup squad[edit]

Number / NameClubBirthdatePldGoalsYCRC
Goalkeepers
1DidaMilan10.07.19735000
12Rogério CeniSão Paulo22.01.19731000
22Júlio CésarInternazionale03.09.19790000
Defenders
2Cafu (captain)Milan07.06.19704020
3LúcioBayern Munich08.05.19785010
4JuanBayer Leverkusen01.02.19795020
6Roberto CarlosReal Madrid10.04.19734000
13CicinhoReal Madrid24.06.19802000
14LuisãoBenfica10.04.19730000
15CrisLyon03.06.19770000
16GilbertoHertha BSC25.04.19761110
Midfielders
5EmersonJuventus04.04.19763010
8KakáMilan22.04.19825100
10RonaldinhoBarcelona21.03.19805000
11Zé RobertoBayern Munich06.07.19745100
17Gilberto SilvaArsenal07.10.19764000
18Mineiro1São Paulo02.08.19750000
19JuninhoLyon30.01.19753100
20RicardinhoCorinthians31.05.19762000
Forwards
7AdrianoInternazionale17.02.19824210
9RonaldoReal Madrid22.09.19765320
21FredLyon31.10.19811100
23RobinhoReal Madrid25.01.19844010
Coach
Carlos Alberto Parreira27.02.1943

Pld = matches played, YC = yellow cards, RC = red cards.

1 Mineiro replaced Edmílson, who was cut due to a knee injury.

Matches[edit]

All times local (UTC+2)

Round robin[edit]

Group F

TeamPtsPldWDLGFGAGD
1.Brazil9330071+6
2. Australia43111550
3. Croatia2302123-1
4. Japan1301227-5

First Round

Brazil vs Croatia

Tuesday, June 13, 2006
21:00 - Olympiastadion, Berlin - Attendance: 72,000

Brazil1 – 0 (1 – 0)Croatia
Kaká 44'
BRAZIL:
GK1Dida
DF2Cafu(C)
DF3Lúcio
DF4Juan
DF6Roberto Carlos
MD5Emerson 42'
MD8Kaká
MD11Zé Roberto
FW7Adriano
FW9Ronaldo(- 70')
FW10Ronaldinho
Substitutions:
FW23Robinho(+ 70')
Coach:
Carlos Alberto Parreira
  • Referee: Benito Archundia (Mexico)
  • Assistant referees:
    • José Ramírez (Mexico)
    • Héctor Vergara (Canada)
  • Fourth official: Mohamed Guezzaz (Morocco)
  • Fifth official: Brahim Djezzar (Algeria)
  • Man of the match: Kaká

Second Round

Brazil vs. Australia

Sunday, June 18, 2006
18:00 - FIFA World Cup Stadium Munich, Munich - Attendance: 66,000

Brazil 2 – 0 (0 – 0)Australia
Adriano 49'
Fred 90'
BRAZIL:
GK1Dida
DF2Cafu(C) 29'
DF3Lúcio
DF4Juan
DF6Roberto Carlos
MD5Emerson(-72')
MD8Kaká
MD11Zé Roberto
FW7Adriano(-88')
FW9Ronaldo(-72') 31'
FW10Ronaldinho
Substitutions:
MD12Gilberto Silva(+ 72')
FW13Robinho(+ 72') 83'
FW14Fred(+ 88')
Coach:
Carlos Alberto Parreira
  • Referee: Markus Merk (Germany)
  • Assistant referees:
    • Christian Schraer (Germany)
    • Jan-Hendrik Salver (Germany)
  • Fourth official: Marco Rodríguez (Mexico)
  • Fifth official: Leonel Leal (Costa Rica)
  • Man of the match: Zé Roberto

Third Round

Brazil vs JapanDownload winning eleven konami.

Thursday, June 22, 2006
21:00 - FIFA World Cup Stadium Dortmund, Dortmund - Attendance: 65,000

Japan1 – 4 (1–1)Brazil
Tamada 34'Ronaldo 46'+, 81'
Juninho 53'
Gilberto 59'
BRAZIL:
GK1Dida(C)(- 82')
DF3Lúcio
DF4Juan
DF16Gilberto 44'
DF13Cicinho
MD8Kaká(- 71')
MD17Gilberto Silva
MD19Juninho
FW23Robinho
FW9Ronaldo(C +82')
FW10Ronaldinho(- 71')
Substitutions:
MD11Zé Roberto(+ 71')
MD20Ricardinho(+ 71')
GK12Rogério Ceni(+ 82')
Coach:
Carlos Alberto Parreira
  • Referee: Éric Poulat (France)
  • Assistant referees:
    • Lionel Dagorne (France)
    • Vincent Texier (France)
  • Fourth official: Jerome Damon (South Africa)
  • Fifth official: Enock Molefe (South Africa)
  • Man of the match: Ronaldo

Knockout stage[edit]

Round of 16 – Brazil vs Ghana

Tuesday, June 27, 2006
17:00 - FIFA WM-Stadion Dortmund, Dortmund - Attendance: 65,000

Brazil 3 – 0 (2 – 0)Ghana
Ronaldo 5'
Adriano 46+'
Zé Roberto 84'
BRAZIL:
GK1Dida
DF2Cafu(C)
DF3Lúcio
DF4Juan 44'
DF6Roberto Carlos
MD5Emerson(- 46')
MD8Kaká(- 83')
MD11Zé Roberto
FW7Adriano 13'(- 61')
FW9Ronaldo
FW10Ronaldinho
Substitutions:
MD17Gilberto Silva(+ 46')
MD19Juninho(+ 61')
MD20Ricardinho(+ 83')
Coach:
Carlos Alberto Parreira
  • Referee: Ľuboš Micheľ (Slovakia)
  • Assistant referees
    • Roman Slysko (Slovakia)
    • Martin Balko (Slovakia)
  • Fourth official: Mark Shield (Australia)
  • Fifth official: Nathan Gibson (Australia)
  • Man of the match: Zé Roberto

Quarterfinal – Brazil vs France

Saturday, July 1, 2006
21:00 - FIFA WM-Stadion Frankfurt, Frankfurt - Attendance: 52,000

Brazil 0 – 1 (0 – 0)France
Henry 57'
BRAZIL:
GK1Dida
DF2Cafu(C) 25'(-76')
DF3Lúcio 47'
DF4Juan 45'
DF6Roberto Carlos
MD8Kaká(-79')
MD10Ronaldinho
MD11Zé Roberto
MD17Gilberto Silva
MD19Juninho(-63')
FW9Ronaldo(C+76') 47+'
Substitutions:
FW7Adriano(+ 63')
DF13Cicinho(+ 76')
FW23Robinho(+ 79')
Coach:
Carlos Alberto Parreira
  • Referee: Luis Medina Cantalejo (Spain)
  • Assistant referees
    • Victoriano Giraldez Carrasco (Spain)
    • Pedro Medina Hernández (Spain)
  • Fourth official: Mark Shield (Australia)
  • Fifth official: Ben Wilson (Australia)
  • Man of the match: Zinedine Zidane

Brazilians in other national teams[edit]

The Brazilian participation in the World Cup was not restricted to the national football team. Many individuals were involved with other national teams, some as players, some as members of their teams' technical staff. Those playing for other national teams had acquired the respective country's citizenship, and according to FIFA's ruling, can never play for the Brazilian team in the future. Those were:

  • In Saudi Arabia: Coach Marcos Paquetá and the entire technical staff, hired by Paquetá. Immediately before the last match in the first stage of the World Cup, when disqualification was imminent for Saudi Arabia, Saudi prince Nawaf bin Faisal, who is president of the Saudi Football Confederation, guaranteed that, regardless of the outcome, Paquetá was to remain as Saudi Arabia's head coach.[6]
  • In Tunisia: Maranhão-born Francileudo dos Santos was a striker for the Tunisian team. He was regarded as the team's 'star'.
  • In Portugal: Head coach Luiz Felipe Scolari and his assistant coach, Flávio Murtosa; as well as midfielder Deco.
  • In Japan: former player and Brazilian football legend Zico was Japan's head coach. Following the team's elimination, Zico left the Japanese team.[7] In addition, Japan also had the Maringá-born fullback Alex Santos.
  • In Spain: São Paulo-born midfielder Marcos Senna played for the Spanish team.
  • In Costa Rica: Alexandre Guimarães was the country's head coach for the World Cup, as he had been in Costa Rica's previous participation, in 2002. He also played for Costa Rica in 1990. After losing all three matches, Guimarães left the national team, allegedly in the wake of death threats received via anonymous phone calls.[8]

References[edit]

  1. ^http://fifaworldcup.yahoo.com/06/pt/060529/1/5w5j.html
  2. ^http://fifaworldcup.yahoo.com/06/pt/060530/6/5wrc.html
  3. ^http://oglobo.globo.com/especiais/copa2006/mat/284103256.asp
  4. ^http://www1.folha.uol.com.br/folha/especial/2006/copa/confrontos_diretos.shtml
  5. ^'Archived copy'. Archived from the original on 2007-08-14. Retrieved 2009-06-20.CS1 maint: Archived copy as title (link)
  6. ^http://www1.folha.uol.com.br/folha/esporte/ult92u104219.shtml
  7. ^http://oglobo.globo.com/especiais/copa2006/mat/284739075.asp
  8. ^http://copa.esporte.uol.com.br/copa/2006/ultnot/costarica/2006/07/03/ult3733u38.jhtm
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