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Battle of Nuremberg (2006 FIFA World Cup)

Round of 16 match between Portugal and the Netherlands in 2006 FIFA World Cup


Summary

Round of 16 match between Portugal and the Netherlands in 2006 FIFA World Cup

FieldValue
titleBattle of Nuremberg
imageWinners and Losers (178280419).jpg
captionThe Frankenstadion held the match.
event2006 FIFA World Cup
Round of 16
team1Portugal
team1score1
team1associationPOR
team2Netherlands
team2associationNED
team2score0
date25 June 2006
stadiumFrankenstadion
cityNuremberg, Germany
man_of_the_match1aManiche
refereeValentin Ivanov (Russia)
attendance41,000
weatherMostly cloudy
26 °C

Round of 16 26 °C

The Battle of Nuremberg (, , ; also known as the Massacre of Nuremberg) is the nickname of a football match played in the round of 16 of the 2006 FIFA World Cup between Portugal and the Netherlands at the Frankenstadion in Nuremberg on 25 June 2006. Russian referee Valentin Ivanov issued a FIFA World Cup record four red cards and 16 yellow cards, setting a new record for cards shown at any FIFA-administered international tournament.

Background

Portugal and the Netherlands had met at the semi-final stage of the previous major tournament, UEFA Euro 2004 held in Portugal, which had finished 2–1 to the host nation, but had not featured the same level of animosity between the players. A total of five Dutch and eleven Portuguese players who took some part in that fixture were also on the field in Nuremberg.

The match

First half

Mark van Bommel was booked in the second minute, and also before the goal Dutch defender Khalid Boulahrouz was booked for a foul, which injured Cristiano Ronaldo and would eventually force the substitution of Portugal's star winger before half time. Ronaldo left in tears, and proceeded to describe Boulahrouz's tackle as "clearly an intentional foul to get me injured." In the meantime, Maniche had been booked for a foul on Van Bommel after 19 minutes.

Shortly after Maniche's 23rd minute goal, Portugal's defensive midfielder Costinha slid into Dutch veteran Philip Cocu, receiving a yellow card. He was then the first to be sent off just before half time after being shown a second yellow card for a handball.

Second half

After Petit had been cautioned in the 50th minute, Giovanni van Bronckhorst and Luís Figo both received yellow cards, with Figo's coming as a result of a touchline melee with Mark van Bommel during which Figo headbutted him. Portugal manager Luiz Felipe Scolari controversially gave his approval to this headbutt by stating after the match, "Jesus Christ may be able to turn the other cheek but Luís Figo isn't Jesus Christ."

Boulahrouz was sent off in the 63rd minute with a second caution after fouling Figo, which sparked a melee on the touch-line, involving Boulahrouz (who confronted Simão), André Ooijer and the Portuguese bench, necessitating the intervention of the fourth official Marco Rodríguez. Portugal's playmaker Deco roughly fouled Dutch defender John Heitinga and was booked; the Netherlands had not given the ball back after Portugal had cleared it into touch to allow a player to receive medical treatment, thus breaking one of football's gentlemen's agreements. In the ensuing brawl, Wesley Sneijder pushed Petit to the ground and was also cautioned. The Netherlands' Rafael van der Vaart received a yellow card, apparently for dissent.

After that, Portugal's goalkeeper Ricardo (presumably for time wasting) and left-back Nuno Valente (for a rough foul) were punished. Deco received his second caution and was dismissed in the 78th minute for delaying the restart after a free-kick was awarded. Cocu escaped a caution for wrestling Deco to the ground in his attempt to retrieve the ball. In the 88th minute, Simão drew the ire of the Dutch goalkeeper Edwin van der Sar, after the Portuguese player's leg made contact with Dutchman's in his attempt to score a goal, but the referee decided against taking any disciplinary action. In injury time, Van Bronckhorst was sent off for a second yellow card for a foul on Tiago.

A scene was shown on television footage during the match in which Boulahrouz, Deco, and Van Bronckhorst were sitting together on the sidelines after being sent off, the latter two having a discussion, both being teammates at Spanish club Barcelona. Commentator Gary Bloom referred to the scene as the "Bad boys' corner".

Aftermath

In the aftermath of the match, referee Ivanov was criticised by FIFA president Sepp Blatter, who suggested that Ivanov should have given himself a yellow card for his poor performance during the match. Blatter later regretted these words and promised to apologise officially. FIFA announced that Ivanov would referee no further matches in the tournament. Ivanov's father Valentin Ivanov defended his son, saying it had been FIFA's demand for referees to be tough on the players.

When Portugal faced England in the subsequent quarter-final, they were without the suspended Deco and Costinha. Portugal managed to reach the semi-finals. However, they had two players suspended for that match due to accumulated yellow cards, including the ones against the Netherlands.

The record for yellow cards in a World Cup game was surpassed in 2022, when Antonio Mateu Lahoz issued a total of 18 yellows (16 for players, one sent off for two yellow cards and 2 more to coaching staff) during the quarter-final match between the Netherlands and Argentina.

Match details

{{Football kitpattern_la = _Brazil_home_2006pattern_b = _por0608hpattern_ra = _Brazil_home_2006pattern_so = _greentopleftarm = 900020body = 900020rightarm = 900020shorts = 900020socks = 900020title = Portugalpattern_la =pattern_b = _nether06apattern_ra =leftarm = FFFFFFbody = FFFFFFrightarm = FFFFFFshorts = 0047ABsocks = FFFFFFtitle = Netherlands
BRA Luiz Felipe Scolari

||[[Image:Portugal-Netherlands line-up.svg|300px]]

Marco van Basten

|}

References

;General

;Specific

References

  1. (25 June 2006). "Portugal 1–0 Holland". [[BBC Sport]].
  2. (25 June 2006). "History for Nurnberg, Germany". wunderground.com.
  3. (26 June 2006). "Portugal Defeats Holland at the Battle of Nuremberg". [[Der Spiegel]].
  4. (8 July 2006). "Fair play takes a dive". [[ABC Sport]].
  5. (1 July 2004). "Maniche has final say against Oranje". UEFA.
  6. (26 June 2006). "Ronaldo cries foul". [[breakingnews.ie]].
  7. Ziegler, Martyn. "Figo escapes ban". The Independent.
  8. Walker, Michael. (26 June 2006). "Holland exit in acrimony as four see red". [[The Guardian]].
  9. (25 June 2006). "Match Report". [[FIFA]].
  10. (26 June 2006). "Blatter criticises referee Ivanov". [[BBC Sport]].
  11. (25 June 2006). "Blatter blast for Ivanov". [[Eurosport]].
  12. (4 July 2006). "Blatter regrets criticism of referee Ivanov". OneIndia News.
  13. (29 June 2006). "Under-fire refs get World Cup boot". CNN.
  14. Culf, Andrew. (27 June 2006). "Red cards and recriminations: have refs gone too far this time?". [[The Guardian]].
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