Costa Rica’s Marco Ureña completes fairytale of shock win over Uruguay
Costa Rica's Marco Ureña scores their third goal
in the 2014 World Cup Group D victory against Uruguay. Photograph: Carl Recine/Action Images
The sense of history might have been stifling for Costa Rica. Thrust
into Group D alongside three former world champions, the central
Americans have been considered as the small fry. This is only their
fourth World Cup and every statistic has seemed to attack them. They had
never beaten Uruguay, for example.
Jorge Luis Pinto, though, had
stressed that famous jerseys and reputations meant nothing and that the
present was all that mattered. On a night that came coated in glory for
the manager and his players, they scoffed at the preconceptions and
illuminated this stadium with a breathtaking second-half comeback.
They
did it the hard way, having started slowly and fallen behind to an
Edinson Cavani penalty. At half-time, the notion that Costa Rica would
get anything felt far-fetched. Uruguay had bristled with streetwise
assurance and their lead might have been greater, but for Keylor Navas’s
wonderful save from Diego Forlán. The goalkeeper scrambled back to tip
Forlán’s deflected shot over the crossbar on 44 minutes.
But Costa
Rica were electric after the interval, hurting Uruguay with their pace
and aerial threat on set pieces. They fashioned a devastating one-two
punch in the form of goals from Joel Campbell and Óscar Duarte and, to
complete the perfect evening, the substitute Marco Ureña ran on to a
pass from Campbell to score within minutes of his introduction.
Campbell
was the star turn. He had offered a threat while the chips were down in
the first half, showing intelligent movement and his powerful shooting,
but it was in the second half when he turned the screw. His equaliser
was the goal of the evening, a composed chest-down and left-footed thump
past Fernando Muslera and, by the end, Uruguay and the defender Maxi
Pereira had had enough.
The right-back swung a spiteful kick at
Campbell as they tussled by the corner to earn a straight red card.
Pereira was not the only Uruguayan to be censured in the second half.
Diego Lugano, Walter Gargano and Martín Cáceres were booked for cynical
challenges, as Uruguay fought, without success, to stem the tide.
On
this evidence, Campbell may yet forge a career at Arsenal, the club
that he joined from Saprissa in 2011 but has yet to play for. His past
three seasons have been spent on loan, although he has now has a work
permit to go with the desire to make his mark upon the Premier League.
This
was the result of Uruguayan nightmares and they could not escape the
scene of their torture quick enough. Nor could their supporters. The
descent from comfort to disaster was startling and their World Cup hopes
have been left to hang by a thread.
Óscar Tabárez chose not to bring Luis Suárez off the substitutes’
bench, as the striker recovers from keyhole knee surgery and the manager
faces a huge task to lift his shattered players for Thursday’s meeting
with England. On the downside for England, Uruguay will be angry and
determined to save their necks. Another defeat could be fatal.
As
for Suárez, Tabárez said there had been “uncertainties as far as his
fitness is concerned”. He refused to offer any assurances, saying: “If
Luis improves, there is a chance he may play against England.”
Costa
Rica had set up with five at the back, four in midfield and the desire
not to be breached. Uruguay might also prefer to strike on the counter
but it was they who stepped on to the front foot, sensing that they
needed to force the issue. They worked some attractive triangles in the
first half and they flickered before the opening goal, when Diego Godín
had an effort pulled back for offside and then when Cavani miskicked a
volley. That was a bad miss.
Costa Rica could lament their
concession for several reasons. Yeltsin Tejeda jumped with two feet off
the ground to foul Cristian Rodríguez and if the midfielder was
fortunate not to be booked, the punishment was swiftly meted out. Forlán
whipped in the free-kick and Júnior Díaz allowed Lugano to get
goal-side of him. His attempt to repair the damage was clumsy, wrapping
his arms around Lugano’s waist, and Cavani converted the penalty with
the minimum of fuss.
Campbell had fizzed a rocket wide from
distance and there were the signs that Uruguay were vulnerable to
set-pieces. Twice, Giancarlo González had the scent of goal, the first
time from Duarte’s nod back but he could not apply the decisive touch.
Uruguay’s
weaknesses were more pronounced in the second half and Duarte ought to
have equalised when he beat Godín to Christian Bolaños’s free-kick only
to head straight at Muslera. Uruguay’s reprieve was temporary. Cristian
Gamboa chased a seemingly lost cause, won it and crossed from the byline
on the right and when it came through for Campbell, he crashed it home.
Moments
later, Uruguay were on their knees. From another Bolaños free-kick,
Duarte once again attacked the far post, ahead of Rodríguez, to score
with a brave, stooping header. Campbell would also curl another
long-range shot inches wide. “Cost-a-Ric-a,” chanted the crowd, many of
whom were Brazilian. There is no love lost between Brazil and Uruguay.
Back
came Uruguay. Cavani got into a dangerous area and he crossed but there
was nobody there while he also made Navas work with a header. Yet it
was Ureña who had the last word. Costa Rica could enjoy one of the great
nights.
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