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Sad end for Zidane

Eurosport
ByEurosport

Published 10/07/2006 at 06:22 GMT

Zinedine Zidane's illustrious career is tainted - if not overshadowed - by his red card in Sunday's final, writes Ian Holyman in Berlin. The France legend's inexplicable headbutt on Marco Materazzi deep into extra-time was shameful and a sad way to end h

FOOTBALL 2006 World Cup Italia Italia-France Zidane Trophy

Image credit: dpa

"I'm sorry for Zidane, because I hold him in great esteem, and he knows that," said Italy coach Marcello Lippi - who bossed Zidane at Juventus - in his post-match press conference, echoing the thoughts of everyone present.
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FOOTBALL Mundial 2006 Marcello Lippi

Image credit: EFE

"He's a great player and I don't want to see him go. I told him before the start of the game to think over his decision to retire. It's a shame to end his career in this way."
The millions around the world who watched the game on TV will have the sight of Zidane's balding head hammering into Materazzi's chest indelibly etched into their archive of the Frenchman's defining moments.
And the majority of the 69000-strong crowd crammed into the Olympic Stadium who booed as Italy stepped up to the podium to collect football's holy grail will look back on their actions with regret as they leaf through their papers on Monday morning.
But they and Lippi - a man who spent three seasons alongside Les Bleus' number 10 in Turin - should know there is a beast which occasionally rears its hideous head and transforms the habitually placid and retiring Zidane.
HEADBUTTED
Saudi Arabia captain Fuad Amin was the first to feel the wrath of 'Zizou,' a two-game ban for the Frenchman for stamping on his opponent neatly overshadowed by his two goals in the final against Brazil to claim a maiden World Cup in 1998.
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FOOTBALL 2006 World Cup Italy-France Zidane

Image credit: dpa

And in 2001, Zidane headbutted Hamburg's Jochen Kientz just 29 minutes into a Champions League encounter - a headbutt that was seen again on the biggest stage of all in the German capital.
There is no doubt Marco Materazzi was goading Zidane, and the words - which neither Lippi nor French counterpart Raymond Domenech were able to disclose - were certainly not for the faint-hearted.
But like it or not, verbally insulting your opponent is a major factor in modern-day football and is something Zidane must have come across countless times on pitches around Europe and he should have just laughed it off.
Perhaps easier said than done in the heat of the battle, but his dismissal virtually ended France's chances of unlocking the Azzurri rearguard given the fundamental role Zidane plays in the 4-2-3-1 formation adopted by Domenech.
NOT A PANENKA, A ZIDANE
But up until his premature departure, France's best moments had rarely come through their star playmaker - aside from his magnificent, outrageously daring penalty.
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FOOTBALL 2006 World Cup Italy Italy-France Zidane Buffon Penalty Goal

Image credit: dpa

The debate will rage over whether referee Horacio Elizondo was right to award the spot-kick, but we can be thankful he did to offer the viewing public the privilege of watching an artist at work.
The 'Panenka' should be renamed the 'Zidane' as having the audacity to do that in the World Cup final - the original 'only' won Euro '76 - deserves long-standing recognition.
But otherwise, in an Italy-dominated first period, the ball was often in wide positions which severely limited Zidane's usefulness - at 34, it is not for his industry that he is going to make a difference.
HENRY THE HEIR
And in the second half of normal time he saw himself upstaged by Thierry Henry, the man who is now expected to take on the mantle of national saviour following Zidane's retirement.
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FOOTBALL 2006 World Cup France Italy-France Italy Henry injured

Image credit: Reuters

There were still some mouth-watering touches though from the great man, particularly in dodging away from that most persistent of opponents, Gennaro Gattuso.
The pick of the bunch, coming on 104 minutes, was a soft-shoe shuffle which spirited the ball out of Gattuso's reach before it was spread wide for Willy Sagnol to cross for Zidane himself to head powerfully goalwards and force Gigi Buffon into a flying stop.
It was a moment of sheer magic, the sort of genius everyone marvelled at after 'that' volley in the 2002 Champions League final, almost as decisive as when he headed those two goals into the Brazil net in Paris eight years ago.
A moment of magic to help ease the painful memory of a moment of madness.
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