World Cup debutants Ghana kicked some life back into African
football on Sunday with a well-deserved World Cup Group E 2-0 win
over the Czech Republic.
Asamoah Gyan fired Ghana ahead in the second minute of the match
and they deservedly doubled their advantage eight minutes from time
when Sulley Muntari blasted in another.
They could have made the result more emphatic but for a penalty
miss by Gyan in the second half.
The foul that led to the penalty also saw Czech defender Tomas
Ujfalusi red-carded on his 50th appearance for the national side,
leaving the pre-match favourites struggling with 10 men for the
final 24 minutes.
Following the Ivory Coast's early elimination and a string of
disappointing results for Africa's other teams, Ghana bounced back
from their own opening defeat to Italy 2-0 with a magnificent
display.
"I opened the way and I think everything's open now," Gyan told
reporters. "We were just the better team today and that's
football.
"The next game against the US is very, very important."
That match is in Nuremberg on Friday.
Czech coach Karel Brueckner said Gyan's early goal was a bad blow
for his side.
"I don't blame the poor performance on absent morale or lack of
effort," said Brueckner. "The first goal was detrimental to our
intentions."
Forced to play without injured strikers Jan Koller and Milan Baros,
the Czechs, meanwhile, looked a shadow of the team that put three
goals past the US without reply in their opener.
Starting the match at a fierce tempo, Ghana won a corner with less
than a minute played and forced Petr Cech into an early
clearance.
If that was a warning, the Czechs seemed unable to heed it with
Gyan firing into the net just a few seconds later.
Receiving a cross from captain Stephen Appiah, the Modena striker
chested the ball down before unleashing a low strike past
Cech.
Karel Bruckner's men enjoyed their best moments during the early
stages of the second half and thought they had found an equaliser
when Pavel Nedved headed home in the 46th minute only for the move
to be ruled offside.
Gradually, though, Ghana took charge and enjoyed a succession of
chances before their missed 66th minute penalty.
The dismissal of Ujfalusi after a trip on Matthew Amoah led to a
twice-taken penalty from Gyan. He tucked in the first top left but
the referee said he had not blown for the kick to be taken and
booked him.
The second cannoned off the right post and bounced to a Czech
defender.
There was to be no Czech reprieve in the 82nd minute, however,
Muntari latching on to a ball on the right of the box and lashing
the ball powerfully past Cech and into the roof of the net.
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