Zinedine Zidane, playing the last match of his illustrious
career in Sunday's World Cup final, was dreaming of the ultimate
farewell party but it went awfully wrong.
The ageing maestro walked off the pitch of the Olympiastadion in
tears, passing the World Cup trophy itself as he went down the
stairs leading to the dressing rooms after losing his cool at the
worst possible moment.
The France captain was sent off for butting Marco Materazzi in the
chest in extra time before Italy went on to win on penalties.
It had all started in promising fashion, the balding playmaker
audaciously chipping the ball in off the crossbar from a penalty to
give his side a seventh-minute lead.
The gifted son of Algerian immigrants showed glimpses of his best
form throughout an ill-tempered contest and bravely battled on
despite hurting his right shoulder in a clash with 10 minutes
remaining in normal time.
After 104 minutes, he powerfully headed a cross from Willy
Sagnol goalwards, only for Gianluigi Buffon to brilliantly tip the
ball over the crossbar.
A few minutes later, he was gone.
"There a moments, when you take blows - I'm not saying I'm excusing
it but I can understand," said France coach Raymond Domenech, aware
that Zidane's violent gesture occured after a heated exchange of
words with Materazzi.
Chirac tribute
There was some consolation for the man who inspired France to their
only World Cup triumph eight years ago when French President
Jacques Chirac paid tribute to him.
"I would like to say all the esteem I have for a man who has
embodied sport's most beautiful values, displayed the greatest
human qualities and made France proud," Chirac, who was at the
match, told French television.
It was far from obvious a few weeks ago that Zidane, who turned 34
during the tournament, would sign off by playing a second World Cup
final after scoring two headed goals when France stunned Brazil 3-0
in 1998.
His penalty on Sunday earned him a place in the record books
alongside Pele, Vava and Geoff Hurst as the only four men to score
three goals in World Cup final matches.
France had struggled to qualify and Zidane, who came out of
international retirement last year to help them win a ticket to
Germany, had looked rusty for months.
He was past his prime, it seemed, and his first matches in the
tournament confirmed the impression.
The man his fans call Zizou woke up in a second-round match against
Spain, orchestrating play with calm authority and scoring a superb
goal in added time in a 3-1 win that was the turning point in
France's campaign.
Then came Brazil in a rematch of the 1998 final and Zidane was pure
magic in a 1-0 win, rolling back the years by pulling out all his
old tricks in one of the most magnificent performances of his
entire career.
"Watching Zizou play must make others feel they should stop,"
France midfielder Patrick Vieira said after that match.
"It also makes you wish he would carry on."
Another age-defying performance in a 1-0 semi-final victory over
Portugal in which he drove home the winning penalty followed before
the final curtain fell in such a traumatic way.
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