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| France's Thierry Henry (L) vies against
Switzerland's Philippe Senderos during the second match of the World Cup
2006 Group G in Stuttgart, Germany on June 13, 2006. The match ended in a
0-0 draw. (Xinhua photo) |
STUTTGART, Germany, June 13 (Xinhua) -- France
were forced to a0-0 tie against Switzerland in their 2006 world cup opener here
on Tuesday.
While retiring Zidane and some of his compeers were
fighting for their final glory in the international stage, the Les Bleus had yet
to overcome the specter from the 2002 tournament when they suffered a shocking
early exit in the first round.
"We get used to sharing points with Switzerland,"
said French coach Raymond Domenech after the match.
The swiss twice held Domenech's men during the
qualifiers and the overall 35 previous head to heads between the two nations
were 15 wins for France, 12 for Switzerland and eight draws.
"We didn't score but if you look into all the
opportunities that we created, you will find it out very positive," said
Domenech.
The French were sharper to every ball at the very
beginning and that good spell of pressure ended with Patrick Vieira mis-hitting
for a Sagnol cross in the 14th minute.
In the 36th minute, a slip from Swiss defender
Philippe Senderos allowed Frank Ribery to race in on goal. But the Marseille
winger seemed unsure of himself and passed the ball to Thiery Henry instead of
going for goal himself.
The Arsenal striker's shot was shut off by a
seemingly handball of Swiss defender Patrick Mueller, which was not awarded by
the Russian referee.
Henry also squandered a couple of chances when his
shots went either wide or high or right into the Swiss keeper Pascal
Zuberbuehler's fingers.
The Switzerland had a real good chance in the 23th
minute, when Tranquillo Barnetta's indirect free kick eluded everyone and came
back off Fabien Barthez's left hand post.
Swiss defender Alexander Frei reached the bounce but
his shots first hit the post, and then went high off the bar.
The second half proved the same pattern with French
possession and set piece opportunities coming to very little although Franck
Ribery was substituted by forward Louis Saha to strengthen offence in the 72nd
minute.
Some direct running from Lyon striker Sylvain Wiltord
nearly forced an opportunity for the French six minutes from the end.
But after working a neat one-two with Zidane, he was
closed out and went down in a painful look.
"I have to be satisfied with the result and things
the way it looked. The French were stronger all as a whole and in the first
half," said Swiss coach Koebi Kuhn.
"My players showed a lot of will in the match.
Despite of small things especially on defence, and ball possession, I'm very
satisfied with their performance."
Since winning the 1998 world cup title by defeating
Brazil 3-0, France have failed to win or score a single goal in world cup
matches.
But Domenech, who took the reins of national team in
2004, criticized the pitch conditions instead of blaming on offence problems.
"Today is hot but they watered the pitch too late. So
it was still very wet when the match began," he said.
"It's a pitch for defence, not a pitch for attack.
The ball just didn't roll."
Kuhn, sharing Domenech's opinion on pitch though,
felt surprised to see "great players like Henry and Ribery were affected by such
situation."
"But I think we should forgive them," he said.
The two both looked to the next match as crucial.
"It could be a tense battle against South Korea. They
won the first match and it's a good situation for them," said Domenech, " but
it's obvious that we have to win."
Kuhn said that the South Korean clash could be
decisive for French because they were to face opponents already with three
points.
"But I think French are strong enough to beat South
Korea." Enditem
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