World Cup colors were red and yellow
(AP) Updated: 2006-07-10 10:13
The colors this World Cup will be remembered for were red and yellow.
 Referee Horacio
Elizondo (R) of Argentina shows France's Zinedine Zidane a red card during
their World Cup 2006 final soccer match against Italy in Berlin July 9,
2006. [Reuters] |
Zinedine Zidane's ejection during France's penalty-kicks loss to Italy
Sunday's final was a record 28th red card of the tournament. The previous mark
was 22 at the 1998 tournament in France.
Argentine referee Horacio Elizondo also gave four yellow cards during the
match, which Italy won 5-3 in a shootout following a 1-1 tie. That raised the
tournament total to 345, 27 percent above the previous mark set in Japan and
South Korea in 2002.
The United States tied for the most red cards in this tournament with two _
and the least yellow, with five. Other countries with two reds were Italy,
Croatia, the Czech Republic, the Netherlands, Portugal and Serbia-Montenegro.
Portugal led with 24 yellow cards in seven matches, followed by Ghana with 18
in four. The U.S. and South Korea tied for the fewest yellows, with five each in
three games.
A three-time world player of the year, Zidane became just the fourth player
sent off in a World Cup final when he launched his head into the chest of Marco
Materazzi in the 110th minute.
Argentina's Pedro Monzon and Gustavo Abel Dezotti received red cards in
Germany's 1-0 win in 1990 at Rome, and France's Marcel Desailly was ejected
after receiving two yellow cards in his country's 3-0 win over Brazil in 1998 at
Saint-Denis.
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