BERLIN - World Cup winners Italy make a triumphant return home on
Monday, with a penalty shootout victory over France in the final having restored
pride to their scandal-tainted national game.
Marcello Lippi's team are sure to receive a tumultuous welcome when they
parade their prize at Rome's Circus Maximus, even with the verdicts due at any
moment in a match-fixing case which could see four leading clubs demoted from
the top league.
The Italians held their nerve before a television audience of more than a
billion people on Sunday night to convert five flawless penalties, after a
disappointing final finished 1-1 in Berlin's Olympiastadion at the end of extra
time.
Fullback Fabio Grosso scored the decisive kick. France's David Trezeguet had
handed the advantage to the Italians by hitting his penalty against the
crossbar.
"The players have unlimited heart, character and personality," Lippi declared
after the win.
"This is the most satisfying moment of my life."
With glittering fireworks exploding around the stadium, Italian captain Fabio
Cannavaro lifted the golden trophy to bring the curtain down on the World Cup
for another four years, after 64 matches around Germany over the past month.
Sunday's match gave Italy their fourth World Cup title and deprived France of
a second, eight years after their first.
It was also notable for the dismissal of France's talismanic playmaker
Zinedine Zidane in his last ever competitive match.
The 34-year-old was sent off in extra time for a butt into the chest of
Italian defender Marco Materazzi after the two players had exchanged angry
words.
The match was doubly bitter for France's squad, featuring several players
unlikely to get another shot at a major title, as they played the better
football most of the time.
"I've said it from the start -- only victory is pretty," declared losing
coach Raymond Domenech. "You can say what we did wasn't bad but it's Italy who
are the champions."
Zidane gave France an early lead with a penalty after seven minutes but
Materazzi equalized with a header 12 minutes later.
FEELING FLAT
Germany will feel a little flat after a month of sun-soaked celebration with
fans from around the world, dubbed the "biggest party on earth" by world soccer
chief Sepp Blatter.
Organizers put in place an unprecedented program of Fan Fests around Germany
to spread the World Cup atmosphere, showing the matches on big screens and
providing cheap food and drink.
They proved a huge hit with locals and visitors alike, drawing in some 14
million people during the tournament.
Around a million German fans gathered at the biggest Fan Fest site, in front
of Berlin's Brandenburg Gate, on Sunday to applaud their team, which finished
third.
Coach Juergen Klinsmann's side, featuring many young players, surpassed
expectations and won widespread affection in Germany and beyond with a brand of
bold, attacking football.
The next World Cup takes place in South Africa in 2010.