The functional Dutch brushed past Slovakia, surviving a late period of pressure to set up a quarter final match against Brazil, who themselves made it through, pushed all the way by a talented Chile side that just lacked a cutting edge.
Holland were uninspiring on the whole, but in Arjen Robben and Wesley Sneijder they have players capable of doing the unexpected and it was those two that got the goals.
Robben, back from injury for his first World Cup start, scored after 18 minutes, taking Sneijder’s pass directly at the Slovakian defence before firing home from 25 yards. While you might think that would have sparked a wave of Total Football from the Dutch you’d be wrong. They instead seemed to withdraw into themselves, restricting Slovakia’s goal threat to next to nothing but offering little themselves going forward.
One interesting stat I picked up from @OptaJoe on Twitter was that Robben has scored with his first shot on target 100% of the time at this year’s World Cup. Brazil had better take note.
It took right up to the 84th minute for Holland to grab their second through the irrepressible Sneijder. Having missed a fairly easy chance earlier in the game, he made up for it by tapping home a Dirk Kuyt pull back into an empty net.
Slovakia never gave up and a late period of pressure saw Dutch keeper Stekelenburg save well from Miroslav Stoch before he brought down Slovakia’s star player of this tournament, Vittek, conceding a penalty in the 94th minute. Vittek duly converted and the referee immediately blew the whistle to make a it a bitter sweet moment for the Slovaks.
The Brazil v Chile match was a far more entertaining affair. The 3-0 scoreline doesn’t flatter the Brazilians but it does a disservice to the Chileans who brought out the best in their opponents.
Chile were missing Estrada, Ponce and Medel through suspension and perhaps with them this would have been a closer affair in terms of scoreline, though I doubt it would have affected the result. Brazil are really coming into their own as the competition progresses and this was underlined around the half hour mark when they scored two in quick succession.
Juan grabbed the first, heading a bullet past Bravo from a Maicon corner, before on fire Luis Fabiano passed the ball into an empty net after the best bit of passing in the game exposed the Chilean defence ruthlessly.
Robinho cut in from the wing, squared the ball to Kaka who dissected the defence with a perfect through ball for Fabiano to collect, round Bravo and tap home.
Robinho himself rounded off the scoring, curling a lovely shot round the keeper after a run from deep in midfield by Ramires had Chile on the back foot.
Brazil really are starting to look ominous and that flair that many believe has been missing under Dunga is beginning to emerge. Coupled with Brazil’s new found defensive resilience it’s a potent combination.
The quarter final between Holland and the Brazilians looks fantastic on paper – but how often have we been disappointed in this World Cup so far? I give you Brazil v Portugal as a case in point. Let’s hope it’s a good one.


