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Football

Marquez spoils Bafana party

Mexico's Rafael Marquez struck 12 minutes from time to deny hosts South Africa a winning start to the World Cup at Soccer City in Johannesburg. Marquez controlled Andres Guardado's cross at the back post and rifled past Itumeleng Khune to ensure the spoils were shared after a breathless opening to the tournament. The Mexicans were the better team throughout, but they fell behind when South Africa's Siphiwe Tshabalala fired in a left-foot thunderbolt from an angle on the left to give Bafana Bafana a lead their supporters revelled in. In an atmosphere bordering on ecstasy in Johannesburg, Tshabalala's screamer threatened to provide the 19th World Cup with the fairytale beginning it was hoping for, before Marquez and Mexico intervened. Even then, Carlos Alberto Parreira's team almost snatched it in the dying moments, only for striker Katlego Mphela to agonisingly roll a shot against the post with Oscar Perez beaten. Yet over the 90 minutes, Parreira and his team were perhaps lucky to get away with a draw themselves in front of a partisan 84,490 crowd as Mexico failed to turn their startling superiority into victory. For South Africa , the first African nation to host the footballing spectacular, what was supposed to be a day of celebration began with the announcement that former president and icon Nelson Mandela's great-granddaughter had tragically died in a car crash on Thursday. The 91-year-old Mandela stayed away from the opening ceremony - which preceded the game - to mourn, but through president Jacob Zuma, who declared the World Cup open, he asked people to "enjoy the game". It is unlikely many of the South African fans enjoyed the first 54 minutes of their moment in the footballing spotlight as their team were comprehensively outplayed by a Mexico side that knocked the ball around the gorgeous surface with consummate skill and ease. With Giovani sitting in the hole behind Carlos Vela and Guillermo Franco, the Mexicans had weapons South Africa simply could not handle - and the movement of the front three quickly began to cause the hosts all kinds of havoc. Khune was only spared the embarrassment of his early fumble costing a goal by Aaron Mokoena's reflex block to deny Giovani, before Franco headed a corner wastefully over. South Africa were struggling to get out of their own half with any real consistency and former West Ham striker Franco was inadvertently keeping them in the contest, again heading off target when he should have done better and seeing another shot expertly saved by Khune. Mpehla had been forced to feed off scraps until he was inches away from heading in Tshabalala's cross just before the break, but soon after the interval the world had the goal it was waiting for. Tshabalala, a 25-year-old Soweto-born left winger for Kaizer Chiefs, wrote his name down in football folklore with a strike of such pure quality it almost took a second for him to realise what he had done. Mexico were shell-shocked, but after Giovani's left-foot rocket was tipped away by Khune, up popped Marquez to slot in and quieten some of the vuvuzelas in the crowd. Mphela's late flirtation with the woodwork only compounded the agony for the hosts, but their World Cup campaign remains very much alive. Source: BBC

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DISCLAIMER: The Views, Comments, Opinions, Contributions and Statements made by Readers and Contributors on this platform do not necessarily represent the views or policy of Multimedia Group Limited.