Copa America 2015 – final – Chile beat Argentina 0-0
(4-1)
- · Copa America final goes to penalties after goalless draw
- · Both sides have chances, but neither can take the lead in normal time
- · Gonzalo Higuain misses from close range with last kick of the game
- · Alexis Sanchez scores winning penalty after Gonzalo Higuain and Ever Banega missed from the spot
- · Angel di Maria taken off inside half an hour with hamstring injury
- · Chile win their first ever major international competition
After 99 years, it came down to
Alexis Sánchez against Sergio Romero from 12 yards. The Arsenal forward
attempted a Panenka, scuffed it badly, and scored anyway as the goalkeeper
dived to his left. Misses from Gonzalo Higuaín and Éver Banega in the shootout proved
decisive and, finally, Chile, one of the four participants at the inaugural
Copa América, had a first international trophy. For Argentina the drought goes on: 22 years since
their last trophy and an increasing sense that this gifted generation of players
will remain unfulfilled.
Where better to achieve that first
win than at home, asked Claudio Bravo on Friday; this wasn’t just about doing
it in front of local fans. Few stadiums in the world have such symbolic value
as Santiago’s Estadio Nacional in being representative of their nation. Behind
the goal at one end a block is left perpetually empty, the benches still as
they were in 1973 when the stadium was used as a prison camp after the coup
through which Augusto Pinochet seized power. It was here that November that Chile kicked off against no opposition in a
notorious World Cup qualifying play-off after the USSR refused to take to the
field in a stadium in which leftists had been murdered a matter of weeks
earlier. Above it is the legendUn
pueblo sin memoria es un pueblo sin futuro – a people without a memory is a
people without a future.
The atmosphere before kick-off was
extraordinary, small dashes of Albiceleste breaking a great sweep of red, each
of the home fans waving the national flags they’d been given as they came in.
And beyond the stands, visible through the haze of dust and pollution for the
first time in the tournament, loomed the rocky bulk of the Andes, an
appropriately grand backdrop to the biggest game in Chile’s history.
Some, it seems, got carried away
in their nationalist fervor, with Lionel Messi’s family having to be moved into
a television cabin at half-time after being abused and having objects thrown at
them in the stands. There were further reports that his elder brother, Rodrigo,
was punched.
Chile had looked anxious in the
semi-final against Peru, as though snatching at the prize as it came within
touching distance, but here they started with a fury. Any thought that Jorge
Sampaoli might compromise on his pressing principles and opt for something more
conservative rapidly disappeared and for a time Argentina were unsettled. Had
Arturo Vidal made better contact with a volley as Sanchez’s half-blocked cross
dropped to him, the hosts might have had an early lead, but his mis-hit effort
was scrambled away by the goalkeeper Romero.
The one change Sampaoli did make
was to push the midfielder Marcelo Díaz extremely deep, almost as a third
centre-back, which freed Gary Medel to leave the back-line and pursue Messi at
times when he dropped deep. Predictably, he was booked before half-time, having
caught Messi in the midriff with a swinging boot. The plan worked; this was a
triumph for the coach, who was born just 35 miles from Messi’s home in Rosario.
Messi had his quietest game of the tournament – his 63 touches in normal time
were his fewest of this Copa América.
One of the reasons Argentina were
so cowed was due to Chile’s aggression, which clearly outraged their coaching
staff. This tournament has seen Chile chart a course from romance via the
decision not to suspend Vidal over his
arrest on drink-driving charges and
Gonzalo Jara’s digital provocation of Edinson Cavani, to the pragmatic decision
to try to kick Argentina off their stride. By half-time, all three central
defenders had been booked and a game that had begun brightly had degenerated
into something far scrappier.
By the second half, this felt far
more like the Argentina of the World Cup than the side which had eviscerated
Paraguay so thrillingly in the semi-final. They were defensively more secure
than they had been, but lacked the fluidity and fluency of movement that characterized
them even in the quarter-final against Colombia. Messi, in particular, was diminished;
a frustrated and often isolated figure on the right, shirt untucked, shoulders
slouched.
As Argentina became increasingly
frustrated, Chile had their chances – a Vidal effort that was charged down, a
Sánchez volley that flashed across the face of goal – but the last clear
opportunity of normal time fell to Argentina. Messi, at last finding space,
broke and laid in Ezequiel Lavezzi, but his low cross was too far in front of
the other substitute, Higuaín, who could only screw the ball into the side
netting.
Had he scored that chance, and had
he scored the chance in the Maracana
in the World Cup final last year, this generation might be have gone down as
one of the greatest. As it was, though, it was Chile who celebrated, the
national anthem proudly sung as flares saluted the victory.
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