Germany vs Greece Report
Germany 4-2 Greece: Record-breakers cruise into last four
The 2008 finalists overcame first-half frustration against the
Hellenic side, with Khedira, Klose and Reus adding to Lahm's brilliant
first half strike to progress
Germany booked a semi-final against England or Italy after thrashing Greece 4-2 in Friday's Euro 2012 quarter-final at the PGE Arena in Gdansk.
In a first half which saw profligate
finishing from the 2008 finalists, Philipp Lahm eventually broke the
deadlock with a fine long-range strike after 39 minutes. Greece secured a
shock equaliser 10 minutes into the second half with Georgios Samaras
tapping in a Dimitris Salpingidis cross.
But Germany retook the
lead after 61 minutes with a sumptous Sami Khedira volley from
close-range, before Miroslav Klose headed a third seven minutes later.
Marco Reus made it 4-1 with 15 minutes left before Salpingidis converted
a penalty a minute before time as Germany secure a semi-final place for
the fourth consecutive tournament.
Die Mannschaft began the game
in typically efficient fashion, and were unlucky not to be ahead after
just four minutes. A nervy Michalis Sifakis spilled a Khedira effort
back into play, with tournament debutant Andre Schurrle firing in low
under the goalkeeper before the goal was ruled out for offside.
Fernando Santos' men failed to offer
attacking creativity in much of the early proceedings at the PGE Arena -
a testament to their game-plan - with a lone shot from Grigoris Makos
saved easily by Manuel Neuer. In contrast, at the other end, Marco Reus
fired an effort wide on goal after a brilliant move from midfield.
Germany
upped their tempo as Greece initiated a period of stability, and it
almost paid dividends. Reus played an intricate one-two with Klose
before spreading the ball out wide to Ozil. The Real Madrid midfielder
could then only fire at Sifakis before the ball was hurriedly cleared by
Papadapoulous.
Seconds later, the lively Reus spurned two
glorious chances as Germany failed to impose on their dominance.
Firstly, with Ozil pulling the strings on the flank, the 23 year swept
the ball across goal which was agonisingly missed by an oustretched
Klose before slicing a shot wide as Greece floundered.
With the
Ethniki seemingly cornered by the Germans, the 2004 winners weren't
without their own opportunities. A superb ball from stand-in captain
Kostas Katsouranis carved open a suspect defence, as Sotiris Ninis
forced Manuel Neuer into an awkward save, with the goalkeeper needing a
second save to make sure.
Further efforts were subsequently
wasted by Joachim Low's men towards the end of the first half. A
Schurrle effort curled frustratingly wide, before Khedira's fierce
effort was again blocked by the impressive Sifakis as a resilient Greek
defence held sway.
Greece's luck would indeed run out five minutes before half-time. Lahm
dribbled his way into position outside the area before unleashing a
superb swerving strike which deceived Sifakis and nestled into the
bottom corner to give die Mannschaft the lead. Schurrle failed with a
chance to make it two before the interval, shooting inches wide of goal.
The
Ethniki were noticeably improving as the game wore on, but were almost
2-0 down after a horror clearance from Sifakis found Schurrle who,
instead of shooting, opted to thread a ball towards Klose with the move
breaking down.
At the other end, Katsouranis picked out Samaras
with a fine pass, as Greece moved into a two against two before
substitute Theofanis Gekas failed to reciprocate a back-heeled pass.
Nevertheless,
the Greeks weren't to be outdone. A quick-fire counter-attacking move
saw Dimitris Salpingidis race down the right before squaring a low cross
towards Samaras who positioned himself in front of
Jerome Boateng and bundle the ball past Neuer to send the travelling
Greek support into delirium.
The celebrations were short-lived,
six minutes in fact as Germany emphatically recovered to take the lead
just past the hour. A speculative cross from Boateng on the flank was
spectacularly met with the foot of Khedira, whose volley rifled into the roof of Sifakis' goal.
The
Greek resistance came to a halt after that setback, and Germany took
full advantage. Ozil's inswinging delivery from the corner saw Klose
rise highest to head home into an empty net after Sifakis opted to
commit himself in clearing, as the Lazio forward claimed his 64th
international goal.
On another typically German break, Klose
latched onto Ozil's neat pass, before firing at Sifakis who blocked the
ball to the feet of Reus who powerfully fired into an
empty net, securing the Germans' record-breaking 15th competitive win.
Boateng was deemed to have handballed late on, with Salpingidis converting a penalty as Greece exited the tournament on a high.
Joachim
Low's men progress to the semi-final where they will meet either
England or Italy on Thursday at the National Stadium in Warsaw.
to secure a semi-final place for the fourth consecutive tournament.
Source : Goal.com