Post by Salem6 on Jun 25, 2006 18:50:23 GMT
David Beckham became the first England player to score at three World Cups as his free-kick earned a quarter-final tie against Portugal or Holland.
Beckham scored his first England goal for 13 games
Beckham beautifully curled home from 30 yards on the hour mark, but England made hard work of Ecuador.
The South Americans could have gone in front early on, Carlos Tenorio's shot deflecting off Ashley Cole and on to the bar after John Terry's mistake.
Frank Lampard missed two fine chances but England had done enough to win.
Sven-Goran Eriksson's side will now play either Portugal or Holland - who meet later on Sunday - on Saturday 1 July at 1600 BST in Gelsenkirchen, live on BBC One, Radio Five Live and on the BBC Sport website.
Again Eriksson will point to a job done, but again it was an England display which will produce more questions than answers.
Playing a 4-1-4-1 formation with Wayne Rooney up front alone, England looked comfortable and clumsy in equal measure on a strange afternoon in Stuttgart.
Yet they started off by doing the sensible thing in the stifling heat, with Michael Carrick at the hub as they passed the ball around and made Ecuador do the running.
However, the first genuine chance fell to the South Americans and after an error by John Terry they came agonisingly close to taking the lead.
Terry completely mis-timed a headed clearance and the ball fell to Carlos Tenorio to run clean through, the striker's fierce shot crashing off the bar thanks to a fine sliding block from Ashley Cole.
It was a Jekyll and Hyde performance from England - one minute keeping the ball with ease, the next giving it away and inviting pressure on to them.
Rooney cut an isolated figure as England put more effort into not conceding than scoring but they still looked shaky at the back, as Rio Ferdinand nearly put through his own net and Terry was booked for a neck-high tackle on Carlos Tenorio.
Ashley Cole gets in a brilliant block to deny Carlos Tenorio early on
The decision to play Carrick in the holding role gave England a better base to build from, but Lampard and Gerrard were not getting forward enough to give the increasingly frustrated Rooney some much-needed support.
The 20-year-old could only look on with envy at the other end as Carlos Tenorio and Agustin Delgado hunted as a pair, causing Terry and Ferdinand to lose their usual composure.
Gerrard took it upon himself to improve things after the break as he bombed forward from the left, only to see his centre run across the six-yard line with no England player in sight.
When the breakthrough came, it was like travelling back in time to 2001 when Beckham was at the very peak of his powers.
He sized up the opportunity from 30 yards, wonderfully whipped the ball over the wall and towards the bottom corner and saw it creep past Cristian Mora at his near post.
Lampard twice had chances straight after to double the lead, first dragging a left-foot shot wide then failing to find Rooney in the box when he should have shot himself.
He missed a sitter with 17 minutes left too, blazing over from 14 yards after some sensational skill from Rooney by the left touchline.
Fortunately, it made no difference. England, for the second time under Eriksson, have reached the last eight of the World Cup finals.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
England: Robinson, Hargreaves, Terry, Ferdinand, Ashley Cole, Beckham (Lennon 87), Carrick, Gerrard (Downing 90), Lampard, Joe Cole (Carragher 77), Rooney.
Subs Not Used: James, Campbell, Bridge, Carson, Crouch, Jenas, Neville, Walcott.
Booked: Terry, Robinson, Carragher.
Goals: Beckham 60.
Ecuador: Mora, De la Cruz, Hurtado, Espinoza, Reasco, Valencia, Edwin Tenorio (Lara 69), Castillo, Mendez, Delgado, Carlos Tenorio (Kaviedes 71).
Subs Not Used: Villafuerte, Ambrossi, Ayovi, Benitez, Borja, Guagua, Lanza, Perlaza, Saritama, Urrutia.
Booked: Valencia, Carlos Tenorio, De la Cruz.
Att: 52,000.
Ref: Frank De Bleeckere (Belgium).
Fifa man-of-the-match: John Terry
news.bbc.co.uk/sport1/hi/football/world_cup_2006/4991536.stm