Luis Suarez Rodrigo Bentancur Diego Alonso Darwin Núñez Federico Valverde Qatar Portugal Usa Ghana Uruguay South Korea county Rich Football cup Luis Suarez Rodrigo Bentancur Diego Alonso Darwin Núñez Federico Valverde Qatar Portugal Usa Ghana Uruguay South Korea county Rich

Rich in talent, uninspiring Uruguay can blame themselves for World Cup slump

channelnewsasia.com

AL WAKRAH, Qatar : With a history of deep World Cup runs and a squad oozing talent and experience, Uruguay's failure to reach the tournament's knockout stages for the first time in two decades was a footballing disaster entirely of their own making.Champions in 1930 and 1950 and present at 14 World Cups, La Celeste have become almost a permanent fixture in the last 16 or beyond, and by their own admission can have no excuses for Friday's Group H exit.

The hunger and dynamism Uruguay showed in their 2-0 win over Ghana in Al Wakrah was exactly what the World Cup was expecting of them, but it came much too late, with the South Americans paying the heaviest of prices for their failure to score a single goal in their opening two matches.

For a team famous for their big-name forwards, it was the most painful of eliminations, with South Korea beating already-qualified Portugal on Friday to advance from Group H instead, not on points or goal difference, but on goals scored.

The conditions had been ripe for another Uruguayan World Cup streak, with strong momentum from victories in their final four qualifying matches after Diego Alonso took over a year ago and turned around a campaign on the rocks.His squad was largely injury-free and had an enviable mix of experience and youth, with five players contesting their fourth World Cup, including strikers Luis Suarez and Edinson Cavani, alongside 13 first-timers, among them Real Madrid's Federico Valverde, Tottenham Hotspur's Rodrigo Bentancur and Liverpool's Darwin Nunez.

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The sight of a tearful Luis Suarez hiding his face in his shirt and an enraged Edinson Cavani knocking over a VAR monitor encapsulated Uruguay's sadness and frustration at their World Cup exit.
AL WAKRAH, Qatar: Giorgian de Arrascaeta netted twice in six minutes as a resurgent Uruguay beat Ghana 2-0 on Friday (Dec 2) in a battle for their World Cup survival, only to crash out agonisingly on goals scored after South Korea's shock win over Portugal.   In Group H deciders that went right down to the wire, Uruguay had one foot in the last 16 before South Korea scored in stoppage time to go through by virtue of notching one goal more than the South Americans over their three matches.   Uruguay had left themselves with a mountain to climb, with their cast of big-name strikers unable to find the net in their opening games, leading to their first group-stage exit in two decades.   "Without doubt, we did everything we could. We paid dear," said De Arrascaeta.   "We are sad because we left our all in this game, we scored goals and the outcome didn't depend on us, it left us out."   Veteran striker Luis Suarez, playing in his fourth World Cup, was recalled to the team as captain and was instrumental in both of the goals. At the final whistle, he was inconsolable and in tears after Uruguay's fate was sealed.   With South Korea tied with Portugal late in their match and Uruguay two goals up, La Celeste looked almost certain to go through before the pendulum swung agonisingly in the direction of South Korea.
AL WAKRAH, Qatar : Uruguay's bitterly disappointed manager and players blamed penalty decisions against them for their exit from the World Cup on Friday after they beat Ghana 2-0 but were pipped to a last 16 spot by South Korea due to an inferior number of goals scored.

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