SAO PAULO (Reuters) - Uruguay forward Luis
Suarez faces a lengthy ban after Italy defender Giorgio Chiellini
accused him of biting during the South Americans' 1-0 Group D victory on
Tuesday, overshadowing a day of emotional extremes at the World Cup.
Tears of joy ran down the face of Colombia reserve keeper Faryd
Mondragon when he became the oldest man to play at the finals at the
age of 43, making a late appearance off the bench in a 4-1 win over
Japan that secured top spot in Group C.
There was anguish for the Ivory Coast and unbridled joy for Greece
in the other Group C clash, after Giorgos Samaras converted a
penalty in the dying seconds of injury time to snatch a 2-1 win and
pip the Africans to second place.
In the day's other match, a goalless draw with an experimental
England side in Belo Horizonte was enough to secure Costa Rica first
place in Group D and condemn the Europeans to their worst World Cup
showing since 1958.
For all the footballing drama, it was Suarez's off-the-ball antics
against Italy that were the major talking point around the world.
Soccer's world governing body FIFA said it was investigating the
incident, which took the gloss off an otherwise glorious day for
Uruguay after they edged 10-man Italy 1-0 in Natal to knock out the
four-times former champions.
Liverpool forward Suarez, hailed a hero for his winning brace
against England, has been banned twice before for biting, and looks
likely to be hit with another lengthy suspension despite escaping
punishment during the match.
"We are awaiting the official match reports and will gather all the
necessary elements in order to evaluate the matter," a FIFA
spokesperson said.
ITALIANS SEE RED
Suarez's escape rubbed salt into Italian wounds, after they had
complained bitterly about the red card shown to midfielder Claudio
Marchisio for a challenge on Egidio Arevalo Rios in the 59th minute.
That decision by referee Marco Rodriguez swung the game in Uruguay's
favour, after Italy appeared to be heading for the draw they needed
to reach the last 16.
With 10 minutes to go, Suarez clashed with Chiellini in Italy's
penalty area, and the Italians were still complaining he had bitten
the defender when Uruguay captain Diego Godin scored a fortuitous
81st-minute winner that flew in off his shoulder.
A furious Chiellini had pulled down his shirt to show a mark to the
referee, and Reuters photographs from the game show what appeared to
be bite marks on his shoulder.
"It was ridiculous not to send Suarez off," he told Rai TV. "It is
clear-cut and then there was the obvious dive afterwards, because he
knew very well that he did something that he shouldn't have done."
Suarez contested that version of events.
"Those are situations that happen on the pitch. We were both just
there inside the area. He shoved me with his shoulder, and my eye
got left like that also," he said in reference to Chiellini's mark.
Uruguay coach Oscar Tabarez said he did not see the incident, but
feared that Suarez, who missed Uruguay's 2010 World Cup semi-final
after being sent off for a handball on the line that denied Ghana
what would have been a match-winning goal, was being unfairly
singled out.
"It seems there is this animosity toward him and he is being
persecuted by past events," he told reporters. "There are people
hiding behind the tree waiting for something to happen."
Italy coach Cesare Prandelli, who offered his resignation after the
match, said it had turned on the sending off.
"It's ridiculous to be down to 10 men in a game like this," he said.
"There weren't any bad fouls or anything that merited a sending off.
You can't affect a game like that. The referee ruined the game."
SAMARAS SAVES GREECE
The other big drama came in Fortaleza, where Ivory Coast were
seconds away from making the knockout stage when Samaras was judged
to have been tripped in the box by Giovanni Sio as the Greeks poured
forward in search of a winner.
Samaras picked himself up after a debatable decision and kept his
cool to stroke home the spot kick and make it 2-1, triggering wild
celebrations during which the striker was buried under team mates
who knew theirs was the narrowest of escapes.
"The end result is cruel, even if the Greeks deserved this victory,"
said crestfallen Ivory Coast coach Sabri Lamouchi. "We could have
had the match stopped one minute earlier. We saw that everything is
in the details. It's very tough, it's very hard."
The Greeks, who had failed to get past the group stage at their two
previous appearances at the World Cup, will face Costa Rica in
Recife on Sunday in the last 16.
Group D's surprise package Costa Rica beat Uruguay and Italy before
playing out a lacklustre 0-0 draw with England to make sure of top
spot.
England manager Roy Hodgson made nine changes from a defeat by
Uruguay that ruled out any chance of qualification, and despite the
lack of goals, he praised the performance that capped a bitterly
disappointing campaign.
With Colombia's main marksman Radamel Falcao missing the tournament
through injury and Teofilo Gutierrez rested, striker Jackson
Martinez's two goals against Japan in Cuiaba underlined the South
Americans' depth of attacking talent.
Colombia, in the last 16 for the first time since 1990, thrashed
Japan 4-1 to maintain their 100 percent record and set up a
mouth-watering clash with Uruguay.
Off the pitch, there were royal Belgian blushes when footage
appeared of Queen Mathilde congratulating Romelu Lukaku for scoring
the winning goal in a 1-0 victory over Russia on Sunday, when the
actual goalscorer was Divock Origi.
(Reporting by Mike Collett-White; Editing by Ken Ferris)