Costa Rica book place at World Cup finals after playoff win
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[June 15, 2022]
By Mark Gleeson
DOHA (Reuters) -Joel Campbell’s early goal sent Costa Rica to the
World Cup for a third successive tournament as they edged past
10-man New Zealand 1-0 in their intercontinental playoff on Tuesday
and secured the last place at the finals in Qatar.
The former Arsenal striker scored after three minutes for Costa Rica
as he squeezed between two defenders to touch home a square pass
from Jewison Bennette with the New Zealand defence slow to react.
But New Zealand will feel hard done by after having an equaliser
chalked off by VAR for a foul in the build-up to Chris Wood putting
the ball in the back of the net in the 39th minute.
A check found that Matthew Garbett had fouled Oscar Duarte in what
looked a harsh decision.
A VAR check also led to a 69th-minute red card for Kosta Barbarouses,
leaving the Kiwis down to 10 men.
"We had a chance to score early on and then we struggled," said
Costa Rica coach Luis Fernando at the post-match press conference.
"We knew what their assets were. We knew we’d struggle with their
aerial balls. We had to make a change at halftime to have greater
possession of the ball and a line of five in defence. That proved
key."
The playoff between the fourth-placed team in the CONCACAF region
and the Oceania confederation winner, at the Ahmad bin Ali Stadium,
brought to an end the qualifying campaign for the 2022 finals in
Qatar, which run from Nov. 21-Dec. 18.
Costa Rica qualified for a sixth World Cup in total and will compete
in Group E at the finals against Germany, Japan and Spain.
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New Zealand's Alex Greive in action with Costa Rica's Bryan Oviedo
REUTERS/Mohammed Dabbous
Campbell’s goal had some 6,000 travelling
supporters, out of a crowd of 10,803, on their feet but did not
precipitate the expected dominant performance from the central
American team.
Instead it was New Zealand who looked the more enterprising of the
teams, with centre forward Wood, who was constantly watched by a
cautious Costa Rican defence, the target of their attacks.
Alex Greive and Garbett also had chances in the first half but their
shooting was off target.
Three changes by Costa Rica at halftime lifted them out of their
slumber but it was still New Zealand who showed more attacking
enterprise in the second half but without any return.
Costa Rica goalkeeper Kaylor Navas made a good stop in the 76th
minute from Clayton Lewis as New Zealand toiled in search of an
equaliser with Costa Rica sitting back and absorbing the pressure
until the final whistle set off joyous celebrations.
"I thought we were by far the better team," said disappointed New
Zealand coach Danny Hay. "One team dominated, there was only one
team trying to put together good quality football."
(Editing by Toby Davis)
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