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Nine against nine as Portugal dump Dutch

Portugal booked a World Cup quarter-final with England on Sunday with an ill-tempered 1-0 win over the Netherlands in which both teams had two players sent off.

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world cup fifa 2006Portugal 1 (Maniche, 23rd) vs Netherlands 0.

NUREMBERG: Portugal booked a World Cup quarter-final with England on Sunday with an ill-tempered 1-0 win over the Netherlands in which both teams had two players sent off.

Russian referee Valentin Ivanov brandished a record 20 cards in total - 16 of them yellow - as Portugal scraped through to extend coach Luiz Felipe Scolari's record World Cup winning streak to 11 matches.

Ugly scenes marred the match as first Costinha, then Khalid Boulahrouz, then Deco and finally Giovanni van Bronckhorst saw red.

Portugal went 1-0 up after 23 minutes but put themselves in trouble when Costinha received his second yellow just before half-time.

They also lost Cristiano Ronaldo to a right thigh injury. But Boulahrouz received his marching orders for elbowing Luis Figo - who himself was fortunate to stay on the pitch after headbutting Mark van Bommel who belatedly and theatrically collapsed to the ground - before Deco was dismissed for throwing away the ball.

Van Bronckhorst trudged off in the dying seconds of the match, killing off the Netherlands' faint hopes of taking it into extra time.

The disciplinary nightmare marred a promising encounter between two of the tournament's form teams who had amassed 32 matches unbeaten between them.

It was Marco van Basten's first competitive defeat as Dutch coach and leaves the Netherlands still waiting for their first win against Portugal since 1991.

Maniche was on target for his second goal of the tournament as the Euro 2004 finalists cut their way through the Dutch defence after 23 minutes, putting them on course for a quarter-final with England.

Maniche, who also scored a blinder against the Dutch in the 2-1 victory in the Euro 2004 semi-finals, said that the victory was a team effort.

"We are a talented squad and we deserved the victory," he said.

However he blamed the referee for overreacting to what he thought was not a violent match.

"The referee did not contribute to the spectacle," said the 28-year-old.

"I don't think that it was such a violent match to merit so many sendings off," added Maniche.

Pauleta come close to making it two in the final seconds of the half but was denied by Edwin van der Sar's fine reflex save.

However, Portugal received a double blow when a tearful Ronaldo was subbed off and Costinha received his marching orders for a second bookable offence.

Ronaldo had been struggling with a thigh problem since going down under a heavy challenge from Boulahrouz.

The Dutch almost got off to a flying start with van Bommel firing just wide in the first minute.

Robin van Persie also sent one thudding against the advertising boards and Arjen Robben failed to get a meaningful shot away after a neat interchange with Dirk Kuyt, who replaced misfiring striker Ruud van Nistelrooy.

But it was Portugal who broke the deadlock when Pauleta met a cross from the irrepressible Deco, teeing it up for Maniche who made space for himself before finishing with his right foot.

Suddenly the Dutch attack looked toothless with Robben struggling under the close attentions of Miguel and Kuyt also finding himself locked down.

But Van Persie sparked them back into life with a twisting run that turned the Portuguese defence inside-out before shooting wide.

Robben had a penalty appeal turned down when he received studs in his shoulder after a knock-on from Kuyt.

The Dutch signalled their intent immediately after half-time when Phillip Cocu hit the bar and van Bommel had a skidding effort scrambled wide by Ricardo.

Kuyt also saw a good effort parried by Ricardo before Maniche tested Edwin van der Sar at the other end.

But the match threatened to disintegrate after an hour when Figo, angry about a foul on Deco, was booked for headbutting van Bommel.

Minutes later Boulahrouz elbowed Figo on the left touchline, earning his second yellow and sparking a furious shoving match between the two benches.

More trouble followed when Wesley Sneijder shoved Petit away from the prone John Heitinga, who had been fouled by Deco.

Deco's dismissal with just over 10 minutes left incensed Scolari, who had been on and off his bench all night.

Meanwhile the Netherlands were growing increasingly desperate with Kuyt firing straight at Ricardo one-on-one before seeing an acrobatic effort blocked.

But the Dutch challenge was effectively grounded by van Bronckhorst's late dismissal and the elated Portuguese burst into celebration on the final whistle.

Match stats Portugal Netherlands
Shots (on goal) 11 25
Fouls 9 12
Corner kicks 3 5
Off-sides 4 2
Time of poss 51% 49%
Yellow card 7 5
Red card 2 2
Saves 6 5

Disciplinary situation in the World Cup

Red Cards: Andre Macanga (Angola), Jean-Paul Yaovi Abalo Dosseh (Togo), Avery John (T&T), Eddie Pope (US), Pablo Mastroeni (US), Daniele De Rossi (Italy), Radoslaw Sobolewski (Poland), Mateja Kezman (Serbia & Montenegro), Tomas Ujfalusi (Czech Republic), Jan Polak (Czech Republic), Vladyslav Vashchuk (Ukraine), Luis Perez (Mexico), Albert Nadj (Serbia & Montenegro), Cyrille Domoraud (Ivory Coast), Brett Emerton (Australia), Josip Simunic (Croatia), Dario Simic (Croatia), Ziad Jaziri (Tunisia), Teddy Lucic (Sweden), Deco (Portugal), Costinha (Portugal), Giovanni van Bronckhorst (Netherlands), Khalid Boulahrouz (Netherlands).

Note: The current tally of 23 red cards for the 2006 World Cup surpasses the previous record of 22 expulsions at the 1998 tournament.

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