2006 FIFA World Cup Group E - Czech Republic Vs Italy

Czech Republic Vs Italy

22 June 2006
16:00
Czech Republic 0–2 Italy FIFA WM Stadion Hamburg, Hamburg
Attendance: 50,000
Referee: Benito Archundia (Mexico)
(Report) Materazzi 26'
Inzaghi 87'
Czech Republic Italy

CZECH REPUBLIC:
GK 1 Petr Čech
RB 2 Zdeněk Grygera
CB 5 Radoslav Kováč 78'
CB 22 David Rozehnal
LB 6 Marek Jankulovski
DM 19 Jan Polák 35', 45+2'
RM 8 Karel Poborský 46'
CM 10 Tomáš Rosický
CM 11 Pavel Nedvěd (c)
LM 20 Jaroslav Plašil
CF 15 Milan Baroš 64'
Substitutions:
MF 17 Jiří Štajner 46'
MF 14 David Jarolím 64'
FW 18 Marek Heinz 78'
Manager:
Karel Brückner

ITALY:
GK 1 Gianluigi Buffon
RB 19 Gianluca Zambrotta
CB 5 Fabio Cannavaro (c)
CB 13 Alessandro Nesta 17'
LB 3 Fabio Grosso
RM 16 Mauro Camoranesi 74'
CM 20 Simone Perrotta
CM 21 Andrea Pirlo
LM 8 Gennaro Gattuso 31'
SS 10 Francesco Totti
CF 11 Alberto Gilardino 60'
Substitutions:
DF 23 Marco Materazzi 17'
FW 18 Filippo Inzaghi 60'
MF 17 Simone Barone 74'
Manager:
Marcello Lippi
Wikinews has related news: Italy sink Czech Republic 2-0 in Group E

Man of the Match:
Marco Materazzi

Assistant referees:
José Ramírez
Héctor Vergara
Fourth official:
Óscar Ruiz
Fifth official:
José Navia

Read more about this topic:  2006 FIFA World Cup Group E

Famous quotes containing the words czech, republic and/or italy:

    I’m neither Czech nor Slovak ... I’m still trying to figure out who I am. I think I’m Jewish. But first I want to be human.
    Natasha Dudinska (b. c. 1967)

    I date the end of the old republic and the birth of the empire to the invention, in the late thirties, of air conditioning. Before air conditioning, Washington was deserted from mid-June to September.... But after air conditioning and the Second World War arrived, more or less at the same time, Congress sits and sits while the presidents—or at least their staffs—never stop making mischief.
    Gore Vidal (b. 1925)

    Uncle Matthew’s four years in France and Italy between 1914 and 1918 had given him no great opinion of foreigners. “Frogs,” he would say, “are slightly better than Huns or Wops, but abroad is unutterably bloody and foreigners are fiends.”
    Nancy Mitford (1904–1973)