World Cup 2006 News
Swiss pay penalty for lack of ambition as Ukraine advance
By Stefan Korshak Jun 26, 2006, 22:51 GMT

Disappointed Swiss soccer fans are disappointed after loosing the match Ukraine against Switzerland at the FIFA World Cup on Monday, June 26, 2006, on a large screen in downtown Zurich, Switzerland. EPA/ALESSANDRO DELLA BELLA
Cologne - Ukraine beat goal-shy Switzerland 3-0 on penalties on Monday to reach the quarter-finals of the World Cup and send the Swiss home with just a pair of unenviable records.
For the fourth game in a row, the Swiss did not concede a goal but they failed to find the net in 120 minutes and missed all three penalties in the shootout as Ukraine advanced to the last eight on their first World Cup appearance.
Ukraine now take on Italy in Hamburg on Friday for a place in the last four, while Switzerland go home even though they were unbeaten in normal time in their four games.
They are the first team to be eliminated from the World Cup without conceding a goal, while it was the first time in 17 World Cup shootouts that a team has failed to score even a single kick.
Even Andriy Shevchenko's miss with the first kick of the shootout did not help the Swiss, but they deserved little else after one of the least entertaining matches of the competition to date.
'We have great heart,' Shevchenko said. 'We suffered a lot and all our players made great sacrifices.'
'It is great to win and I am very happy for all the people of Ukraine.'
Swiss coach Koebi Kuhn was at a loss to explain his team's failure to find the net.
'All of my players this morning managed to score from the spot all the time,' he said.
'It is sad, we are going home, but I think we are leaving with a lot of positive things.
'I said a while ago that the World Cup might be a bit early for us, but I need to change that, I think we were at the right place at the right time and we could have gone through.'
Switzerland were not the only guilty party for Ukraine were equally toothless in attack, with very few clearcut chances for either team.
Shevchenko did hit the bar on 20 minutes with a diving header and Alexander Frei, who scored two goals in the group stages, also struck the crossbar with a well-struck free-kick.
But for long periods, the two goalkeepers must have wondered what their gloves were for as they watched both teams snuff each other out.
Oleg Blokhin's side were unlucky not to win a penalty just before the hour mark when Shevchenko's free-kick clearly struck the forearm of a Swiss defender.
Shevchenko, who will play for Chelsea next season, smashed a left- foot strike just wide (66) and Andriy Gusin headed narrowly wide from a corner (73).
Ukraine were the more attacking side in the last 20 minutes of the match but they could not breach the Swiss defence and the game drifted into extra time.
Both sides lacked the courage to chase the game in extra time and it looked like only a mistake would yield a goal.
Oleksandr Shovkovskyi easily gathered a shot from Swiss captain Johann Vogel but apart from a couple of dangerous crosses, neither goalkeeper having a difficult shot in extra time.
Ukraine went first in the penalty shootout but Shevchenko, who missed from the spot in the Champions League final against Liverpool in 2005, saw his tame effort saved by Pascal Zuberbuehler.
But the Swiss handed the advantage back immediately when Streller's shot was saved by Shovkovskyi. Artem Milevskiy and Sergiy Rebrov then scored for Ukraine while Tranquillo Barnetta hit the bar and Ricardo Cabanas' shot was saved.
And Gusev kept his nerve to hit the crucial penalty to clinch the win.
Switzerland defender Ludovic Magnin could barely hide his disappointment.
'We are depressed and frustrated,' he said. 'We are people foremost - we have showed the world that small Switzerland is no longer small in football.
'We did not take our chances but I think we should learn from this - I think we left a positive image.'
© 2006 dpa - Deutsche Presse-AgenturCOMMENT
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