2006 FIFA World Cup knockout stage explained

The knockout stage was the second and final stage of the 2006 FIFA World Cup, following the group stage. The top two teams from each group (16 in total) advance to the knockout stage to compete in a single-elimination style tournament. A match was played between the two losing teams of the semi-finals to determine which team finished in third place.

All times local (CEST/UTC+2)

Qualified teams

The top two placed teams from each of the eight groups qualified for the knockout stage.

Round of 16

Germany vs Sweden

Germany progressed thanks to two goals from Lukas Podolski inside the opening 12 minutes. His first was in the fourth minute; German captain Michael Ballack sent a pass to Miroslav Klose, who was tackled by goalkeeper Andreas Isaksson, only for an onrushing Podolski to turn the ball in.[1] Eight minutes later, a pass from Klose found Podolski, who scored his second goal.[2] Germany held out for a 2–0 win.

GK 1 Jens Lehmann
RB 3 Arne Friedrich
CB 17Per Mertesacker
CB 21Christoph Metzelder
LB 16Philipp Lahm
RM 19Bernd Schneider
CM 8
CM 13Michael Ballack (c)
LM 7
CF 11Miroslav Klose
CF 20
Substitutions:
MF 18
FW 10
MF 5
Manager:
Jürgen Klinsmann
GK 1 Andreas Isaksson
RB 7 Niclas Alexandersson
CB 3 Olof Mellberg (c)
CB 4
LB 5 Erik Edman
DM 6 Tobias Linderoth
RM 18
LM 9 Freddie Ljungberg
AM 16
CF 10
CF 11Henrik Larsson
Substitutions:
DF 13
MF 21
FW 20
Manager:
Lars Lagerbäck
Man of the Match:
Miroslav Klose (Germany)

Assistant referees:
Aristeu Tavares (Brazil)
Edmílson Corona (Brazil)
Fourth official:
Shamsul Maidin (Singapore)
Fifth official:
Prachya Permpanich (Thailand)

Argentina vs Mexico

See also: Argentina–Mexico football rivalry.

GK 1 Roberto Abbondanzieri
RB 13Lionel Scaloni
CB 2 Roberto Ayala
CB 6
LB 3 Juan Pablo Sorín (c)
DM 8 Javier Mascherano
RM 5
LM 18Maxi Rodríguez
AM 10Juan Román Riquelme
CF 7
CF 9
Substitutions:
FW 11
MF 16
FW 19
Manager:
José Pékerman
GK 1 Oswaldo Sánchez
CB 4 Rafael Márquez (c)
CB 5 Ricardo Osorio
CB 3 Carlos Salcido
RM 16Mario Méndez
CM 15
CM 8
CM 11
LM 18
CF 17
CF 9 Jared Borgetti
Substitutions:
MF 6
MF 14
MF 7
Manager:
Ricardo La Volpe
Man of the Match:
Maxi Rodríguez (Argentina)

Assistant referees:
Francesco Buragina (Switzerland)
Matthias Arnet (Switzerland)
Fourth official:
Khalil Al Ghamdi (Saudi Arabia)
Fifth official:
Fathi Arabati (Jordan)

England vs Ecuador

GK 1
RB 16Owen Hargreaves
CB 5 Rio Ferdinand
CB 6
LB 3 Ashley Cole
DM 18Michael Carrick
RM 7 David Beckham (c)
CM 4
CM 8 Frank Lampard
LM 11
CF 9 Wayne Rooney
Substitutions:
DF 15
MF 19
MF 20
DF 2Gary Neville
DF 12Sol Campbell
FW 21Peter Crouch
FW 10Michael Owen
Manager:
Sven-Göran Eriksson
GK 12Cristian Mora
RB 4
CB 3 Iván Hurtado (c)
CB 17Giovanny Espinoza
LB 18Neicer Reasco
RM 16
CM 14Segundo Castillo
CM 20
LM 8 Édison Méndez
CF 21
CF 11Agustín Delgado
Substitutions:
MF 7
FW 10
Manager:
Luis Fernando Suárez
Man of the Match:
John Terry (England)

Assistant referees:
Peter Hermans (Belgium)
Walter Vromans (Belgium)
Fourth official:
Óscar Ruiz (Colombia)
Fifth official:
José Navia (Colombia)

Portugal vs Netherlands

See main article: Battle of Nuremberg (2006 FIFA World Cup).

GK 1
RB 13Miguel
CB 5 Fernando Meira
CB 16Ricardo Carvalho
LB 14
CM 6
CM 18
RW 7 Luís Figo (c)
AM 20
LW 17
CF 9
Substitutions:
FW 11
MF 8
MF 19
Manager:
Luiz Felipe Scolari
GK 1 Edwin van der Sar (c)
RB 3
CB 13André Ooijer
CB 4
LB 5
RM 18
CM 20
LM 8
RF 17Robin van Persie
CF 7 Dirk Kuyt
LF 11Arjen Robben
Substitutions:
MF 10
DF 14
FW 19
Manager:
Marco van Basten
Man of the Match:
Maniche (Portugal)

Assistant referees:
Nikolay Golubev (Russia)
Evgeni Volnin (Russia)
Fourth official:
Marco Rodríguez (Mexico)
Fifth official:
José Luis Camargo (Mexico)

Italy vs Australia

GK 1 Gianluigi Buffon
RB 19
CB 5 Fabio Cannavaro (c)
CB 23
LB 3
RM 20Simone Perrotta
CM 21Andrea Pirlo
LM 8
AM 7
CF 11
CF 9
Substitutions:
FW 15
DF 6
FW 10
Manager:
Marcello Lippi
GK 1 Mark Schwarzer
CB 3 Craig Moore
CB 2 Lucas Neill
CB 14Scott Chipperfield
RM 5 Jason Culina
CM 13
LM 20
RW 21
AM 4
LW 23Mark Bresciano
CF 9 Mark Viduka (c)
Substitutions:
FW 15
Manager:
Guus Hiddink
Man of the Match:
Gianluigi Buffon (Italy)

Assistant referees:
Víctoriano Giráldez Carrasco (Spain)
Pedro Medina Hernández (Spain)
Fourth official:
Éric Poulat (France)
Fifth official:
Lionel Dagorne (France)

Switzerland vs Ukraine

Despite their early elimination, Switzerland became the first team in the history of the FIFA World Cup to leave an edition of the tournament without conceding a single goal.[5]

GK 1 Pascal Zuberbühler
RB 23Philipp Degen
CB 2
CB 20Patrick Müller
LB 3 Ludovic Magnin
DM 6 Johann Vogel (c)
RM 16
LM 8 Raphaël Wicky
AM 7 Ricardo Cabanas
SS 22
CF 9
Substitutions:
DF 13
FW 11
FW 18
Manager:
Köbi Kuhn
GK 1 Oleksandr Shovkovskyi
CB 9 Oleh Husyev
CB 17Vladyslav Vashchuk
CB 2 Andriy Nesmachnyi
CM 8 Oleh Shelayev
CM 14Andriy Husin
CM 4 Anatoliy Tymoschuk
AM 16
AM 19
SS 10
CF 7 Andriy Shevchenko (c)
Substitutions:
MF 21
FW 11
FW 15
Manager:
Oleg Blokhin
Man of the Match:
Oleksandr Shovkovskyi (Ukraine)

Assistant referees:
José Ramírez (Mexico)
Héctor Vergara (Canada)
Fourth official:
Jerome Damon (South Africa)
Fifth official:
Justice Yeboah (Ghana)

Brazil vs Ghana

GK 1 Dida
RB 2 Cafu (c)
CB 3 Lúcio
CB 4
LB 6 Roberto Carlos
CM 5
CM 11Zé Roberto
AM 8
AM 10Ronaldinho
CF 7
CF 9 Ronaldo
Substitutions:
MF 17
MF 19
MF 20
FW 23Robinho
GK 22Júlio César
Manager:
Carlos Alberto Parreira
GK 22Richard Kingson
RB 15
CB 5 John Mensah
CB 7 Illiasu Shilla
LB 6 Emmanuel Pappoe
RM 23Haminu Dramani
CM 18
CM 10Stephen Appiah (c)
LM 11
CF 3
CF 14
Substitutions:
MF 9
FW 12
MF 8 Michael Essien
Manager:
Ratomir Dujković
Man of the Match:
Zé Roberto (Brazil)

Assistant referees:
Roman Slyško (Slovakia)
Martin Balko (Slovakia)
Fourth official:
Mark Shield (Australia)
Fifth official:
Nathan Gibson (Australia)

Spain vs France

See also: France–Spain football rivalry.

GK 1
RB 15Sergio Ramos
CB 22Pablo
CB 5
LB 3 Mariano Pernía
CM 18Cesc Fàbregas
CM 14Xabi Alonso
CM 8
AM 21
AM 9 Fernando Torres
CF 7 Raúl (c)
Substitutions:
FW 11
MF 17
MF 16
MF 13Andrés Iniesta
GK 23Pepe Reina
GK 19Santiago Cañizares
Manager:
Luis Aragonés
GK 16Fabien Barthez
RB 19Willy Sagnol
CB 15Lilian Thuram
CB 5 William Gallas
LB 3 Eric Abidal
CM 4
CM 6 Claude Makélélé
RW 22
AM 10Zinedine Zidane (c)
LW 7
CF 12
Substitutions:
FW 9
FW 11
FW 20David Trezeguet
Manager:
Raymond Domenech
Man of the Match:
Patrick Vieira (France)

Assistant referees:
Cristiano Copelli (Italy)
Alessandro Stagnoli (Italy)
Fourth official:
Markus Merk (Germany)
Fifth official:
Christian Schräer (Germany)

Quarter-finals

Germany vs Argentina

Argentina took the lead through Roberto Ayala early in the second half, but the South Americans’ goalkeeper Roberto Abbondanzieri was injured after the goal and his replacement Leo Franco was unable to stop Miroslav Klose from equalizing with ten minutes left in regulation time. The match went to extra time. With no goals scored, the semifinal spot came down to penalties, during which German goalkeeper Jens Lehmann was seen looking at a piece of paper kept in his sock before each Argentinian player would come forward for a penalty kick. Lehmann had researched the penalty taking habits of seven players on the Argentinian team. However, only two players on his list ended up taking a penalty that day. On the attempts by those two players, Lehmann saved one and came close to saving the other.[6] He then had to guess on Esteban Cambiasso's kick since he did not have any information written on his list about Cambiasso. However, he derived an educated guess from the videos he had studied and pretended to read the piece of paper and nodded his head before putting it away, implying to Cambiasso that he did in fact have information on the kicker. Lehmann guessed correctly and saved the penalty, thus winning the shootout for Germany.[7] "Lehmann's list" became so popular in the annals of German football history that it is now in the Haus der Geschichte museum.

GK 1 Jens Lehmann
RB 3
CB 17Per Mertesacker
CB 21Christoph Metzelder
LB 16Philipp Lahm
RM 19
CM 8 Torsten Frings
CM 13Michael Ballack (c)
LM 7
CF 11
CF 20
Substitutions:
MF 18
MF 22
FW 10
Manager:
Jürgen Klinsmann
GK 1
RB 4 Fabricio Coloccini
CB 2 Roberto Ayala
CB 6 Gabriel Heinze
LB 3 Juan Pablo Sorín (c)
DM 8
RM 18
LM 22Lucho González
AM 10
CF 9
CF 11Carlos Tevez
Substitutions:
GK 12
MF 5
FW 20
Other disciplinary actions:
DF 17
Manager:
José Pékerman
Man of the Match:
Michael Ballack (Germany)

Assistant referees:
Roman Slysko (Slovakia)
Martin Balko (Slovakia)
Fourth official:
Massimo Busacca (Switzerland)
Fifth official:
Francesco Buragina (Switzerland)

Italy vs Ukraine

GK 1
RB 19Gianluca Zambrotta
CB 5 Fabio Cannavaro (c)
CB 6 Andrea Barzagli
LB 3 Fabio Grosso
RM 16
CM 21
CM 8
LM 20Simone Perrotta
AM 10Francesco Totti
CF 9 Luca Toni
Substitutions:
MF 17
DF 22
DF 2
Manager:
Marcello Lippi
GK 1 Oleksandr Shovkovskyi
RB 9
CB 22
CB 6
LB 2 Andriy Nesmachnyi
CM 14Andriy Husin
CM 4 Anatoliy Tymoschuk
CM 8 Oleh Shelayev
RW 15
CF 7 Andriy Shevchenko (c)
LW 19
Substitutions:
FW 16
DF 17
FW 20
Manager:
Oleg Blokhin
Man of the Match:
Gennaro Gattuso (Italy)

Assistant referees:
Peter Hermans (Belgium)
Walter Vromans (Belgium)
Fourth official:
Toru Kamikawa (Japan)
Fifth official:
Yoshikazu Hiroshima (Japan)

England vs Portugal

GK 1 Paul Robinson
RB 2 Gary Neville
CB 5 Rio Ferdinand
CB 6
LB 3 Ashley Cole
RM 7 David Beckham (c)
CM 4 Steven Gerrard
CM 16
CM 8 Frank Lampard
LM 11
CF 9
Substitutions:
MF 19
FW 21
DF 15
Manager:
Sven-Göran Eriksson
GK 1 Ricardo
RB 13Miguel
CB 5 Fernando Meira
CB 16
LB 14Nuno Valente
CM 19
CM 8
CM 18Maniche
AM 7 Luís Figo (c)
AM 17Cristiano Ronaldo
CF 9
Substitutions:
FW 11
MF 10
FW 23
Manager:
Luiz Felipe Scolari
Man of the Match:
Owen Hargreaves (England)

Assistant referees:
Darío García (Argentina)
Rodolfo Otero (Argentina)
Fourth official:
Coffi Codjia (Benin)
Fifth official:
Aboudou Aderodjou (Benin)

Brazil vs France

Defending world champions Brazil went out in the quarter-finals after Zinedine Zidane found an unmarked Thierry Henry from a free kick, the striker having been given a free run at the ball after his marker, Roberto Carlos, stopped to tie his shoe.[8]

GK 1
RB 2 Cafu (c)
CB 3
CB 4
LB 6 Roberto Carlos
RM 17Gilberto Silva
CM 8
CM 19
LM 11Zé Roberto
SS 10Ronaldinho
CF 9
Substitutions:
FW 7
DF 13
FW 23
Manager:
Carlos Alberto Parreira
GK 16Fabien Barthez
RB 19
CB 15
CB 5 William Gallas
LB 3 Eric Abidal
CM 4 Patrick Vieira
CM 6 Claude Makélélé
RW 22
AM 10Zinedine Zidane (c)
LW 7
CF 12
Substitutions:
FW 9
FW 11
FW 14
Manager:
Raymond Domenech
Man of the Match:
Zinedine Zidane (France)

Assistant referees:
Víctoriano Giráldez Carrasco (Spain)
Pedro Medina Hernández (Spain)
Fourth official:
Mark Shield (Australia)
Fifth official:
Ben Wilson (Australia)

Semi-finals

Germany vs Italy

See also: Germany–Italy football rivalry. This was the fourth time that Italy defeated the host nation of tournament, after France in 1938, Mexico in 1970 and Argentina in 1978.

GK 1 Jens Lehmann
RB 3 Arne Friedrich
CB 17Per Mertesacker
CB 21
LB 16Philipp Lahm
RM 19
CM 13Michael Ballack (c)
CM 5 Sebastian Kehl
LM 18
CF 11
CF 20Lukas Podolski
Substitutions:
MF 7
MF 22
FW 10
Manager:
Jürgen Klinsmann
GK 1
RB 19Gianluca Zambrotta
CB 5 Fabio Cannavaro (c)
CB 23Marco Materazzi
LB 3 Fabio Grosso
RM 16
CM 21Andrea Pirlo
CM 8 Gennaro Gattuso
LM 20
AM 10Francesco Totti
CF 9
Substitutions:
FW 11
FW 15
FW 7
Manager:
Marcello Lippi
Man of the Match:
Andrea Pirlo (Italy)

Assistant referees:
José Ramírez (Mexico)
Héctor Vergara (Canada)
Fourth official:
Toru Kamikawa (Japan)
Fifth official:
Yoshikazu Hiroshima (Japan)

Portugal vs France

GK 1 Ricardo
RB 13
CB 5 Fernando Meira
CB 16
LB 14Nuno Valente
CM 6
CM 18Maniche
RW 7 Luís Figo (c)
AM 20Deco
LW 17Cristiano Ronaldo
CF 9
Substitutions:
DF 2
FW 11
FW 23
Manager:
Luiz Felipe Scolari
GK 16Fabien Barthez
RB 19Willy Sagnol
CB 15Lilian Thuram
CB 5 William Gallas
LB 3 Eric Abidal
CM 4 Patrick Vieira
CM 6 Claude Makélélé
RW 22
AM 10Zinedine Zidane (c)
LW 7
CF 12
Substitutions:
FW 11
FW 9
FW 14
Manager:
Raymond Domenech
Man of the Match:
Lilian Thuram (France)

Assistant referees:
Wálter Rial (Uruguay)
Pablo Fandino (Uruguay)
Fourth official:
Mark Shield (Australia)
Fifth official:
Nathan Gibson (Australia)

Third place play-off

This was the third time that Portugal lost to the host nation of tournament, after England in 1966 and South Korea in 2002.

GK 12Oliver Kahn (c)
RB 16Philipp Lahm
CB 6 Jens Nowotny
CB 21Christoph Metzelder
LB 2 Marcell Jansen
RM 19Bernd Schneider
CM 5 Sebastian Kehl
CM 8
LM 7
CF 11
CF 20
Substitutions:
FW 10
FW 9
MF 15
Manager:
Jürgen Klinsmann
GK 1 Ricardo
RB 2
CB 5 Fernando Meira
CB 4
LB 14
CM 6
CM 18Maniche
RW 17Cristiano Ronaldo
AM 20Deco
LW 11Simão
CF 9 Pauleta (c)
Substitutions:
MF 8
FW 21
MF 7
Manager:
Luiz Felipe Scolari
Man of the Match:
Bastian Schweinsteiger (Germany)

Assistant referees:
Yoshikazu Hiroshima (Japan)
Kim Dae-young (South Korea)
Fourth official:
Coffi Codjia (Benin)
Fifth official:
Celestin Ntagungira (Rwanda)

Final

See main article: 2006 FIFA World Cup final.

GK 1
RB 19
CB 5 Fabio Cannavaro (c)
CB 23Marco Materazzi
LB 3 Fabio Grosso
RM 16
CM 8 Gennaro Gattuso
CM 21Andrea Pirlo
LM 20
AM 10
CF 9 Luca Toni
Substitutions:
MF 4
FW 15
FW 7
Manager:
Marcello Lippi
GK 16Fabien Barthez
RB 19
CB 15Lilian Thuram
CB 5 William Gallas
LB 3 Eric Abidal
CM 4
CM 6 Claude Makélélé
RW 22
AM 10Zinedine Zidane (c)
LW 7
CF 12
Substitutions:
MF 18
FW 20
FW 11
Manager:
Raymond Domenech
Man of the Match:
Andrea Pirlo (Italy)

Assistant referees:
Darío García (Argentina)
Rodolfo Otero (Argentina)
Fourth official:
Luis Medina Cantalejo (Spain)
Fifth official:
Víctoriano Giráldez Carrasco (Spain)

Notes and References

  1. News: Germany 2-0 Sweden. 24 June 2006.
  2. News: Germany 2 - 0 Sweden. The Guardian. 24 June 2006. Ashdown. John.
  3. In the 52nd minute, Henrik Larsson won a penalty for Sweden when he was challenged by Christoph Metzelder, only for Larsson himself to shoot the ball over the crossbar.[2]
  4. On 35 minutes, Teddy Lučić received a second yellow card for a foul on Klose.[2]
  5. Web site: 27 June 2006. 2006 FIFA World Cup - News - Out but no goals against . https://web.archive.org/web/20200926204801/https://www.fifa.com/worldcup/news/out-but-goals-against-23830. 26 September 2020. live. 24 March 2021. www.fifa.com.
  6. Web site: Germany beat Argentina 4–2 in a penalty shoot-out after a tense quarter-final in Berlin ended 1–1 after extra-time. . BBC Sport . 30 June 2006 . 5 April 2014 .
  7. Web site: The piece of paper that helped Germany turn the page. www.fifa.com.
  8. Web site: 10 Best World Cup Moments. siphiwetshabalala.co.za. Siphiwe Tshabalala. 3 September 2014. 4 September 2014. https://web.archive.org/web/20140904071229/http://siphiwetshabalala.co.za/2014/06/10/10-best-world-cup-moments/. dead.