Bangkok Post

Video replay aids Spain, Dutch lose again

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PARIS: Spain twice benefited from the use of video assistance to defeat France 2-0 on Tuesday, while Sweden rallied from two goals down to beat Portugal 3-2 and spoil Cristiano Ronaldo’s homecoming in Madeira.

Antoine Griezmann headed in what appeared to be the opening goal at the Stade de France shortly after half-time, but it was ruled out for offside after consultati­on with the video assistant referee.

David Silva then converted from the penalty spot after a foul by Laurent Koscielny, and the Spaniards again profited from technology as the referee reversed an offside decision that had initially negated Gerard’s Deulofeu 78th-minute effort.

“The victory was not a result of the [video] refereeing but due to the excellent work and attitude of my players,” said Spain coach Julen Lopetegui.

“The [video] refereeing gave justice to this match, it resolved those two incidents fairly.”

Griezmann’s celebratio­ns after the break were cut short when Layvin Kurzawa was shown to be in an offside position as he set up the Atletico Madrid striker.

The linesman’s flag was then raised as Deulofeu tapped in Jordi Alba’s left-wing cross, but replays indicated the on-loan AC Milan winger was marginally behind Samuel Umtiti as the ball was played into the box.

Real Madrid star Ronaldo paraded the European Championsh­ip trophy before kick-off at the Maritimo Stadium as Portugal played their first match on his home island of Madeira since 2001.

Ronaldo fired the hosts ahead with 18 minutes gone against Sweden before Andreas Granqvist’s own goal doubled the lead for the Euro 2016 champions.

But Viktor Claesson pulled one back just before Ronaldo was withdrawn on 58 minutes, and the Krasnodar midfielder then struck an equaliser before Joao Cancelo turned into his own net in injury time as Sweden crashed the party in dramatic fashion.

The Netherland­s slumped to another defeat, losing 2-1 at home to Italy in the country’s first game since the dismissal of head coach and former Dutch internatio­nal Danny Blind.

Assistant coach Fred Grim replaced Blind in the dugout with the Netherland­s’ World Cup hopes hanging by a thread following Saturday’s shock 2-0 loss in Bulgaria left the three-time runners-up fourth in their qualifying group.

The Dutch grabbed a 10th-minute lead in Amsterdam when Italy defender Alessio Romagnoli diverted the ball past 18-yearold Gianluigi Donnarumma — the AC Milan goalkeeper making his first internatio­nal start.

But Italy hit back immediatel­y through Eder and Leonardo Bonucci converted the winner after turning in the rebound from Marco Parolo’s header in the 32nd minute.

 ?? AFP ?? Referee Felix Swayer seeks video assistance next to France goalkeeper Hugo Lloris.
AFP Referee Felix Swayer seeks video assistance next to France goalkeeper Hugo Lloris.

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