The Times Herald (Norristown, PA)

Uruguay’s World Cup eliminatio­n could be era-ending

Long-serving coach Tabarez likely done as coach

- By Gerald Imray

NIZHNY NOVGOROD, RUSSIA » It didn’t work at either end of the field for Uruguay in the World Cup quarterfin­als.

Most clearly, when goalkeeper Fernando Muslera allowed Antoine Griezmann’s seemingly straightfo­rward shot to bounce off his hands and into the net to put France ahead 2-0 on Friday.

“Fernando is a top goalkeeper. We all make mistakes. That’s football,” Uruguay captain Diego Godin said. “We have to move on.”

Before that blunder at the back, Uruguay was struggling up front.

Luis Suarez was ineffectiv­e without striker partner Edinson Cavani, who didn’t recover from injury in time to play. That left Uruguay without its best forward at the tournament. With no Cavani, Suarez didn’t manage a shot on goal in the game. Cavani’s replacemen­t, Cristhian Stuani, had only one shot and was taken off in the second half.

It was a meek end to a World Cup that had all the signs of being a defining moment for long-serving coach Oscar Tabarez, the 71-yearold former teacher who has reformed Uruguayan soccer in the 12 years he has been in charge of the national team.

“We’ve lost before, so we’re not learning anything new,” Tabarez said, stressing Uruguay’s ability to recover from setbacks.

Yet the big question now for Uruguay, a country of only 3½ million people, is who will lead it forward.

Tabarez, who walks with the help of a crutch, is not expected to continue as head coach much longer. Suarez, Cavani, Godin, Muslera and other key players are all in their 30s and probably won’t be back for the 2022 World Cup in Qatar.

That might leave Tabarez’s mission, started over a decade ago, to put Uruguay permanentl­y back among the best incomplete. Uruguay won two World Cups in the early days of the tournament, before Tabarez began the rebuilding in 2006. The team hadn’t reached the quarterfin­als since 1970 but Uruguay has done it twice in the last three World Cups under Tabarez.

The veteran coach said he had faith that his country, however small the population, would continue to challenge at World Cups.

“What I know for sure is that Uruguay is going to be a football nation. It’s going to keep developing,” Tabarez said. “I think the world has seen what we have achieved. The world knows what we can do.”

Asked about his future, Tabarez wouldn’t say what his plans were with regard to continuing as coach, but there were hints.

“For me, it has been a huge honor to be the national coach,” he said, “and there’s nothing more beautiful or more satisfying than that.”

 ?? HASSAN AMMAR — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Uruguay’s Edinson Cavani embraces teammate Luis Suarez, left, at the end of the quarterfin­al match between Uruguay and France at the 2018 soccer World Cup in the Nizhny Novgorod Stadium, in Nizhny Novgorod, Russia, Friday.
HASSAN AMMAR — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Uruguay’s Edinson Cavani embraces teammate Luis Suarez, left, at the end of the quarterfin­al match between Uruguay and France at the 2018 soccer World Cup in the Nizhny Novgorod Stadium, in Nizhny Novgorod, Russia, Friday.

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