Ghana lose to Uruguay however witness 2010 miscreant Suarez breakdown after South Korea’s late goal against Portugal dispense with the South Americans.
The match ended with tears. for Ghana and Uruguay. On the field, in the stands, a torrent of tears poured onto Al Janoub’s sands. Luis Suarez cried uncontrollably in the dugout as the game came to a close, with Uruguay winning 2-0 but losing to South Korea, who beat Portugal, in the knockout stage.
He covered the tear-stained shirt as the cameras inevitably focused on his face. While some of his teammates were barging into the referee and his staff of assistants, he glanced sideways for a possible corner and penalty. But Suarez, who was always going to be the match’s protagonist, was only briefly distracted by those.
Suarez was content after playing his best football of this World Cup for 64 minutes, chatting with his teammates in the dugout and playing with the support staff just 30 minutes before the game ended. Suarez probably turned the best switch during the Ghana match.
He rediscovered his vintage, possibly the 2010 vintage, which was sluggish, invisible, and inactive prior to this game.
However, you should wait for Andrew Ayew before proceeding to Suarez. At the point when he arranged for the punishment, he had an entire load of Ghana’s footballing history on his left side foot.
He hopped, came to a stop, and swung at the ball. The ball warned the edge of his boot and rolled compliantly into the protected palms of Uruguayan goalkeeper Sergio Rocher. Ayew stood stunned by thunder.
The silence among Ghanaians could be heard as the wilt of a thousand hearts as the nation froze. Up until that point, the vocal supporters stood numbed in a riot of color, singing, and dancing. The players became weak and lost their way. Suarez had been living in their heads up until this point.
However, he was going to also torture them on the field at this point. This was the most terrifying of the cruel scripts for Ghanaians. being scared by Suarez. to be forever terrified by Suarez. for a long time, perhaps generations.
They fell apart after the penalty was spilled. The bleach-haired Giorgian de Arrascaeta scored twice in six minutes to capitalize on the Ghanian haze. Both goals were the result of ridiculously careless defense (or defense?).
Two defenders assumed that the other would clear the ball as the deep ball passed through them. Through the left flank, Suarez accelerated, bent sharply, and unleashed a stinging shot at goal.
Suarez drifted the ball to Arrascaeta, a brilliant throw. The latter converted the volley. From Suarez’s lob, which was sweet and lavishly designed using an artist’s palette, it was a goal of pure technical perfection.
The execution befitted the help. Arrascaeta’s body dropped with the ball, and just before the ball touched the ground, he twisted and hit it full. Unable to determine the ball’s path, the ball first swung away before changing direction and passing Ati-Zigi. Suarez would wildly celebrate besides the touchline to exacerbate their suffering. After the subsequent goal, he went towards the Ghanaian part of fans and applauded, flicked approval, and motioned to boo him stronger.
To thunderous applause from the Uruguayan enclosure and muffled silence from the Ghanaian side, Suarez was dismissed at the stroke of the 64th minute. However, despite his absence, Suarez remained visible to the Ghanaian players everywhere on the field. They looked like they were running through a maze with no way out.
The Ghanaians’ prayers were ultimately granted. Suarez cried, but not in the manner they had prayed or desired. They were crying as well. Ghana would have advanced to the round of 16 if they had won or drawn the game. However, maybe, in the likeness of their destiny, Ghana might experience tracked-down harmony with Suarez and Uruguay. or finally granted him forgiveness.