2014 FIFA World Cup knockout stage

Main article: 2014 FIFA World Cup

The knockout stage of the 2014 FIFA World Cup was the second and final stage of the competition, following the group stage. It began on 28 June with the round of 16 and ended on 13 July with the final match of the tournament, held at Estádio do Maracanã, Rio de Janeiro. The top two teams from each group (16 in total) advanced to the knockout stage to compete in a single-elimination tournament. A third-place match was played between the two losing teams of the semi-finals.[1]

In all matches in the knockout stage, if the score was level at the end of 90 minutes, two 15-minute periods of extra time was played. If the score was still level after extra time, the match was decided by a penalty shoot-out.[2]

All times listed below are in Brasília official time (UTC–3).

Qualified teams

Group Winners Runners-up
A  Brazil  Mexico
B  Netherlands  Chile
C  Colombia  Greece
D  Costa Rica  Uruguay
E  France   Switzerland
F  Argentina  Nigeria
G  Germany  United States
H  Belgium  Algeria

Bracket

Quarter-finals Semi-finals Final
                           
28 June – Belo Horizonte            
  Brazil (pen.)  1 (3)
4 July – Fortaleza
  Chile  1 (2)  
  Brazil  2
28 June – Rio de Janeiro
    Colombia  1  
  Colombia  2
8 JulyBelo Horizonte
  Uruguay  0  
  Brazil  1
30 June – Brasília
    Germany  7  
  France  2
4 July – Rio de Janeiro
  Nigeria  0  
  France  0
30 June – Porto Alegre
    Germany  1  
  Germany (aet)  2
13 JulyRio de Janeiro
  Algeria  1  
  Germany (aet)  1
29 June – Fortaleza
    Argentina  0
  Netherlands  2
5 July – Salvador
  Mexico  1  
  Netherlands (pen.)  0 (4)
29 June – Recife
    Costa Rica  0 (3)  
  Costa Rica (pen.)  1 (5)
9 July – São Paulo
  Greece  1 (3)  
  Netherlands  0 (2)
1 July – São Paulo
    Argentina (pen.)  0 (4)   Third place
  Argentina (aet)  1
5 July – Brasília 12 July – Brasília
   Switzerland  0  
  Argentina  1   Brazil  0
1 July – Salvador
    Belgium  0     Netherlands  3
  Belgium (aet)  2
  United States  1  

Round of 16

Brazil vs Chile

The two teams had met in 68 previous matches,[3] including three times in the FIFA World Cup knockout stage, all won by Brazil (1962, semi-finals: 4–2; 1998, round of 16: 4–1; 2010, round of 16: 3–0).

Brazil opened the scoring when from a corner when David Luiz turned Thiago Silva's flick-on into the net with his thigh. While replays suggested that Chilean defender Gonzalo Jara may have had the last touch,[4] FIFA later confirmed that the goal was scored by Luiz, not Jara.[5] Chile equalised when Hulk lost possession after a throw-in in his own half, Eduardo Vargas stole the ball and passed to Alexis Sánchez to score.[6]

In the second half, Hulk's goal was disallowed as Howard Webb adjudged that the player used his arm in bringing down the ball and gave him a yellow card instead.[7] Chances were few after that with Brazil dominating possession with Hulk forcing Claudio Bravo into a decent save, and the match went to extra time. The best chance of extra time came in the last seconds as Mauricio Pinilla's shot hit the crossbar.[8] In the resulting penalty shootout, the score was tied 2–2 after four rounds, with Brazil goalkeeper Júlio César saving from Pinilla and Sánchez, while Willian missed and Hulk's shot was saved by Bravo. In the fifth round, Neymar scored his penalty, meaning Chile had to score, but Jara's shot hit the inside of the post.[9] Brazil advanced to the quarter-finals to face Colombia.

The result meant that in all four World Cups where Chile qualified for the knockout stage, they were eliminated by Brazil.

Brazil
Chile
GK 12Júlio César
RB 2 Dani Alves  105+1'
CB 3 Thiago Silva (c)
CB 4 David Luiz
LB 6 Marcelo
DM 5 Fernandinho  72'
DM 17Luiz Gustavo  60'
RW 7 Hulk  55'
AM 11Oscar  106'
LW 10Neymar
CF 9 Fred  64'
Substitutes:
FW 21  93'  64'
MF 16Ramires  72'
MF 19Willian  106'
Manager:
Luiz Felipe Scolari
GK 1 Claudio Bravo (c)
CB 5 Francisco Silva  40'
CB 17Gary Medel  108'
CB 18Gonzalo Jara
RWB4 Mauricio Isla
LWB2 Eugenio Mena  17'
CM 20Charles Aránguiz
CM 21Marcelo Díaz
AM 8 Arturo Vidal  87'
CF 7 Alexis Sánchez
CF 11Eduardo Vargas  57'
Substitutes:
MF 16Felipe Gutiérrez  57'
FW 9 Mauricio Pinilla  102'  87'
DF 13José Rojas  108'
Manager:
Argentina Jorge Sampaoli

Man of the Match:
Júlio César (Brazil)

Assistant referees:
Michael Mullarkey (England)
Darren Cann (England)
Fourth official:
Felix Brych (Germany)
Fifth official:
Mark Borsch (Germany)


Colombia vs Uruguay

The two teams had met in 38 previous matches,[10] including in the 1962 FIFA World Cup group stage, won 2–1 by Uruguay. Their most recent meetings were in the 2014 FIFA World Cup qualifiers, with both teams winning at home, Colombia winning 4–0 and Uruguay winning 2–0. Uruguayan striker Luis Suárez was not in the line-up because of a nine-game ban imposed by FIFA due to a biting incident involving Italian defender Giorgio Chiellini during their final group stage match.[11]

Colombia won 2–0 with both goals from James Rodríguez, the first in the 28th minute, where he controlled Abel Aguilar's headed ball on his chest before volleying left-footed from 25 yards out with the ball going in off the underside of the crossbar,[12] which won the 2014 FIFA Puskás Award later in the year.[13] The second goal, in the 50th minute, was a close-range shot from six yards out after receiving the ball from a header by Juan Cuadrado on the right.[14]

Colombia progressed through to the quarter-finals for the first time in their history, where they would face Brazil.[15]

28 June 2014
17:00
Colombia  2–0  Uruguay
Rodríguez  28', 50' Report
Colombia
Uruguay
GK 1 David Ospina
RB 18Juan Camilo Zúñiga
CB 2 Cristián Zapata
CB 3 Mario Yepes (c)
LB 7 Pablo Armero  78'
RM 11Juan Cuadrado  81'
CM 8 Abel Aguilar
CM 6 Carlos Sánchez
LM 10James Rodríguez  85'
CF 9 Teófilo Gutiérrez  68'
CF 21Jackson Martínez
Substitutes:
MF 15Alexander Mejía  68'
MF 13Fredy Guarín  81'
FW 19Adrián Ramos  85'
 
Manager:
Argentina José Pékerman
GK 1 Fernando Muslera
RB 22Martín Cáceres
CB 13José Giménez  55'
CB 3 Diego Godín (c)
LB 6 Álvaro Pereira  53'
RM 16Maxi Pereira
CM 20Álvaro González  67'
CM 17Egidio Arévalo
LM 7 Cristian Rodríguez
SS 21Edinson Cavani
CF 10Diego Forlán  53'
Substitutes:
FW 11Cristhian Stuani  53'
MF 18Gastón Ramírez  53'
FW 8 Abel Hernández  67'
DF 2 Diego Lugano  77'[nb 1]
Manager:
Óscar Tabárez

Man of the Match:
James Rodríguez (Colombia)

Assistant referees:
Sander van Roekel (Netherlands)
Erwin Zeinstra (Netherlands)
Fourth official:
Svein Oddvar Moen (Norway)
Fifth official:
Kim Haglund (Norway)

Notes

  1. Despite not playing, Lugano received a yellow card on the bench.

Netherlands vs Mexico

The two teams had met in six previous matches,[16] including in the 1998 FIFA World Cup group stage, a 2–2 draw. Mexico midfielder José Juan Vázquez was suspended for the match due to accumulation of yellow cards.[17]

Giovani dos Santos opened the scoring for Mexico early in the second half with a left-footed volley from outside the box after gathering a Dutch clearance.[18] Mexico led until the 88th minute, when a Dutch corner was headed back by substitute Klaas-Jan Huntelaar for Wesley Sneijder to equalise with a hard shot from 16 yards. Only a few minutes later, with stoppage time coming to a close, Arjen Robben drew a penalty for the Netherlands after being fouled by Rafael Márquez on the right of the penalty area, which Huntelaar converted into the bottom left corner to win the match for the Netherlands.[19] Netherlands advanced to the quarter-finals to face Costa Rica, while Mexico were eliminated in the round of 16 for the sixth tournament in a row.[20]

The match was the first time in World Cup history where a cooling break was instituted, with temperatures at 32 °C (90 °F) and humidity levels at 68%.[21]

29 June 2014
13:00
Netherlands  2–1  Mexico
Sneijder  88'
Huntelaar  90+4' (pen.)
Report Dos Santos  48'
Netherlands
Mexico
GK 1 Jasper Cillessen
RB 12Paul Verhaegh  56'
CB 2 Ron Vlaar
CB 3 Stefan de Vrij
LB 5 Daley Blind
CM 15Dirk Kuyt
CM 6 Nigel de Jong  9'
CM 20Georginio Wijnaldum
AM 10Wesley Sneijder
CF 11Arjen Robben
CF 9 Robin van Persie (c)  76'
Substitutions:
DF 4 Bruno Martins Indi  9'
MF 21Memphis Depay  56'
FW 19Klaas-Jan Huntelaar  76'
Manager:
Louis van Gaal
GK 13Guillermo Ochoa
CB 2 Francisco Javier Rodríguez
CB 4 Rafael Márquez (c)  90+2'
CB 15Héctor Moreno  46'
RWB22Paul Aguilar  69'
LWB7 Miguel Layún
CM 6 Héctor Herrera
CM 3 Carlos Salcido
CM 18Andrés Guardado  90+3'
CF 10Giovani dos Santos  61'
CF 19Oribe Peralta  75'
Substitutes:
DF 5 Diego Reyes  46'
MF 20Javier Aquino  61'
FW 14Javier Hernández  75'
Manager:
Miguel Herrera

Man of the Match:
Guillermo Ochoa (Mexico)

Assistant referees:
Bertino Cunha (Portugal)
Tiago Trigo (Portugal)
Fourth official:
Carlos Vera (Ecuador)
Fifth official:
Byron Romero (Ecuador)


Costa Rica vs Greece

The two teams had never met before.[22] This match was Greece's first ever in the FIFA World Cup knockout stage.

Bryan Ruiz opened the scoring in the 52nd minute when Christian Bolaños passed to him and he shot low left-footed from outside the penalty area to the right corner of the net with Greek goalkeeper Orestis Karnezis not moving on his line. Costa Rica were then reduced to 10 men with Óscar Duarte being sent off after picking up a second yellow card. Sokratis Papastathopoulos equalised in injury time shooting into the net from seven yards out after Costa Rica goalkeeper Keylor Navas had saved an initial shot from Theofanis Gekas.[23] No goals were scored in extra time, and the match went to a penalty shoot-out. During the intermission before the penalty shoot-out, the Greek coach Fernando Santos was sent off following a dispute with the referee.[24] In the penalty shoot-out, Navas saved Gekas' shot before Michael Umaña scored the winning penalty for Costa Rica hitting it high to the goalkeeper's right.[25]

This marked the first time that Costa Rica progressed to the quarter-finals in a FIFA World Cup, where they faced the Netherlands.

Costa Rica
Greece
GK 1 Keylor Navas  90'
CB 6 Óscar Duarte Yellow cardYellow cardRed card 42', 66'
CB 3 Giancarlo González
CB 4 Michael Umaña
RWB16Cristian Gamboa  77'
LWB15Júnior Díaz
CM 5 Celso Borges
CM 17Yeltsin Tejeda  48'  66'
RW 10Bryan Ruiz (c)  70'
LW 7 Christian Bolaños  83'
CF 9 Joel Campbell
Substitutions:
MF 22José Miguel Cubero  66'
DF 2 Johnny Acosta  77'
FW 14Randall Brenes  83'
MF 13Óscar Granados  57'[nb 1]
Manager:
Colombia Jorge Luis Pinto
GK 1 Orestis Karnezis
RB 15Vasilis Torosidis
CB 4 Kostas Manolas  72'
CB 19Sokratis Papastathopoulos
LB 20José Holebas
DM 10Giorgos Karagounis (c)
CM 2 Giannis Maniatis  78'
CM 22Andreas Samaris  36'  58'
RW 14Dimitris Salpingidis  69'
LW 16Lazaros Christodoulopoulos
CF 7 Georgios Samaras
Substitutes:
FW 9 Kostas Mitroglou  58'
FW 17Theofanis Gekas  69'
MF 21Kostas Katsouranis  78'
Manager:
Portugal Fernando Santos Red card 120+1'

Man of the Match:
Keylor Navas (Costa Rica)

Assistant referees:
Matthew Cream (Australia)
Hakan Anaz (Australia)
Fourth official:
Nawaf Shukralla (Bahrain)
Fifth official:
Yaser Tulefat (Bahrain)

Notes

  1. Despite not playing, Granados received a yellow card on the bench.

France vs Nigeria

The two teams had met in one previous match, in a friendly in 2009, won by Nigeria 1–0.[26]

Paul Pogba had the best chance in the first half but his right foot volley after a cross from the right was saved by Vincent Enyeama. In the second half Yohan Cabaye saw a shot come back off the bar.[27] The opening goal came with 11 minutes to play when Pogba headed into the net after a mistake by Enyeama where he failed to hold onto a corner kick from the left by Mathieu Valbuena. In injury time, France got a second when Joseph Yobo put into his own net under pressure from Antoine Griezmann after a cross from the right by Valbuena.[28]

France advanced to the quarter-finals to face Germany, while Nigeria were eliminated at the round of 16 in all three World Cups where they reached the knockout stage.

30 June 2014
13:00
France  2–0  Nigeria
Pogba  79'
Yobo  90+2' (o.g.)
Report
France
Nigeria
GK 1 Hugo Lloris (c)
RB 2 Mathieu Debuchy
CB 4 Raphaël Varane
CB 21Laurent Koscielny
LB 3 Patrice Evra
DM 6 Yohan Cabaye
CM 19Paul Pogba
CM 14Blaise Matuidi  54'
RW 8 Mathieu Valbuena  90+4'
LW 10Karim Benzema
CF 9 Olivier Giroud  62'
Substitutions:
FW 11Antoine Griezmann  62'
MF 18Moussa Sissoko  90+4'
Manager:
Didier Deschamps
GK 1 Vincent Enyeama
RB 5 Efe Ambrose
CB 2 Joseph Yobo (c)
CB 13Juwon Oshaniwa
LB 22Kenneth Omeruo
RM 7 Ahmed Musa
CM 17Ogenyi Onazi  59'
CM 10John Obi Mikel
LM 11Victor Moses  89'
SS 8 Peter Odemwingie
CF 9 Emmanuel Emenike
Substitutes:
MF 4 Reuben Gabriel  59'
FW 19Uche Nwofor  89'
Manager:
Stephen Keshi

Man of the Match:
Paul Pogba (France)

Assistant referees:
Mark Hurd (United States)
Joe Fletcher (Canada)
Fourth official:
Alireza Faghani (Iran)
Fifth official:
Hassan Kamranifar (Iran)


Germany vs Algeria

The two teams had met in two previous matches,[29] including in the 1982 FIFA World Cup group stage, where Algeria defeated West Germany 2–1. This match was Algeria's first ever in the FIFA World Cup knockout stage.

After a goalless 90 minutes, Germany opened the scoring two minutes into extra time, when half-time substitute André Schürrle scored with a left foot back-heel from Thomas Müller's cross from the left.[30] Germany extended the lead in the 120th minute when Mesut Özil converted with his left foot high into the net after Schürrle's shot was blocked on the line, but Algeria pulled one back in injury time when substitute Abdelmoumene Djabou scored with his left foot from six yards after a cross from the right by Sofiane Feghouli.[31]

Germany advanced to the quarter-finals to face France, continuing their streak of reaching the last eight in every World Cup since 1954.[32] Djabou's goal, timed at 120 minutes and 51 seconds, was the latest goal in World Cup history, surpassing Alessandro Del Piero's goal against Germany in 2006, timed at 120 minutes and 32 seconds.[33]

30 June 2014
17:00
Germany  2–1 (a.e.t.)  Algeria
Schürrle  92'
Özil  120'
Report Djabou  120+1'
Estádio Beira-Rio, Porto Alegre
Attendance: 43,063
Referee: Sandro Ricci (Brazil)
Germany
Algeria
GK 1 Manuel Neuer
RB 21Shkodran Mustafi  70'
CB 17Per Mertesacker
CB 20Jérôme Boateng
LB 4 Benedikt Höwedes
DM 16Philipp Lahm (c)  107'
CM 7 Bastian Schweinsteiger  109'
CM 18Toni Kroos
RW 8 Mesut Özil
LW 19Mario Götze  46'
CF 13Thomas Müller
Substitutes:
MF 9 André Schürrle  46'
MF 6 Sami Khedira  70'
MF 23Christoph Kramer  109'
Manager:
Joachim Löw
GK 23Raïs M'Bolhi
CB 22Mehdi Mostefa
CB 4 Essaïd Belkalem
CB 5 Rafik Halliche (c)  42'  97'
RWB20Aïssa Mandi
LWB3 Faouzi Ghoulam
DM 8 Medhi Lacen
RM 19Saphir Taïder  78'
CM 10Sofiane Feghouli
LM 13Islam Slimani
CF 15El Arbi Hillel Soudani  100'
Substitutes:
MF 11Yacine Brahimi  78'
DF 2 Madjid Bougherra  97'
MF 18Abdelmoumene Djabou  100'
Manager:
Bosnia and Herzegovina Vahid Halilhodžić

Man of the Match:
Raïs M'Bolhi (Algeria)

Assistant referees:
Emerson de Carvalho (Brazil)
Marcelo Van Gasse (Brazil)
Fourth official:
Walter López (Guatemala)
Fifth official:
Leonel Leal (Costa Rica)


Argentina vs Switzerland

The two teams had met in six previous matches,[34] including in the 1966 FIFA World Cup group stage, won by Argentina 2–0.

The match went to extra time with Ángel Di María scoring the only goal with two minutes remaining with a side-foot finish from the right of the penalty area after a run and pass from Lionel Messi.[35] Switzerland had a chance to equalise in injury time but Blerim Džemaili headed against the post then prodded the rebound wide.[36] Argentina advanced to the quarter-finals to face Belgium.

1 July 2014
13:00
Argentina  1–0 (a.e.t.)   Switzerland
Di María  118' Report
Arena Corinthians, São Paulo
Attendance: 63,255
Referee: Jonas Eriksson (Sweden)
Argentina
Switzerland
GK 1 Sergio Romero
RB 4 Pablo Zabaleta
CB 17Federico Fernández
CB 2 Ezequiel Garay  120+4'
LB 16Marcos Rojo  90'  105+1'
CM 5 Fernando Gago  106'
CM 14Javier Mascherano
CM 7 Ángel Di María  120'
AM 10Lionel Messi (c)
SS 22Ezequiel Lavezzi  74'
CF 9 Gonzalo Higuaín
Substitutes:
FW 18Rodrigo Palacio  74'
DF 23José María Basanta  105+1'
MF 6 Lucas Biglia  106'
Manager:
Alejandro Sabella
GK 1 Diego Benaglio
RB 2 Stephan Lichtsteiner
CB 20Johan Djourou
CB 22Fabian Schär
LB 13Ricardo Rodríguez
CM 11Valon Behrami
CM 8 Gökhan Inler (c)
RW 23Xherdan Shaqiri
AM 10Granit Xhaka  36'  66'
LW 18Admir Mehmedi  113'
CF 19Josip Drmić  82'
Substitutions:
MF 16Gelson Fernandes  73'  66'
MF 9 Haris Seferović  82'
MF 15Blerim Džemaili  113'
Manager:
Germany Ottmar Hitzfeld

Man of the Match:
Lionel Messi (Argentina)

Assistant referees:
Mathias Klasenius (Sweden)
Daniel Wärnmark (Sweden)
Fourth official:
Svein Oddvar Moen (Norway)
Fifth official:
Kim Haglund (Norway)


Belgium vs United States

The two teams had met in five previous matches,[37] including one in the 1930 FIFA World Cup group stage won by United States 3–0 and which was one of the two first FIFA World Cup matches to be played. An unofficial friendly between the two teams was scheduled on 12 June 2014 in São Paulo,[38] but was cancelled because of traffic due to the opening ceremony and match.[39] Belgium midfielder Steven Defour was suspended for the match,[40] after being sent off in the last group stage match against South Korea.

In a game dominated by the Belgians, but still goalless through the first 90 minutes thanks to American goalkeeper Tim Howard, USA striker Chris Wondolowski missed a great chance in stoppage time from less than five yards out. Thus, the game went to extra time and Belgium took the lead within two minutes. Romelu Lukaku, who came off the bench at the start of extra time, crossed from the right into the penalty area, Matt Besler failed to clear the ball, and Kevin De Bruyne shot low into the far corner from the right of the penalty area. Near the end of extra time first half, De Bruyne's through ball from the right set up Lukaku to extend the lead with a left footed shot to the net.[41] The United States pulled one back early in extra time second half, when substitute Julian Green volleyed in Michael Bradley's lobbed pass with his right foot from near the penalty spot. Minutes later, the USA nearly equalised on a set piece routine that saw Clint Dempsey through on goal, but his first touch was too hard and the ball was corralled by Belgian goalkeeper Thibaut Courtois. Belgium held on for the win, and advanced to the quarter-finals to face Argentina.[42]

With Belgium's victory, the 2014 World Cup became the first tournament where all the top teams of the group stage advanced to the quarter-finals.[43] American goalkeeper Tim Howard recorded 15 saves[44][Note 1] in the match, which was the most saves recorded in a match since FIFA started to keep track of the number of saves in 1966.[45] Julian Green also became the youngest player to score a goal in the 2014 FIFA World Cup.

1 July 2014
17:00
Belgium  2–1 (a.e.t.)  United States
De Bruyne  93'
Lukaku  105'
Report Green  107'
Belgium
United States
GK 1 Thibaut Courtois
RB 2 Toby Alderweireld
CB 15Daniel Van Buyten
CB 4 Vincent Kompany (c)  42'
LB 5 Jan Vertonghen
CM 6 Axel Witsel
CM 8 Marouane Fellaini
RW 14Dries Mertens  60'
AM 7 Kevin De Bruyne
LW 10Eden Hazard  111'
CF 17Divock Origi  91'
Substitutes:
MF 11Kevin Mirallas  60'
FW 9 Romelu Lukaku  91'
MF 22Nacer Chadli  111'
Manager:
Marc Wilmots
GK 1 Tim Howard
RB 23Fabian Johnson  32'
CB 3 Omar Gonzalez
CB 5 Matt Besler
LB 7 DaMarcus Beasley
DM 20Geoff Cameron  18'
CM 13Jermaine Jones
CM 4 Michael Bradley
RW 19Graham Zusi  72'
LW 11Alejandro Bedoya  105+2'
CF 8 Clint Dempsey (c)
Substitutes:
DF 2 DeAndre Yedlin  32'
FW 18Chris Wondolowski  72'
MF 16Julian Green  105+2'
Manager:
Germany Jürgen Klinsmann

Man of the Match:
Tim Howard (United States)

Assistant referees:
Rédouane Achik (Morocco)
Abdelhak Etchiali (Algeria)
Fourth official:
Norbert Hauata (Tahiti)
Fifth official:
Aden Range (Kenya)

Quarter-finals

France vs Germany

The two teams had met in 25 previous matches, including three times in the FIFA World Cup (1958, third place match: France 6–3 West Germany; 1982 semi-finals: France 3–3 (aet) West Germany, West Germany won 5–4 on penalties; 1986, semi-finals: France 0–2 West Germany).[46]

The only goal came in the 13th minute when Mats Hummels got ahead of his marker Raphaël Varane to head Germany into the lead from ten yards out after a free-kick from Toni Kroos on the left.[47] Karim Benzema had a shot in second half injury time from the left which he hit straight at Manuel Neuer.[48]

Germany advanced to the semi-finals where they would face Brazil. They became the first team to reach four straight World Cup semi-finals, breaking the record of three shared by their predecessor West Germany (1982, 1986, 1990) and Brazil (1994, 1998, 2002). Germany was also guaranteed their 13th top four finish, the most by any nation.[49]

4 July 2014
13:00
France  0–1  Germany
Report Hummels  13'
France
Germany
GK 1 Hugo Lloris (c)
RB 2 Mathieu Debuchy
CB 4 Raphaël Varane
CB 5 Mamadou Sakho  72'
LB 3 Patrice Evra
CM 19Paul Pogba
CM 6 Yohan Cabaye  74'
CM 14Blaise Matuidi
RW 8 Mathieu Valbuena  84'
LW 11Antoine Griezmann
CF 10Karim Benzema
Substitutions:
DF 21Laurent Koscielny  72'
FW 20Loïc Rémy  74'
FW 9 Olivier Giroud  84'
Manager:
Didier Deschamps
GK 1 Manuel Neuer
RB 16Philipp Lahm (c)
CB 20Jérôme Boateng
CB 5 Mats Hummels
LB 4 Benedikt Höwedes
CM 7 Bastian Schweinsteiger  80'
CM 6 Sami Khedira  54'
RW 13Thomas Müller
AM 18Toni Kroos  90+3'
LW 8 Mesut Özil  83'
CF 11Miroslav Klose  68'
Substitutes:
FW 9 André Schürrle  68'
MF 19Mario Götze  83'
MF 23Christoph Kramer  90+3'
Manager:
Joachim Löw

Man of the Match:
Mats Hummels (Germany)

Assistant referees:
Hernán Maidana (Argentina)
Juan Pablo Belatti (Argentina)
Fourth official:
Jonas Eriksson (Sweden)
Fifth official:
Mathias Klasenius (Sweden)


Brazil vs Colombia

The two teams had met in 25 previous matches, but never in the FIFA World Cup.[50] This was the first time Colombia had reached the quarter-finals of the World Cup. Brazil midfielder Luiz Gustavo was suspended for the match due to accumulation of yellow cards.[51]

Brazil took the lead in the 7th minute, when Neymar's corner from the left was turned in from close range by Thiago Silva.[52] They doubled the lead in the 69th minute when David Luiz scored directly from a long-range free kick, side-footing the ball over the wall and into the top-right corner. Colombia reduced the deficit with 10 minutes to go, when James Rodríguez converted a penalty kick low into the left corner and sent the goalkeeper the wrong way. The penalty was awarded after substitute Carlos Bacca was fouled by Brazil goalkeeper Júlio César.[53] Neymar was kneed in the back by Colombia defender Juan Camilo Zúñiga in the 88th minute, which resulted in the striker's withdrawal from the match. Subsequent medical evaluation discovered a fractured vertebra, forcing the Brazilian to miss the remainder of the tournament.[54] Brazil advanced to the semi-final, where they faced Germany.

James's sixth goal of the tournament was enough for him to win the Golden Boot award.[55] He also became the first player to score in his first five career World Cup matches since Peru’s Teófilo Cubillas (across the 1970 and 1978 tournaments).[56]

4 July 2014
17:00
Brazil  2–1  Colombia
Thiago Silva  7'
David Luiz  69'
Report Rodríguez  80' (pen.)
Brazil
Colombia
GK 12Júlio César  78'
RB 23Maicon
CB 3 Thiago Silva (c)  64'
CB 4 David Luiz
LB 6 Marcelo
CM 5 Fernandinho
CM 8 Paulinho  86'
RW 7 Hulk  82'
AM 11Oscar
LW 10Neymar  88'
CF 9 Fred
Substitutes:
MF 16Ramires  82'
MF 18Hernanes  86'
DF 15Henrique  88'
Manager:
Luiz Felipe Scolari
GK 1 David Ospina
RB 18Juan Camilo Zúñiga
CB 2 Cristián Zapata
CB 3 Mario Yepes (c)  71'
LB 7 Pablo Armero
RM 11Juan Cuadrado  80'
CM 13Fredy Guarín
CM 6 Carlos Sánchez
LM 14Víctor Ibarbo  46'
CF 9 Teófilo Gutiérrez  70'
CF 10James Rodríguez  67'
Substitutes:
FW 19Adrián Ramos  46'
FW 17Carlos Bacca  70'
MF 20Juan Quintero  80'
Manager:
Argentina José Pékerman

Man of the Match:
David Luiz (Brazil)

Assistant referees:
Roberto Alonso (Spain)
Juan Carlos Yuste (Spain)
Fourth official:
Svein Oddvar Moen (Norway)
Fifth official:
Kim Haglund (Norway)


Argentina vs Belgium

The two teams had met in three previous matches, including twice in the FIFA World Cup (1982, group stage: Argentina 0–1 Belgium; 1986, semi-finals: Argentina 2–0 Belgium).[57] Argentina defender Marcos Rojo was suspended for the match due to accumulation of yellow cards.[58]

The only goal of the match was scored by Argentina forward Gonzalo Higuaín in the eighth minute, a powerful shot with his right foot from just inside the penalty area after a pass from Di María was deflected to him by Belgium defender Jan Vertonghen.[59] Higuaín had a chance to extend the lead in the second half, but his shot hit the crossbar.[60] Argentina won 1–0 to advance to the semi-finals, where they would face the Netherlands.

5 July 2014
13:00
Argentina  1–0  Belgium
Higuaín  8' Report
Argentina
Belgium
GK 1 Sergio Romero
RB 4 Pablo Zabaleta
CB 15Martín Demichelis
CB 2 Ezequiel Garay
LB 23José María Basanta
CM 6 Lucas Biglia  75'
CM 14Javier Mascherano
RW 22Ezequiel Lavezzi  71'
LW 7 Ángel Di María  33'
CF 10Lionel Messi (c)
CF 9 Gonzalo Higuaín  81'
Substitutes:
MF 8 Enzo Pérez  33'
FW 18Rodrigo Palacio  71'
MF 5 Fernando Gago  81'
Manager:
Alejandro Sabella
GK 1 Thibaut Courtois
RB 2 Toby Alderweireld  69'
CB 15Daniel Van Buyten
CB 4 Vincent Kompany (c)
LB 5 Jan Vertonghen
CM 6 Axel Witsel
CM 8 Marouane Fellaini
RW 11Kevin Mirallas  60'
AM 7 Kevin De Bruyne
LW 10Eden Hazard  53'  75'
CF 17Divock Origi  59'
Substitutions:
FW 9 Romelu Lukaku  59'
FW 14Dries Mertens  60'
MF 22Nacer Chadli  75'
Manager:
Marc Wilmots

Man of the Match:
Gonzalo Higuaín (Argentina)

Assistant referees:
Renato Faverani (Italy)
Andrea Stefani (Italy)
Fourth official:
Ben Williams (Australia)
Fifth official:
Matthew Cream (Australia)


Netherlands vs Costa Rica

The two teams had never met before.[61] This was the first time Costa Rica had reached the quarter-finals of the World Cup. Costa Rica defender Óscar Duarte was suspended for the match, after being sent off in the round of 16 match against Greece.[62]

After a goalless 90 minutes, which saw Wesley Sneijder's free kick hit the post and Robin van Persie's shot deflected onto the crossbar by Costa Rica defender Yeltsin Tejeda, the match headed to extra time. In the second period, substitute Marco Ureña had a shot saved by Netherlands goalkeeper Jasper Cillessen, while Sneijder had another shot hit the crossbar. In added time at the end of 120 minutes, Dutch manager Louis van Gaal brought on Tim Krul to replace Cillessen.[63] In the subsequent penalty shoot-out, Krul saved from Bryan Ruiz and Michael Umaña, while the Netherlands scored all four of their kicks to advance to the semi-finals, where they would face Argentina.[64]

Uzbek referee Ravshan Irmatov took charge of his ninth World Cup match, breaking the record of most World Cup games officiated, which he previously held jointly with Joël Quiniou of France, Benito Archundia of Mexico, and Jorge Larrionda of Uruguay.[65]

Netherlands
Costa Rica
GK 1 Jasper Cillessen  120+1'
CB 3 Stefan de Vrij
CB 2 Ron Vlaar
CB 4 Bruno Martins Indi  64'  106'
RWB15Dirk Kuyt
LWB5 Daley Blind
CM 20Georginio Wijnaldum
CM 10Wesley Sneijder
RW 11Arjen Robben
LW 21Memphis Depay  76'
CF 9 Robin van Persie (c)
Substitutions:
MF 17Jeremain Lens  76'
FW 19Klaas-Jan Huntelaar  111'  106'
GK 23Tim Krul  120+1'
Manager:
Louis van Gaal
GK 1 Keylor Navas
CB 2 Johnny Acosta  107'
CB 3 Giancarlo González  81'
CB 4 Michael Umaña  52'
RWB16Cristian Gamboa  79'
LWB15Júnior Díaz  37'
CM 17Yeltsin Tejeda  97'
CM 5 Celso Borges
RW 10Bryan Ruiz (c)
LW 7 Christian Bolaños
CF 9 Joel Campbell  66'
Substitutes:
FW 21Marco Ureña  66'
DF 8 David Myrie  79'
MF 22José Miguel Cubero  97'
Manager:
Colombia Jorge Luis Pinto

Man of the Match:
Keylor Navas (Costa Rica)

Assistant referees:
Abdukhamidullo Rasulov (Uzbekistan)
Bahadyr Kochkarov (Kyrgyzstan)
Fourth official:
Noumandiez Doué (Ivory Coast)
Fifth official:
Songuifolo Yeo (Ivory Coast)

Semi-finals

Brazil vs Germany

The two teams had met in 21 previous matches, including in the final of the 2002 FIFA World Cup (their only previous encounter in the tournament's history), won by Brazil 2–0.[66]

Miroslav Klose (center) celebrating with fellow team-mates after scoring the second goal for Germany.

While Germany kept the same starting line-up as their quarter-final against France, Brazil made two changes: defender and captain Thiago Silva was suspended for the match due to accumulation of yellow cards,[67] and was replaced by Dante, while forward Neymar was sidelined after suffering a fractured vertebra in the quarter-final against Colombia,[54] and was replaced by Bernard.[68] Germany took the lead in the 11th minute, Thomas Müller volleying in Toni Kroos's corner. Miroslav Klose scored Germany's second goal, after a passing move saw him set up by Kroos, his first shot was saved by Brazil goalkeeper Júlio César, but he slotted in the rebound. Kroos then scored two quick goals in succession, the first one after Philipp Lahm's cross was missed by Müller, the second one after stealing the ball from Fernandinho and playing a quick one-two with Sami Khedira. Khedira then scored Germany's fourth goal in six minutes, after exchanging passes with Mesut Özil, to give Germany a 5–0 halftime lead. Substitute André Schürrle added two more goals in the second half, first slotting in from Lahm's cross, then scoring via the crossbar after a cut-back from Müller. Brazil scored a consolation goal in the 90th minute, as Oscar received a pass from Marcelo, dribbled inside and scored.[69] Germany reached their eighth World Cup final, a record by any nation, where they would face Argentina, while Brazil had to settle for the third-place play-off against the Netherlands.

The game equalled Brazil’s biggest margin of defeat, a 6–0 loss to Uruguay in 1920, and it broke a 62-match home unbeaten streak in competitive matches going back to 1975.[70] The match also broke many World Cup records: It was Brazil's biggest World Cup defeat (eclipsing their 1998 final loss to France), the biggest defeat by a World Cup host nation (previous record was by three goals), and the biggest margin of victory in a World Cup semi-final (three previous semi-finals ended in 6–1 scorelines).[71]

Klose's goal was his 16th overall throughout his World Cup appearances, allowing him to beat Ronaldo for the record of all-time top scorer in World Cup finals tournaments.[72] Germany's seven goals took their total tally in World Cup history to 223, surpassing Brazil's 221 goals to first place overall.[73]

8 July 2014
17:00
Brazil  1–7  Germany
Oscar  90' Report Müller  11'
Klose  23'
Kroos  24', 26'
Khedira  29'
Schürrle  69', 79'
Brazil
Germany
GK 12Júlio César
RB 23Maicon
CB 4 David Luiz (c)
CB 13Dante  68'
LB 6 Marcelo
CM 17Luiz Gustavo
CM 5 Fernandinho  46'
RW 7 Hulk  46'
AM 11Oscar
LW 20Bernard
CF 9 Fred  70'
Substitutes:
MF 16Ramires  46'
MF 8 Paulinho  46'
MF 19Willian  70'
Manager:
Luiz Felipe Scolari
GK 1 Manuel Neuer
RB 16Philipp Lahm (c)
CB 20Jérôme Boateng
CB 5 Mats Hummels  46'
LB 4 Benedikt Höwedes
CM 6 Sami Khedira  76'
CM 7 Bastian Schweinsteiger
RW 13Thomas Müller
AM 18Toni Kroos
LW 8 Mesut Özil
CF 11Miroslav Klose  58'
Substitutes:
DF 17Per Mertesacker  46'
MF 9 André Schürrle  58'
MF 14Julian Draxler  76'
Manager:
Joachim Löw

Man of the Match:
Toni Kroos (Germany)

Assistant referees:
Marvin Torrentera (Mexico)
Marcos Quintero (Mexico)
Fourth official:
Mark Geiger (United States)
Fifth official:
Mark Hurd (United States)


Netherlands vs Argentina

Line-up of the teams before the match

The two teams had met in eight previous matches, including four times in the FIFA World Cup: Netherlands won 4–0 in the second group stage of the 1974 FIFA World Cup and 2–1 in the quarter-finals of the 1998 FIFA World Cup, Argentina won 3–1 (after extra time) in the final of the 1978 FIFA World Cup, where as a group stage encounter of the 2006 FIFA World Cup ended in a 0–0 draw.[74]

The Netherlands made one change to their starting line-up from their quarter-final, with Nigel de Jong returning from injury to replace Memphis Depay, while Argentina made two changes, with Marcos Rojo returning from suspension to replace José María Basanta and Enzo Pérez replacing the injured Di María.[75] The match finished 0–0 after extra-time with very little chances as both sides cancelled each other out.[76] In the penalty shoot-out, Sergio Romero saved the first penalty from Ron Vlaar diving to his left and the fifth penalty of the shoot-out from Wesley Sneijder when he dived high to his right. Argentina scored all of their four penalties to win 4–2.[77] Maxi Rodríguez scored the decisive fourth penalty, shooting to Dutch goalkeeper Jasper Cillessen's right to send Argentina into the final, where they would face Germany, while the Netherlands had to settle for the third-place play-off against Brazil.

This was the first World Cup semi-final to end in a goalless draw.[78] Argentina won their fourth World Cup penalty shoot-out, tied with Germany for most wins, and were involved in their fifth World Cup shoot-out, a record for any nation.

Netherlands
Argentina
GK 1 Jasper Cillessen
CB 3 Stefan de Vrij
CB 2 Ron Vlaar
CB 4 Bruno Martins Indi  45'  46'
RWB15Dirk Kuyt
LWB5 Daley Blind
CM 6 Nigel de Jong  62'
CM 20Georginio Wijnaldum
AM 10Wesley Sneijder
CF 11Arjen Robben
CF 9 Robin van Persie (c)  96'
Substitutions:
DF 7 Daryl Janmaat  46'
MF 16Jordy Clasie  62'
FW 19Klaas-Jan Huntelaar  105'  96'
Manager:
Louis van Gaal
GK 1 Sergio Romero
RB 4 Pablo Zabaleta
CB 15Martín Demichelis  49'
CB 2 Ezequiel Garay
LB 16Marcos Rojo
CM 6 Lucas Biglia
CM 14Javier Mascherano
CM 8 Enzo Pérez  81'
SS 10Lionel Messi (c)
CF 9 Gonzalo Higuaín  82'
CF 22Ezequiel Lavezzi  101'
Substitutes:
FW 18Rodrigo Palacio  81'
FW 20Sergio Agüero  82'
MF 11Maxi Rodríguez  101'
Manager:
Alejandro Sabella

Man of the Match:
Sergio Romero (Argentina)

Assistant referees:
Bahattin Duran (Turkey)
Tarık Ongun (Turkey)
Fourth official:
Jonas Eriksson (Sweden)
Fifth official:
Mathias Klasenius (Sweden)

Third place play-off: Brazil vs Netherlands

The two teams had met in 11 previous meetings, including four times in the FIFA World Cup: Netherlands won 2–0 in the second group stage of the 1974 FIFA World Cup and 2–1 in the quarter-finals of the 2010 FIFA World Cup, and Brazil won 3–2 in the quarter-finals of the 1994 FIFA World Cup and 4–2 on penalties after a 1–1 draw (after extra time) in the semi-finals of the 1998 FIFA World Cup.[79]

Brazil made six changes in their starting line-up from their semi-final, while the Netherlands made only two, with Wesley Sneijder, who was originally part of the Dutch starting line-up, replaced by Jonathan de Guzmán after an injury during the pre-match warm-up prevented him from playing.[80] The Netherlands opened the scoring within three minutes, after Robin van Persie converted a penalty kick awarded for a foul on Arjen Robben by Thiago Silva. Daley Blind extended the lead in the 17th minute, scoring after a David Luiz headed clearance fell to him inside the penalty area. Georginio Wijnaldum completed the scoring in second half injury time as he shot home from substitute Daryl Janmaat's cross from the right.[81][82]

The Netherlands finished third for the first time in their World Cup history.[83] With Michel Vorm's participation (who was substituted into the match in second half injury time), the Netherlands became the first team to use all of their 23 players in a World Cup since the finals squads were expanded from 22 to 23 players in 2002.[84] Brazil, who finished fourth for the second time in World Cup history, conceded a total of 14 goals in the tournament, the most they had ever allowed in a World Cup and also the most conceded by any World Cup hosts.[85] Brazil also became the second team to concede 100 World Cup goals, after Germany.[86][87]

12 July 2014
17:00
Brazil  0–3  Netherlands
Report Van Persie  3' (pen.)
Blind  17'
Wijnaldum  90+1'
Brazil
Netherlands
GK 12Júlio César
RB 23Maicon
CB 3 Thiago Silva (c)  2'
CB 4 David Luiz
LB 14Maxwell
CM 8 Paulinho  57'
CM 17Luiz Gustavo  46'
RW 16Ramires  73'
AM 11Oscar  68'
LW 19Willian
CF 21
Substitutes:
MF 5 Fernandinho  54'  46'
MF 18Hernanes  57'
FW 7 Hulk  73'
Manager:
Luiz Felipe Scolari
GK 1 Jasper Cillessen  90+3'
CB 3 Stefan de Vrij
CB 2 Ron Vlaar
CB 4 Bruno Martins Indi
RWB15Dirk Kuyt
LWB5 Daley Blind  70'
CM 20Georginio Wijnaldum
CM 16Jordy Clasie  90'
CM 8Jonathan de Guzmán  36'
CF 9 Robin van Persie (c)
CF 11Arjen Robben  9'
Substitutes:
DF 7 Daryl Janmaat  70'
DF 13Joël Veltman  90'
GK 22Michel Vorm  90+3'
Manager:
Louis van Gaal

Man of the Match:
Arjen Robben (Netherlands)

Assistant referees:
Rédouane Achik (Morocco)
Abdelhalk Etchiali (Algeria)
Fourth official:
Yuichi Nishimura (Japan)
Fifth official:
Toru Sagara (Japan)

Final: Germany vs Argentina

Germany–Argentina line-up before kick-off

The two teams had met in 20 previous matches, including six times in the FIFA World Cup: 1958, group stage: West Germany 3–1 Argentina; 1966, group stage: West Germany 0–0 Argentina; 1986, final: West Germany 2–3 Argentina; 1990, final: West Germany 1–0 Argentina; 2006, quarter-finals: Germany 1–1 Argentina (after extra time, Germany won 4–2 on penalties); 2010 FIFA World Cup, quarter-finals: Germany 4–0 Argentina.[88] Their third final meeting is the most ever in World Cup history, and also tied the record for the most frequent fixture in tournament history, as Brazil vs Sweden and Germany vs Serbia (including Yugoslavia) had also been played seven times in the World Cup.[89]

Both teams initially named unchanged starting line-ups from their semi-finals,[90] but Germany had to make a late change as Sami Khedira injured his calf and was replaced by Christoph Kramer, who was himself substituted in the first half by André Schürrle after a blow to his head.[91] In the first half, Gonzalo Higuaín shot wide after a Toni Kroos's misplaced header fell to him, and also had a goal disallowed for offside. Later, Jérôme Boateng cleared off the line after a Lionel Messi run, and Benedikt Höwedes's header hit the post. In the second half, Argentina's best chance fell to Messi, whose shot went just wide, while Toni Kroos also had a chance for Germany but could not convert. For the third World Cup final in a row, the match went to extra time. In the first half, Schürrle had a shot saved by Sergio Romero, while Rodrigo Palacio's lobbed shot was also unsuccessful. Germany scored the only goal in the second half, as Schürrle ran down the left wing and crossed for substitute Mario Götze, who controlled the ball on his chest and volleyed past Romero.[92]

Germany won their fourth World Cup title, and their first title since German reunification (they won as West Germany in 1954, 1974, and 1990). It was the first time a European team won the tournament in the Americas. For the third tournament in a row, the World Cup was won by a European team, first time for any confederation. Argentina finished as the runners-up for the third time in their history.[93]

A total of 171 goals were scored in the tournament, a joint record along with the 1998 FIFA World Cup. Götze's goal was the 32nd by a substitute, a World Cup record. Including the final, a total of eight matches went to extra time, a joint record along with the 1990 FIFA World Cup.[94]

13 July 2014
16:00
Germany  1–0 (a.e.t.)  Argentina
Götze  113' Report
Germany
Argentina
GK 1 Manuel Neuer
RB 16 Philipp Lahm (c)
CB 20 Jérôme Boateng
CB 5 Mats Hummels
LB 4 Benedikt Höwedes  34'
CM 23 Christoph Kramer  31'
CM 7 Bastian Schweinsteiger  29'
RW 13 Thomas Müller
AM 18 Toni Kroos
LW 8 Mesut Özil  120'
CF 11 Miroslav Klose  88'
Substitutions:
FW 9 André Schürrle  31'
MF 19 Mario Götze  88'
DF 17 Per Mertesacker  120'
Manager:
Joachim Löw
GK 1 Sergio Romero
RB 4 Pablo Zabaleta
CB 15 Martín Demichelis
CB 2 Ezequiel Garay
LB 16 Marcos Rojo
CM 14 Javier Mascherano  64'
CM 6 Lucas Biglia
RW 8 Enzo Pérez  86'
LW 22 Ezequiel Lavezzi  46'
SS 10 Lionel Messi (c)
CF 9 Gonzalo Higuaín  78'
Substitutions:
FW 20 Sergio Agüero  65'  46'
FW 18 Rodrigo Palacio  78'
MF 5 Fernando Gago  86'
Manager:
Alejandro Sabella

Man of the Match:
Mario Götze (Germany)

Assistant referees:
Renato Faverani (Italy)
Andrea Stefani (Italy)
Fourth official:
Carlos Vera (Ecuador)
Fifth official:
Christian Lescano (Ecuador)

Notes

  1. FIFA's initial match statistics showed 16 saves, and many news sources continue to use this number. The official FIFA statistics were updated on July 5, 2014 to show 15 saves.

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