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PAGLIUCA
STANDS ALONE, WITHOUT FEELING OF LUCK
By Lisa Dillman , Los Angeles Times (probably 18 July 1994).
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Soccer: Italy's goalkeeper turns in a shutout, but it's not
good enough.
The victorious Brazilians were doing something closely resembling
jumping
jacks in the midfield, and several yards away, Italian goalkeeper
Gianluca
Pagliuca was flat on the ground.
His teammates were respectful, letting him remain alone with
his thoughts.
Finally, a couple came over and comforted him. Forward Gianfranco
Zola put an arm around Pagliuca.
How bittersweet could it get?
Pagliuca had not allowed a goal but lost the World Cup championship
game
when Brazil defeated Italy on Sunday on penalty kicks, 3-2,
at the Rose Bowl. He did exactly what a goalkeeper is supposed
to do -- shut out the opposition.
Romario couldn't score.
Neither did Bebeto.
Dunga, Branco, Cafu and Viola wre unable to get it past Pagliuca.
For 120 minutes, there was nothing in the net.
It's hard to get a grip on losing on penalty kicks, not exactly
commonplace.
The final game had never been decided by penalty kicks.
"This is a terrible emotion," Pagliuca said.
But the goalkeeper with movie-star looks did not lash out against
the use of
penalty kicks."It was right because that's the rules,"
he said.
After overtime and before the penalty kicks, his teammates gave
him
encouragement. Defender Luigi Apolloni hugged him, and in an
immense show of class, Brazilian goalkeeper Claudio Taffarel
walked over and hugged him before the penalty kicks. Perhaps
Taffarel realized the injustice, a sentiment he expressed before
the game.
Said Taffarel: "We are great friends. When we walked together
toward the
goal, we agreed that whichever team would persevere was predetermined
to win the title."
Somehow, Pagliuca and his teammates did not have the necessary
feeling of
luck about the unprecedented way to decide a championship.
"We played a good game, but we made too many mistakes,"
Pagliuca said. "When it came to penalty kicks, you've just
got to have a feeling."
The pressure was on Pagliuca, even before he faced the first
kick, because
Italian defender Franco Baresi (*) started the series by missing.
But Pagliuca
immediately put Italy back in it by making a save on Marcio
Santos.
But Romario, Branco and Dunga scored, and the result was taken
out of
Pagliuca's hands. "We were not able to finish the game.
We made too many mistakes," Pagliuca said.
He got away with a major error himself in regulation. One of
Brazil's best
opportunities came in the 76th minute when Pagliuca bobbled
a 25-yard blast by midfielder Mauro Silva. But the ball bounced
harmlessly off the post and
disaster was averted.
Pagliuca, dramatically, kissed his own hand and patted the post.
For him, it was a tumultuous tournament from start to finish.
The
27-year-old, who plays for Sampdoria of Genoa, was the first
goalkeeper to be
ejected from a World Cup game when he was given a red card for
handling the ball out of the penalty area.
It came in the 21st minute against Norway in the first round,
and Pagliuca
was tossed and promptly suspended for two more games. And Italian
Coach Arrigo Sacchi went with Luca Marchegiani for the second
round and was criticized for going back to Pagliuca for the
quarterfinals against Spain.
Marchegiani had been the starter during World Cup qualifying
but lost his
position when he committed two major errors in a 2-2 tie against
Switzerland.
Pagliuca, a reserved and self-contained man, took over and was
the starter
through the rest of qualifying. He often has one stock phrase
for the Italian
media when asked about his performance, saing: "You lot,
judge for yourselves."
As for Sunday?
Well, there's not exactly much to criticize when a goalkeeper
records a
shutout and still loses.
That was Pagliuca's lot.
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