2014 FIFA World Cup Group B

Group B of the 2014 FIFA World Cup consisted of Spain, the Netherlands, Chile, and Australia. This group contained the finalists of the previous World Cup in 2010: Spain (reigning champion) and the Netherlands (runners-up). Play began on 13 June and ended on 23 June 2014. The Netherlands and Chile progressed to the knockout stage, while Australia and Spain were eliminated after suffering two defeats in their opening two matches. Chile was eliminated by Brazil in the second round after penalties, while the Netherlands made their way to the semi-finals in which they lost to Argentina on penalties. The third place match was won by the Netherlands with a convincing 3–0 victory against Brazil.

Teams

Draw position Team Confederation Method of
qualification
Date of
qualification
Finals
appearance
Last
appearance
Previous best
performance
FIFA Rankings
October 2013[nb 1] June 2014
B1 (seed)  Spain UEFA UEFA Group I winners 15 October 2013 14th 2010 Winners (2010) 1 1
B2  Netherlands UEFA UEFA Group D winners 10 September 2013 10th 2010 Runners-up (1974, 1978, 2010) 8 15
B3  Chile CONMEBOL CONMEBOL third place 15 October 2013 9th 2010 Third place (1962) 12 14
B4  Australia AFC AFC Fourth Round Group B runners-up 18 June 2013 4th 2010 Round of 16 (2006) 57 62
Notes
  1. The rankings of October 2013 were used for seeding for the final draw.

Standings

Pos Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts Qualification
1  Netherlands 3 3 0 0 10 3 +7 9 Advance to knockout stage
2  Chile 3 2 0 1 5 3 +2 6
3  Spain 3 1 0 2 4 7 3 3
4  Australia 3 0 0 3 3 9 6 0
Source: FIFA
Rules for classification: Tie-breaking criteria

Matches

Spain vs Netherlands

The two teams had met in 10 previous matches, including in the 2010 FIFA World Cup Final, won by Spain 1–0 after extra time.[1] This was the first time in the FIFA World Cup that the previous finalists met in the group stage.

Halfway into the first half, the referee judged that Diego Costa caught a trailing leg from Stefan de Vrij's attempted tackle. Xabi Alonso scored the penalty kick for Spain, shooting into the bottom-right corner with his right foot, putting them into the lead. They were unable to keep the lead until half time though, with Robin van Persie scoring a 15-yard diving looping header after a long ball from Daley Blind from the left after he spotted Iker Casillas slightly off his line.[2] In the second half, Blind assisted another goal for Netherlands, this time setting up Arjen Robben who controlled the pass before coming inside to finish with his left foot from ten yards out. Twelve minutes later, Netherlands scored again, as De Vrij headed the ball in from a tight angle from a Wesley Sneijder free kick on the left. Spanish goalkeeper Iker Casillas protested that he had been fouled by Van Persie, but the goal was allowed to stand and Casillas received a yellow card for his protest. Not long after this, a backpass from Sergio Ramos was miscontrolled by Casillas with his left leg, resulting in Van Persie gathering the ball and scoring into an empty net for his second goal of the game. The fifth goal for Netherlands was a solo effort from Robben. Having received the ball near the halfway line from a Wesley Sneijder pass, he outran Ramos, Jordi Alba and Casillas, before slotting the ball into the net from 10 yards out with his left foot.[3][4][5]

The 5–1 scoreline was the biggest loss margin for a defending champion in the FIFA World Cup, and also Spain's biggest loss in the World Cup since 1950.[6] With their goals, Van Persie and Robben became the first Dutch players to score in three World Cups.[7] Casillas and Xavi joined Andoni Zubizarreta as the only Spanish players to appear in four World Cups.[8]

13 June 2014
16:00 UTC−3
Spain  1–5  Netherlands
Alonso  27' (pen.) Report Van Persie  44', 72'
Robben  53', 80'
De Vrij  65'
Spain
Netherlands
GK 1 Iker Casillas (c)  65'
RB 22César Azpilicueta
CB 3 Gerard Piqué
CB 15Sergio Ramos
LB 18Jordi Alba
RM 8 Xavi
CM 16Sergio Busquets
LM 14Xabi Alonso  62'
RW 21David Silva  78'
LW 6 Andrés Iniesta
CF 19Diego Costa  62'
Substitutions:
FW 9 Fernando Torres  62'
FW 11Pedro  62'
MF 10Cesc Fàbregas  78'
Manager:
Vicente del Bosque
GK 1 Jasper Cillessen
CB2 Ron Vlaar
CB 3 Stefan de Vrij  41'  77'
CB 4 Bruno Martins Indi
RWB7 Daryl Janmaat
LWB5 Daley Blind
CM 6 Nigel de Jong
CM 8 Jonathan de Guzmán  25'  62'
AM 10Wesley Sneijder
CF 9 Robin van Persie (c)  66'  79'
CF 11Arjen Robben
Substitutions:
MF 20Georginio Wijnaldum  62'
DF 13Joël Veltman  77'
FW 17Jeremain Lens  79'
Manager:
Louis van Gaal

Man of the Match:
Robin van Persie (Netherlands)

Assistant referees:
Renato Faverani (Italy)
Andrea Stefani (Italy)
Fourth official:
Svein Oddvar Moen (Norway)
Fifth official:
Kim Haglund (Norway)

Chile vs Australia

The two teams had met in four previous matches, including in the 1974 FIFA World Cup group stage, a 0–0 draw.[10]

Chile took a 2–0 lead within the first 15 minutes. First, Alexis Sánchez controlled an Eduardo Vargas header in the penalty area to slot home. Two minutes later, Jorge Valdivia's shot from a Sánchez pass doubled the lead. Australia pulled one back through a Tim Cahill header from a cross by Ivan Franjic before half time.[11]

Australia could not find the equaliser in the second half, and in stoppage time, Chilean substitute Jean Beausejour converted the rebound after Mauricio Pinilla's shot was saved by Mathew Ryan.[12]

With their respective goals, Cahill became the first Australian player to score in three World Cups,[13] while Beausejour became the first Chilean player to score in two World Cups.[14]

13 June 2014
18:00 UTC−4
Chile  3–1  Australia
Sánchez  12'
Valdivia  14'
Beausejour  90+2'
Report Cahill  35'
Chile
Australia
GK 1 Claudio Bravo (c)
RB 4 Mauricio Isla
CB 17Gary Medel
CB 18Gonzalo Jara
LB 2 Eugenio Mena
RM 20Charles Aránguiz  86'
CM 21Marcelo Díaz
LM 8 Arturo Vidal  60'
RF 7 Alexis Sánchez
CF 10Jorge Valdivia  68'
LF 11Eduardo Vargas  88'
Substitutions:
MF 16Felipe Gutiérrez  60'
MF 15Jean Beausejour  68'
FW 9 Mauricio Pinilla  88'
Manager:
Argentina Jorge Sampaoli
GK 1 Mathew Ryan
RB 2 Ivan Franjic  49'
CB 22Alex Wilkinson
CB 6 Matthew Špiranović
LB 3 Jason Davidson
CM 15Mile Jedinak (c)  58'
CM 5 Mark Milligan  67'
RW 7 Mathew Leckie
AM 23Mark Bresciano  78'
LW 11Tommy Oar  68'
CF 4 Tim Cahill  44'
Substitutions:
DF 19Ryan McGowan  49'
MF 10Ben Halloran  68'
MF 14James Troisi  78'
Manager:
Ange Postecoglou

Man of the Match:
Alexis Sánchez (Chile)

Assistant referees:
Songuifolo Yeo (Ivory Coast)
Jean-Claude Birumushahu (Burundi)
Fourth official:
Roberto Moreno (Panama)
Fifth official:
Eric Boria (United States)

Australia vs Netherlands

The two teams had met in three previous matches, all in friendlies, most recently in 2009.[15]

The Netherlands took the lead after Arjen Robben collected a Daley Blind headed pass at the halfway line, burst into the penalty area and scored with a low shot to the goalkeepers left. Soon after the restart, Australia equalised through Tim Cahill's left-foot volley into the goal from the underside of the bar from Ryan McGowan's cross.[16] Australia took the lead in the second half with Mile Jedinak's penalty, awarded for a handball by Daryl Janmaat, but Robin van Persie equalised after he received substitute Memphis Depay's pass and scored. Ten minutes later, Memphis Depay received a pass from Jonathan de Guzmán and his long range effort beat Australia goalkeeper Mathew Ryan.[17]

With his goal Depay became the youngest Dutch scorer in the World Cup.[18]

18 June 2014
13:00 UTC−3
Australia  2–3  Netherlands
Cahill  21'
Jedinak  54' (pen.)
Report Robben  20'
Van Persie  58'
Memphis  68'
Australia
Netherlands
GK 1 Mathew Ryan
RB 19Ryan McGowan
CB 22Alex Wilkinson
CB 6 Matthew Špiranović
LB 3 Jason Davidson
CM 15Mile Jedinak (c)
CM 17Matt McKay
RW 7 Mathew Leckie
AM 23Mark Bresciano  51'
LW 11Tommy Oar  77'
CF 4 Tim Cahill  43'  69'
Substitutions:
MF 13Oliver Bozanić  51'
MF 10Ben Halloran  69'
FW 9 Adam Taggart  77'
Manager:
Ange Postecoglou
GK 1 Jasper Cillessen
CB 2 Ron Vlaar
CB 3 Stefan de Vrij
CB 4 Bruno Martins Indi  45+3'
RM 7 Daryl Janmaat
CM 8 Jonathan de Guzmán  78'
CM 6 Nigel de Jong
LM 5 Daley Blind
AM 10Wesley Sneijder
CF 9 Robin van Persie (c)  47'  87'
CF 11Arjen Robben
Substitutions:
MF 21Memphis Depay  45+3'
MF 20Georginio Wijnaldum  78'
FW 17Jeremain Lens  87'
Manager:
Louis van Gaal

Man of the Match:
Arjen Robben (Netherlands)

Assistant referees:
Rédouane Achik (Morocco)
Abdelhak Etchiali (Algeria)
Fourth official:
Bakary Gassama (Gambia)
Fifth official:
Evarist Menkouande (Cameroon)

Spain vs Chile

The two teams had met in ten previous matches, including twice in the FIFA World Cup group stage, both won by Spain (1950: 2–0; 2010: 2–1).[19]

Chile opened the scoring when Charles Aránguiz squared a pass to Eduardo Vargas to score home in the penalty area. Near the end of the first half Alexis Sánchez's free kick was parried by Spanish goalkeeper Iker Casillas to Aránguiz who put in the rebound.[20] Spain, which needed at least a point to stay alive in the competition, had its best chance in the second half which fell to Sergio Busquets, but he missed from close range.[21] Spain's loss confirmed the qualification of both Chile and the Netherlands into the knockout stage, and eliminated both Spain and Australia.

Spain became the fifth defending champions to be knocked out in the group stage, and the first since 1950 to be eliminated after only two games (Italy were drawn into a three-team group and only played two games in 1950).[22]

18 June 2014
16:00 UTC−3
Spain  0–2  Chile
Report Vargas  20'
Aránguiz  43'
Spain
Chile
GK 1 Iker Casillas (c)
RB 22César Azpilicueta
CB 4 Javi Martínez
CB 15Sergio Ramos
LB 18Jordi Alba
CM 16Sergio Busquets
CM 14Xabi Alonso  41'  46'
RW 21David Silva
AM 6 Andrés Iniesta
LW 11Pedro  76'
CF 19Diego Costa  64'
Substitutions:
MF 17Koke  46'
FW 9 Fernando Torres  64'
MF 20Santi Cazorla  76'
Manager:
Vicente del Bosque
GK 1 Claudio Bravo (c)
CB 17Gary Medel
CB 5 Francisco Silva
CB 18Gonzalo Jara
RM 4 Mauricio Isla
CM 20Charles Aránguiz  64'
CM 21Marcelo Díaz
LM 2 Eugenio Mena  61'
AM 8 Arturo Vidal  26'  88'
CF 11Eduardo Vargas  85'
CF 7 Alexis Sánchez
Substitutions:
MF 16Felipe Gutiérrez  64'
MF 10Jorge Valdivia  85'
MF 6 Carlos Carmona  88'
Manager:
Argentina Jorge Sampaoli

Man of the Match:
Eduardo Vargas (Chile)

Assistant referees:
Mark Hurd (United States)
Joe Fletcher (Canada)
Fourth official:
Nawaf Shukralla (Bahrain)
Fifth official:
Yaser Tulefat (Bahrain)

Australia vs Spain

The two teams had never met before.[23] Australia forward Tim Cahill was suspended for the match due to accumulation of yellow cards.[24]

In a match between two already-eliminated teams, Spain went in front in the 36th minute after Andrés Iniesta threaded a pass down the right to overlapping full-back Juanfran, who then crossed the ball low to David Villa to finish with a back flick of his right foot low to the net.[25] In the second half, Fernando Torres scored Spain's second with a low finish from the left of the penalty area after a pass from Iniesta, before substitute Juan Mata, receiving a pass from Cesc Fàbregas, scored from the right of the penalty area with a low shot between the goalkeeper's legs.[26]

Villa's goal was his ninth career World Cup goal. Already Spain's record World Cup goalscorer, he also joined Fernando Hierro, Raúl and Julio Salinas as Spanish players who had scored in three World Cups.[27]

23 June 2014
13:00 UTC−3
Australia  0–3  Spain
Report Villa  36'
Torres  69'
Mata  82'
Arena da Baixada, Curitiba
Attendance: 39,375
Referee: Nawaf Shukralla (Bahrain)
Australia
Spain
GK 1 Mathew Ryan
RB 19Ryan McGowan
CB 6 Matthew Špiranović  88'
CB 22Alex Wilkinson
LB 3 Jason Davidson
CM 17Matt McKay
CM 15Mile Jedinak (c)  90+2'
CM 13Oliver Bozanić  72'
RW 7 Mathew Leckie
CF 9 Adam Taggart  46'
LW 11Tommy Oar  61'
Substitutions:
MF 10Ben Halloran  46'
MF 14James Troisi  61'
MF 23Mark Bresciano  72'
Manager:
Ange Postecoglou
GK 23Pepe Reina
RB 5 Juanfran
CB 2 Raúl Albiol
CB 15Sergio Ramos (c)  62'
LB 18Jordi Alba
CM 14Xabi Alonso  83'
CM 17Koke
AM 6 Andrés Iniesta
RW 20Santi Cazorla  68'
LW 7 David Villa  56'
CF 9 Fernando Torres
Substitutions:
MF 13Juan Mata  56'
MF 10Cesc Fàbregas  68'
MF 21David Silva  83'
Manager:
Vicente del Bosque

Man of the Match:
David Villa (Spain)

Assistant referees:
Yaser Tulefat (Bahrain)
Ebrahim Saleh (Bahrain)
Fourth official:
Norbert Hauata (Tahiti)
Fifth official:
Aden Marwa (Kenya)

Netherlands vs Chile

The two teams had met in one previous match, at the 1928 Summer Olympics.[28] Netherlands forward Robin van Persie was suspended for the match due to accumulation of yellow cards.[24]

With both teams already assured of qualifying for the knockout stage after their first two matches, this match would decide which team would win the group: the Netherlands needed only a draw while Chile needed a win. The Netherlands went in front in the 77th minute with a header from six yards by substitute Leroy Fer after a Daryl Janmaat cross from the right. Another substitute Memphis Depay got the second in injury time, when he scored from close range after Arjen Robben had made a run down the left before crossing from the byline.[29] With this win the Netherlands won Group B with a perfect record of three wins out of three, while Chile finished as group runners-up.[30]

23 June 2014
13:00 UTC−3
Netherlands  2–0  Chile
Fer  77'
Memphis  90+2'
Report
Netherlands
Chile
GK 1 Jasper Cillessen
RB 7 Daryl Janmaat
CB 2 Ron Vlaar
CB 3 Stefan de Vrij
LB 5 Daley Blind  64'
RM 20Georginio Wijnaldum
CM 6 Nigel de Jong
LM 15Dirk Kuyt  89'
AM 10Wesley Sneijder  75'
SS 11Arjen Robben (c)
CF 17Jeremain Lens  69'
Substitutions:
MF 21Memphis Depay  69'
MF 18Leroy Fer  75'
DF 14Terence Kongolo  89'
Manager:
Louis van Gaal
GK 1 Claudio Bravo (c)
CB 17Gary Medel
CB 5 Francisco Silva  25'  70'
CB 18Gonzalo Jara
RWB 4Mauricio Isla
LWB 2Eugenio Mena
CM 20Charles Aránguiz
CM 21Marcelo Díaz
AM 16Felipe Gutiérrez  46'
CF 7Alexis Sánchez
CF 11Eduardo Vargas  81'
Substitutions:
MF 15Jean Beausejour  46'
MF 10Jorge Valdivia  70'
FW 9 Mauricio Pinilla  81'
Manager:
Argentina Jorge Sampaoli

Man of the Match:
Arjen Robben (Netherlands)

Assistant referees:
Evarist Menkouande (Cameroon)
Felicien Kabanda (Rwanda)
Fourth official:
Joel Aguilar (El Salvador)
Fifth official:
William Torres (El Salvador)

References

  1. "2014 FIFA World Cup – Statistical Kit" (PDF). FIFA.com. p. 9.
  2. "Spain humiliated as rampant Holland blast five in World Cup shock". Guardian. 13 June 2014. Retrieved 30 October 2014.
  3. "Spain 1-5 Netherlands". BBC Sport. 13 June 2014. Retrieved 14 June 2014.
  4. "Spain v Holland, World Cup 2014: as it happened". The Telegraph. 13 June 2014. Retrieved 14 June 2014.
  5. "Spain v Holland: World Cup 2014 – as it happened". The Guardian. 13 June 2014. Retrieved 14 June 2014.
  6. Lowe, Sid (13 June 2014). "Spain suffer not just a defeat but a World Cup disaster against Holland". The Guardian.
  7. "Manchester United Striker Robin Van Persie Sets New Dutch World Cup Goal-Scoring Record". Caughtoffisde.com. 14 June 2014.
  8. "These are the players who have defended Spain in more World Cups". sefutbol.com. 28 June 2014.
  9. 1 2 "Referee designations for matches 1-4" (PDF). FIFA.com (Fédération Internationale de Football Association). 10 June 2014.
  10. "2014 FIFA World Cup – Statistical Kit" (PDF). FIFA.com. p. 10.
  11. "Australia's fighting spirit not enough as Alexis Sánchez fires up Chile". Guardian. 13 June 2014. Retrieved 30 October 2014.
  12. "Chile 3 Australia 1". BBC Sport. 13 June 2014.
  13. "World Cup 2014: Battling Socceroos take Chile to the wire". The Sydney Morning Herald. 14 June 2014.
  14. "A place in history for returning Beausejour". FIFA.com. 14 June 2014.
  15. "2014 FIFA World Cup – Statistical Kit" (PDF). FIFA.com. p. 28.
  16. "Holland come from behind to beat brave Australia in Group B classic". Guardian. 18 June 2014. Retrieved 30 October 2014.
  17. "Australia 2 Netherlands 3". BBC Sport. 18 June 2014.
  18. "Eagles down, but not out -Ameobi". The Sun. 20 June 2014.
  19. "2014 FIFA World Cup – Statistical Kit" (PDF). FIFA.com. p. 27.
  20. "Spain crash out as irresistible Chile prove too much of a handful". Guardian. 18 June 2014. Retrieved 30 October 2014.
  21. "Spain 0 Chile 2". BBC Sport. 18 June 2014.
  22. "Taxi for tiki-taka! Spain become the fifth World Cup holders to crash out in the group stage after Brazil, France and Italy (twice)". Daily Mail. 18 June 2014.
  23. "2014 FIFA World Cup – Statistical Kit" (PDF). FIFA.com. p. 40.
  24. 1 2 "Van Persie and Cahill earn suspensions". ESPN FC. 18 June 2014. Retrieved 18 June 2014.
  25. "David Villa helps Spain salvage some pride with victory over Australia". Guardian. 23 June 2014. Retrieved 24 June 2014.
  26. "Australia 0 Spain 3". BBC Sport. 23 June 2014. Retrieved 24 June 2014.
  27. "David Villa se despide marcando" (in Spanish). Yahoo! Deportes. 24 June 2014.
  28. "2014 FIFA World Cup – Statistical Kit" (PDF). FIFA.com. p. 41.
  29. "Holland top Group B after Leroy Fer header helps break Chile's resolve". Guardian. 23 June 2014. Retrieved 24 June 2014.
  30. "Netherlands 2 Chile 0". BBC Sport. 23 June 2014. Retrieved 24 June 2014.

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