Africa weeps!

JOHANNESBURG, (Reuters) – Ghana striker Asamoah  Gyan’s penalty miss in the dying seconds of extra time against Uruguay yesterday cost the African side a place in the World Cup  semi-finals and broke hearts across the continent.

Uruguay’s 4-2 shootout win after a 1-1 draw took them into  the last four for the first time in 40 years where they will  face Netherlands, who earlier shocked Brazil 2-1, and stopped  Ghana becoming the first African side to reach the semis.

Gyan blasted his spot kick against the bar with the last  kick in added time on a night of pulsating drama at Soccer City  that not even a Hollywood scriptwriter would have penned.

Uruguay made the most of being let off the hook to progress  with Fernando Muslera saving two of Ghana’s penalties before a  cheeky chipped spot kick from Sebastian Abreu that was full of  Latin bravado and panache delivered the spoils.

Uruguay celebrated their good fortune with unbridled joy on  the pitch while Gyan broke down and wept. Ghana’s Serbian coach  Milovan Rajevac struggled to hold back the tears at the  post-match news conference. “At the end we had a historic opportunity. It would have  been a fairytale. We didn’t deserve to lose in this way,”  Rajevac said, his eyes swollen as he bit repeatedly at his  bottom lip.

SUAREZ HANDBALL

The difference between the sweet taste of victory and bitter  defeat turned on a handball by Uruguay forward Luis Suarez on  the line that denied Ghana a goal in the final seconds.

While he was sent off for the offence, and will miss the  semi-final, Uruguay got an effective lifeline that they snatched  to book a meeting with the Dutch in Cape Town on Tuesday.

“We did what we had to do to win without playing  brilliantly,” was Uruguay coach Oscar Tabarez’s response to a  question about the credibility of his side’s success.

Gyan had netted two penalties in the first round of the  tournament but struck yesterday’s effort high, grazing the top of  the crossbar and then clutching his head in his hands as the  opportunity of a lifetime slipped by.

Ghana had taken the lead on the stroke of halftime when  Sulley Muntari, restored to the starting lineup after an earlier  bust-up with the coach, fired a speculative shot from long range  that deceived Uruguay keeper Muslera.

It came after the Africans had weathered a jittery opening  spell as Uruguay’s much vaunted attack of Suarez and Diego  Forlan set up three good early chances.

Uruguay equalised 10 minutes into the second half when  Forlan struck a wicked swerving free kick over the top of the  defence and keeper Richard Kingson.

But it was the Black Stars who had the better of the late  chances in a flowing game that taxed the physical conditioning  of both sides.

Missed chances in extra time suggested the game would limp  to the lottery of a shootout but it suddenly came alive when  Kevin-Prince Boateng narrowly missed with a header in the 118th  minute before the scarcely believable finish unfolded.