Argentina: 22-Sergio Romero; 2-Martin Demichelis, 13-Walter Samuel, 6-Gabriel Heinze, 17-Jonas Gutierrez; 14-Javier Mascherano, 20-Maxi Rodriguez, 7-Angel Di Maria; 10-Lionel Messi, 11-Carlos Tevez, 9-Gonzalo Higuain.
South Korea: 18-Jung Sung-ryong; 2-Oh Beom-seok, 12-Lee Young-pyo, 4-Cho Yong-hyung, 14-Lee Jung-soo, 8-Kim Jung-woo, 16-Ki Sung-yong, 7-Park Ji-sung, 17-Lee Chung-yong, 10-Park Chu-young, 19-Yeom Ki-hun.
Referee: Frank De Bleeckere (Belgium)
South Korea: 18-Jung Sung-ryong; 2-Oh Beom-seok, 12-Lee Young-pyo, 4-Cho Yong-hyung, 14-Lee Jung-soo, 8-Kim Jung-woo, 16-Ki Sung-yong, 7-Park Ji-sung, 17-Lee Chung-yong, 10-Park Chu-young, 19-Yeom Ki-hun.
Referee: Frank De Bleeckere (Belgium)
16 mins GOAL Argentina 1-0 South Korea
Oh dear. Poor old Park Chu-young, the South Korean forward inadvertantly deflecting Lionel Messi's free-kick from the left past his helpless keeper under little to no pressure at all. Advantage Argentina. 33 mins GOAL Argentina 2-0 South Korea
It's 2-0, and Argentina have their first 2010 World Cup goal from open play. Maxi Rodriguez drifts a nice ball right-footed in from the left, Nicolas Burdisso flicks it on, and Gonzalo Higuain - onside - is in miles of space as he picks his spot with his header at the back stick. Is that game, set and match?
38 mins Commentary
This is very impressive from Argentina, a performance built on their willingness and commitment to win the ball back when they lose possession. Carlos Tevez - who else? - is typifying such an approach, but the work-rate of Diego Maradona's side is almost as impressive as their guile going forward right now.
38 mins Commentary
This is very impressive from Argentina, a performance built on their willingness and commitment to win the ball back when they lose possession. Carlos Tevez - who else? - is typifying such an approach, but the work-rate of Diego Maradona's side is almost as impressive as their guile going forward right now.
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