With Neymar’s Golden Kick, Brazil Wins First Olympic Soccer Title - Eastern Mirror
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With Neymar’s golden kick, Brazil wins first Olympic soccer title

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By IANS Updated: Aug 21, 2016 11:10 pm

RIO DE JANEIRO, AUGUST 21: Neymar converted the decisive spot-kick as Brazil ended their long wait for Olympic football glory with a dramatic 5-4 (1-1) penalty shoot-out victory over their 2014 World Cup tormentors Germany here on Saturday.
The Brazil captain held his nerve after the scores were tied 1-1 at the end of extra-time in a pulsating final at the Maracana stadium, Xinhua news agency reported.
Lars Bender was the only player to miss in the shoot-out, with Brazil goalkeeper Weverton punching away the midfielder’s feeble attempt.
FC Barcelona forward Neymar had earlier opened the scoring with a superb first-half free-kick but Germany equalised through a 59th-minute strike from captain Max Meyer.
Brazil’s victory came barely two years after they crashed out of the World Cup on home soil with a 1-7 thrashing against Germany in Belo Horizonte, a result that was described by the country’s media as a national tragedy.
An Olympic Games triumph had been the only major prize to elude the five-time World Cup winners and their bid for gold in Rio had become something of an obsession.
Brazil had previously reached the final on three occasions — 1984, 1988 and 2012 — but had to settle for silver each time.
The Olympic football tournament doesn’t quite have the prestige of the World Cup, but Brazilian fans have embraced it in a way that other Olympic sports can only envy.
While many events during these Games have been played out in front of empty stands, the Selecao has mostly enjoyed near-capacity crowds at their matches. That was again the case on Saturday, with 78,000 braving the rain to fill the Maracana.
After starting the Olympic tournament with two goalless draws, Brazil won their next three matches by an aggregate of 12 goals.
Germany’s form had been even more impressive, with 21 goals for the tournament, including six each from SC Freiburg striker Nils Petersen and Arsenal midfielder Serge Gnabry.
Perhaps understandably, Brazil began nervously as a settled-looking Germany took control of possession. The visitors nearly went a goal up in the 10th minute when Julian Brandt’s dipping long-range shot cannoned off the crossbar.
Second-half substitute Felipe Anderson nearly ended the impasse for Brazil just after the extra-time interval when he was played in by Neymar and forced a smart save from Horn. But Germany defended resolutely to force the match into a penalty shoot-out.

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By IANS Updated: Aug 21, 2016 11:10:06 pm
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