Ecuador proved the critics over them had been all wrong as they
made a fine start to World Cup against Group A rivals Poland,
winning 2-0 in Gelsenkirchen on Friday.
"Ecuador have always been criticized to earn all our victories
by playing at a very high altitude," said coach Luis Suarez, who
was happy but stayed cool with the surprising win taken in front of
boisterous supporters for Poland.
"This was a great result. But this is just a step. The mountain
is great. This is the first step in World Cup," he added.
The Latin Americans, who fell 2-0 behind to Italy inside the
first 20 minutes on their World Cup debut in 2002, looked far
assured kicking off their campaign in Germany and made the
breakthrough first after a sluggish start with little goalmouth
actions from both sides.
Forward Carlos Tenorio came out the burst-out hero as he latches
on in front of the goal and sent a header into the net beyond
Poland's keeper Artur Boruc on the 24th minute, after his attacking
partner Agustin Delgado flicked a long throw from winger Ulises De
La Cruz from the right line.
Delgado scored his own later in the second half to make it two
for the Ecuadorians, tipping in an inside-box cross from substitute
Ivan Kaviedes in 80 minutes.
Ecuador should have improved their scoreboard earlier, when
Tenorio drove a great run in the first half to set up Delgado, who
blazed over from point-blank range in 29 minutes.
Delgado, who was named Man of the Match with his extraordinary
performance of scoring the second goal and setting up the first for
Tenorio, echoed his manager that the team must keep their feet on
the ground.
"We can celebrate a victory but we must concentrate also on the
next Group A match," he said. Ecuador is to play Costa Rica on
Thursday at a second round match of Group A, which also features
hosts Germany.
Poland, who had the bulk of possession before the break,
continued to do little to get an equalizer in the second half,
showing nothing of their toughness and resolutions and even slowing
down on paces with 15 mintues to go.
Coach Pawel Janas replaced the exhausted Maciej Zurawski with
Pawel Brozek at 83, hoping to inject some fresh forces in their
attack, but the young striker did not come up to any chance for the
Poles in his short showup.
Poland's Ebi Smolarek and Ecuador captain Ivan Hurtado were
booked for a pair of challenges, while Hurtado was forced to exit
from the pitch after being tackled from back by Polish midfielder
Ebi Smolarek at 64 and carried off the pitch on a stretcher.
(Xinhua News Agency June 10, 2006)