Antoine Griezmann scored
twice as France beat Germany 2-0 at the Stade Velodrome to set up a Euro 2016
final with Portugal in Paris, on Sunday.
Germany enjoyed almost 70
per cent possession during a frantic first-half in Marseille but it was France
who broke the deadlock in injury time at the end of the first period after
Patrice Evra's header was adjudged to have hit the arm of Bastian Schweinsteiger.
Griezmann made no mistake
from the spot (45+2) and the tournament's leading goalscorer was again
celebrating in the 72nd minute after he capitalised on mistakes from Joshua
Kimmich and Manuel Neuer to score his sixth goal of the competition to send
Didier Deschamps' side to the final.
For Germany, who did
everything but score, they exit the tournament having now lost four of their
last six semi-finals at major tournaments.
France, who become the
first host nation to reach the Euros final twice, now have the opportunity to
win their first major tournament since Euro 2000 and evoke memories of the side
Deschamps captained to World Cup glory in 1998.
France had the luxury of
naming the same starting line up in consecutive Euros matches for the first
time in the country's history following their 5-2 quarter-final victory over
Iceland, while Germany made three changes with Schweinsteiger, Emre Can and
Julian Draxler replacing the suspended Mats Hummels and the injured duo of Sami
Khedira and Mario Gomez.
The first big chance of
the match fell to Griezmann in the seventh minute after he danced his way
through the Germany defence, but his right-footed shot could not beat the dive
of Neuer.
France looked the sharper
of the two sides but Germany gradually worked their way into the contest with
Thomas Muller snatching at a first-time effort after being picked out by Can.
The Liverpool midfielder
was involved again minutes later as his deflected shot looked to be heading for
the bottom corner before Hugo Lloris got down to his right to palm the ball to
safety.
Germany were beginning to
dominate possession with Toni Kroos running the show, and he wanted a penalty
in the 21st minute after going down under the challenge of Samuel Umtiti and
Paul Pogba, but Italian referee Nicola Rizzoli waved away the appeals.
Just as they started the
half well, France finished the stronger of the two sides with Evra slipping the
ball into the path of Griezmann, who hit the side netting with a snap-shot from
a tight angle.
A minute later, Olivier
Giroud raced through on goal with Griezmann in support, but the Arsenal striker
was just not fast enough to get away from Benedikt Howedes, who recovered to
make a superb last ditch sliding challenge.
France were not finished
there though as Evra headed Dimitri Payet's corner against the arm of
Schweinsteiger and after a moment of confusion Rizzoli booked the Manchester
United midfielder and pointed to the spot. Griezmann stepped up to send Neuer
the wrong way to score his fifth goal of the tournament.
Deschamps' side started
the second half in confident fashion with Moussa Sissoko picking out
Giroud, but the striker's shot was expertly blocked by Jerome Boateng. Seconds
later, Griezmann went close again after combining with Giroud in the penalty
area and the former's shot was deflected over the crossbar.
Germany were still seeing
plenty of the ball but in the absence of the injured Gomez, they were
struggling for a cutting edge in the final third with Laurent Koscielny and the
impressive Umtiti defending resolutely.
Germany were forced into
a change in the 61st minute when Shkodran Mustafi replaced the injured Boateng
and Joachim Low was soon calling for attacking reinforcements with Mario
Gotze coming on in place of Can.
But it was France who
extended their lead and it was two Germany errors, the first by Kimmich and the
second by Neuer, that handed Griezmann his second. Kimmich gave the ball away
inside his own box, before the Bayern Munich goalkeeper flapped at Pogba's
cross and Griezmann was on hand to poke home from close range.
Germany almost responded
immediately and it was Kimmich, who almost made amends for his mistake,
clipping the outside of the post with a curling effort from the edge of the
penalty area.
Low threw Leroy Sane on
for Schweinsteiger with 11 minutes remaining and he almost scored with his
first touch before Mustafi lashed over from close range and Howedes headed
over.
France went close to
extending their advantage with four minutes remaining but Griezmann fluffed his
lines in search of a hat-trick, firing his effort straight at a grateful Neuer.
It proved to be the
Atletico Madrid forward's last action and he was replaced by Yohan Cabaye after
getting a standing ovation from all four sides of the ground.
Germany had one final
chance to pull one back as Kimmich turned the ball goalwards but Lloris kept
his clean sheet intact with a tremendous diving stop to sum up Germany's
evening.
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