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Ireland beats Italy 2-0 in friendly
Posted Wednesday, June 08, 2011 by YAHOO Sport

Ireland beats Italy 2-0 in friendly

LIEGE, Belgium (AP)—Giovanni Trapattoni coached Ireland to a 2-0 victory over his native Italy in a friendly Tuesday.

Blackburn midfielder Keith Andrews put Ireland ahead in the 36th minute following a free kick and second-half substitute Simon Cox doubled the lead in the 90th on a rainy night.

“If we really had to lose, it was better to lose to (Trapattoni),” said Italy coach Cesare Prandelli, who played under Trapattoni at Juventus in the early 1980s.

After a light touch from Stephen Hunt, Andrews delayed his shot until Italy’s wall opened, then launched the ball inside the near post as goalkeeper Emiliano Viviano looked on befuddled.

Italy’s usual goalkeeper Gianluigi Buffon was rested.

Cox finished off a counterattack for his goal, easily redirecting a cross from Hunt inside the goal box.

Italy controlled for long stretches but was unable to create many clear chances before a crowd of about 20,000 dominated by Italian immigrants.

An Italy defensive error nearly gave Ireland the lead in the 13th, but Shane Long shot wide.

“We certainly need to reflect over this,” Prandelli said. “We had problems with our movement in attack. We were too stagnant.”

Ireland had several usual starters missing, with Robbie Keane, John O’Shea, Kevin Kilbane and first-choice goalkeeper Shay Given excused from the trip.

Ireland: David Forde, Paul McShane, Sean St. Ledger, Darren O’Dea, Stephen Ward, Seamus Coleman, Keith Andrews, Kevin Foley (Glenn Whelan, 60), Stephen Hunt, Andrew Keogh, Shane Long (Simon Cox, 60).

Italy: Emiliano Viviano, Mattia Cassani, Alessandro Gamberini, Giorgio Chiellini, Domenico Criscito, Claudio Marchisio, Andrea Pirlo (Angelo Palombo, 46), Antonio Nocerino (Alberto Gilardino, 59), Riccardo Montolivo, Giuseppe Rossi (Alessandro Matri, 46), Giampaolo Pazzini (Sebastian Giovinco, 59).

Standings
    Rank Team W/D/L Pts

    Cities & Stadiums

    The Top 3 Teams of Previous Tournaments

    Year Winners Runner-up Third place
    2008SpainGermanyRussia / Turkey
    2004GreecePortugalNetherlands / Czech Republic
    2000FranceItalyNetherlands / Portugal
    1996GermanyCzech RepublicFrance / England
    1992DenmarkGermanyNetherlands / Sweden
    1988NetherlandsSoviet UnionItaly / West Germany
    1984FranceSpainDenmark / Portugal
    1980West GermanyBelgiumCzechoslovakia
    1976CzechoslovakiaWest GermanyNetherlands
    1972West GermanySoviet UnionBelgium
    1968ItalyYugoslaviaEngland
    1964SpainSoviet UnionHungary
    1960Soviet UnionYugoslaviaCzechoslovakia