MADRID, Spain -- Disappointment turned to violence in downtown Madrid
after Spain lost 3-1 to France and was eliminated from the World Cup,
news reports said Wednesday.
Municipal police officers reportedly drew truncheons on youngsters who
jumped into a fountain at Colon square following a broadcast of
Tuesday's second-round game on a giant TV screen which was watched by
some 15,000 supporters.
Some fans responded by throwing bottles, leading police to mount a
charge. Sixteen people were hospitalized, including one officer, and 12
arrested.
National El Pais said officers had acted indiscriminately, with
those attacked including bottle-throwers, people leaving the square
peacefully, small children, couples and journalists.
People fled hysterically, the newspaper added, and the square was
emptied within 10 minutes of the final whistle.
Battles reportedly continued between riot police and supporters in
nearly streets, with a car burned and street furniture destroyed.
Meanwhile, Spain's press attempted to come to terms with the national
team's latest flop by employing headlines such as "Broken dreams,"
"Failure" and "Back home, as always."
Most newspapers bemoaned the team's continued failure to improve on its
best World Cup placing when it finished fourth in 1950.
"The Spain of always," lamented El Pais, saying Luis
Aragones' team was "the same which always fails in the top tournaments,
a victim of its own misfortune and incapable of beating teams of higher
standing."
"Not even the quarterfinals" said sports daily Mundo
Deportivo, which added "our first serious rival knocked the national
team out."
However, two Madrid-based sports papers, Marca and As,
looked on the bright side on their front pages.
"Don't cry. We have a team and we'll be back," Marca said. "It was nice
while it lasted," added As.
But Marca also said the defeat should spell the end for Spain's
veteran coach Luis Aragones, who suffered his first defeat in 26 matches
since his appointment in the wake of the team's previous flop in the
2004 European championships.
"Luis himself said if he didn't get past the quarterfinals he would go.
And we didn't even get to that stage," the paper said.
As praised Zinedine Zidane, the scorer of France's third goal which
ensured his involvement in the final tournament of his career would
continue at least until the quarterfinals.
"He delivered the coup de grace, and you can almost say that it was a
good death. The last thing we saw while we were still alive in this
World Cup was the gallop, the dribble, the shot by Zidane," the paper
said in its editorial.
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