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France united in sorrow
10/07/2006 10:21  - (SA)  
 
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Paris - France united in sorrow and wounded pride on Sunday after its team lost the World Cup final to Italy, with fans thronging Paris' Champs-Elysees and spilling into streets nationwide in a collective post-match consolation party.

Dismay at losing out on soccer's greatest honour in a spectacular, tightly fought match was palpable - but so was satisfaction at having made it to the final at all. France struggled to qualify for the Cup and then barely squeezed past the first round.

"Of course we're disappointed," said Thibaud Miannay, a 24-year-old student in Paris straining to watch the match outside a restaurant. "We didn't deserve to finish on penalties," he said, of the penalty shoot-out that ended the match 5-3 in Italy's favour.

The loss was made more poignant since it was the parting match for national hero Zinedine Zidane, the midfielder and team captain who bid adieu to his stellar career after Sunday's final in Berlin.

Earlier in the day, fans chanted the refrain of a pop jingle in outdoor markets, on subway trains and just about anywhere: "Zidane il va marquer!" - "Zidane, he'll score a goal!"

He did, converting a penalty in the seventh minute. But then he exited unceremoniously after being red-carded for savagely head-butting Marco Materazzi in the 110th minute.

Police staked out positions in Paris and other cities, bracing for unrest after the evening match. Some clashes were reported at a stadium in southern Paris, Stade Charlety, that broadcast the match on a huge screen.

Fear of violence was fed by lingering tensions following riots that shook the nation last fall in impoverished, immigrant neighbourhoods like those where Zidane and several of the players grew up.

Faces striped with the French tricolour had filled streets as the nation geared up for the match. Cars draped with French flags honked incessantly throughout the afternoon, but they and the rest of Paris fell silent during the tense match.

After France snared its first and only World Cup title in 1998 - on its home soil - the country staged its biggest celebrations since World War II. A portrait of Zidane was projected 16 stories high on the side of the Arc de Triomphe.

Posters of Zidane playing for various teams line the walls of a bar nicknamed Cafe Zizou near the farming hamlet of Aguemoune in the mountains of eastern Algeria, where his father grew up and where Zidane still has family.

France's lacklustre early performance in the Cup prompted widespread scorn, with critics calling the players dysfunctional and has-beens.

The team returns to France on Monday and heads straight for a lunch at the presidential Elysee palace with President Jacques Chirac, who was in Berlin for the final. Then the team will parade along the Champs-Elysees and circle the Arc de Triomphe, despite the loss.

AP