Champions of  Europe and now champions of the world, Spain captured football's Holy  Grail for the first time with a 1-0 victory over the Netherlands thanks  to Andres Iniesta's 116th-minute strike at Soccer City.
The solitary goal came with penalties looming  as substitute Cesc Fabregas played in Iniesta and the little midfielder  drove emphatically across Maarten Stekelenburg and into the far corner.  With this victory – their fourth successive single-goal win in South  Africa – Spain became the eighth name on the FIFA World Cup™ Trophy and  also the first European team to have triumphed on a different continent.  For the Netherlands, who lost defender John Heitinga to a red card in  extra time, there is only the heartache of another tale of what might  have been after they completed a hat-trick of Final losses.
This was a match preceded by much talk of two  like-minded footballing cultures, of the influence of Dutchmen like  Johan Cruyff and Rinus Michels, of 'tiki taka' and Total  Football. In many ways, as the first 116 minutes showed, it was also a  case of the irresistible force versus the immovable object. The Dutch  had won 14 straight games to get to the Final, in qualifying and the  tournament proper, and Spain 15 out of 16, their only slip the defeat by  Switzerland in their first game here in South Africa.
It was the Spanish found their stride first,  living up to their pre-game billing as favourites. Vicente del Bosque's  side dominated possession and created the early chances. With the Dutch  penned inside their half, goalkeeper Stekelenburg had to make a save  after five minutes, diving low to stop a Sergio Ramos header from Xavi's  free-kick from the right. Gerard Pique looked poised to follow up only  to be denied by a combination of Joris Mathijsen and Dirk Kuyt.
Ramos came again in the tenth minute, beating  Kuyt on the right and driving in a low centre that Heitinga deflected  behind. From the corner came another scare for the Netherlands. Xavi  played the ball back to Xabi Alonso whose cross went beyond the far post  to David Villa but the in-form No7 sliced his volley into the  side-netting. After those near things, however, both defences got on top  with none of the flair players on either side able to take a grip on  proceedings. Instead the yellow-card count began to rise with Nigel de  Jong becoming the fifth player in Howard Webb's notebook by the time the  half-hour mark arrived.
With the orange  sections of the 84,490 Soccer City crowd finding their voice, Bert van  Marwijk's men almost gave them something to sing about from a corner in  the 37th minute. Robben rolled the ball to Mark van Bommel on the edge  of the box and although he failed to make a clean connection he  unwittingly diverted the ball on to the unmarked Mathijsen but the  defender missed his kick. As half-time approached, Iker Casillas had  barely had a save to make but entering stoppage time, he had to be alert  to deny Robben at his near post as a spell of Dutch pressure ended with  the winger spearing in a low shot from the corner of the box.
Puyol, Spain's semi-final matchwinner, showed  his aerial threat once more minutes after the restart when he rose above  Heitinga and headed to the far post but Joan Capdevila failed to make  contact. The game was gradually opening up and the Dutch spurned a  golden opportunity in the 62nd minute when Wesley Sneijder sent Robben  running clear. Casillas came to Spain's rescue, deflecting the shot  behind with his right foot when falling the wrong way.
Spain coach Del Bosque had already sent on  Jesus Navas for Pedro on the hour and the winger helped pick a hole in  the Dutch defence in the 70th minute. Xavi sent him flying down the  right into the box and when Heitinga failed to deal with Navas's low  cross, the ball fell to Villa who looked odds-on to score only to see  his effort deflected behind. Ramos was equally profligate after 78  minutes when he headed over a Xavi centre when unmarked, after Villa had  forced another corner.
Spain were  looking the more likely winners and it took Sneijder of all people to  foil Iniesta with a smart tackle after his jinking run into the box. Yet  Robben's pace was a persistent threat and the Oranje No11  almost embarrassed Puyol in the 82nd minute, speeding clear of the Spain  defender when second-favourite to reach a through-ball. Resisting  Pique's attempt to tackle too, he was foiled only by Casillas, the  captain saving at Robben's feet as the Dutchman tried to round him.
Extra time began with opportunities for Spain.  Xavi failed to connect when well positioned and when the ball ran to  Villa, his shot went wide off an orange shirt. Substitute Fabregas then  broke clear on to Iniesta's through-ball but was foiled by Stekelenburg.  Mathijsen headed wide from a corner but like waves, Spanish attacks  kept rolling on to the Netherlands back line and Navas was close with a  shot deflected into the side-netting.
Fernando  Torres replaced Villa midway through the extra period and Spain gained a  man advantage four minutes later with Heitinga's dismissal for pulling  back Iniesta on the edge of the box, the offence earning him a second  yellow. Iniesta would not be denied, however, and his fine late  strike put Spain into the history books and left a Dutch dream  shattered. (FIFA.COM)

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