Weird goals, missed passes: blame the ball
Weird goals, missed passes: blame the ball
Players and coaches are complaining about the new high-bouncing World Cup ball that has resulted in goalkeeping blunders.

Polokwane, South Africa: Slovenia chalked up their first ever World Cup win when a dreadful mistake by Algeria goalkeeper Faouzi Chaouchi handed them a 1-0 victory in their opening Group C match on Sunday.

Both coaches said afterwards that their sides had struggled to adapt to the new high bouncing World Cup ball and the semi-synthetic pitch in Polokwane, and that that might have been a factor in Chaouchi's blunder.

Time and again throughout the game, players overhit their passes or failed to tame the ball as it sprang off the surface. A largely lacklustre encounter took a twist in the 73rd minute when Abdelkader Ghezzal was sent off for handball having already been booked within seconds of coming on. The attacking midfielder was only on the pitch for 15 minutes.

Six minutes later Chaouchi fumbled Robert Koren's harmless looking shot, allowing the ball to squirt through his arms into the bottom left hand corner of his net.

Asked about the playing surface, Koren said: "The turf itself is very fast and it resulted in some mistakes."

Meanwhile, Saadane defended Chaouchi and Ghezzal when asked about the mistakes that had cost his team a share of the points.

"Football is full of mistakes and I don't want to blame the two players. I think it was perhaps the state of the turf. Both the ball and the turf were difficult for both goalies."

"The speed and the impact, especially on crosses, was very difficult. The players had to place the balls very carefully."

Asked if he would drop Chaouchi for the next match against the United States on Friday, Saadane replied: "He is the best goalkeeper we have at the moment. It's out of the question."

"He said sorry. He said sorry to the team. But that's only normal and I don't want to go back over the incident."

Slovenia coach Matjaz Kek was also critical of the pitch, which is a mixture of grass and synthetic fibre. This was the first World Cup match ever to be played on it.

"I don't agree with this turf," Kek said. "We only got adjusted to it yesterday with 60 minutes of training. I'm not saying this as an excuse because it was the same for us and Algeria. But there are lots of artificial bits and that means it's a different game."

England's draw with the US in the group's opening match also contained a goalkeeping error, with England's Robert Green producing a howler to gift the Americans their equaliser.

That match was played on grass.

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