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Hand of God belongs to me, says Suárez
04/07/2010  by Guardian.co.uk
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Luis Suárez pushes away Dominic Adiyiah's header during the dying seconds of Uruguay's game against Ghana. 

The Uruguay striker Luis Suárez has evoked Diego Maradona's infamous goal against England in 1986, declaring "the Hand Of God now belongs to me" after he broke Ghana's hearts and helped his side reach the World Cup semi-finals.

Fifa have confirmed Suárez could miss the rest of the tournament after his handball on the goalline denied Ghana a winner in the dying seconds of extra time during their quarter-final. Asamoah Gyan missed the subsequent penalty, and Uruguay went on to win a shoot-out. Suárez was given a straight red card, and Fifa's disciplinary committee will now decide whether to increase a one-match ban and cause the Ajax player miss the final or third-place play-off.

"The Hand of God now belongs to me. Mine is the real Hand Of God," said Suárez. "I made the best save of the tournament. Sometimes in training I play as a goalkeeper so it was worth it. There was no alternative but for me to do that and when they missed the penalty I thought 'It is a miracle and we are alive in the tournament'.

"Now we are in the semi-finals although I was very sad because no one likes to be sent off. The celebration afterwards was impressive, but very quiet because nobody gave us a chance but, with courage, we move forward."

Fifa's disciplinary committee will decide early next week on the case. "For automatic red cards there is an automatic one-match suspension," said the Fifa spokesman Pekka Odriozola. "The disciplinary committee also opens a case and they will be looking at that incident and taking a decision."

Suárez's strike partner Diego Forlán, who had scored Uruguay's equaliser in normal time, backed the actions of his team-mate. "It is a pity we won't have Luis for the semi-final but he made a good save," said Forlán "He didn't score a goal but he saved one. He was sent off but he saved the game for us. Now we will have to try and do our best to reach the final [and hope] he will be available for that.

"When they had the last-minute penalty, I couldn't believe it, I stopped thinking. When he [Gyan] missed, I couldn't believe it again. Everyone is so happy. It was a tough game and we knew it was going to be very difficult and the way it finished was incredible."

Forlán believes Uruguay deserve their success after coming through a demanding South American group to reach their first semi-final since 1970. "Qualifying in South America is really tough because Argentina, Brazil, Paraguay and Chile are great teams with good players," said Forlán. "You play at altitude, in warm weather, in cold weather, different types of climate and pitches and it's really tough.

"But we also knew once we qualified this was going to be a different tournament and we just focused on each game. We were not looking forward to what might happen, just looking at the game in front of us. Every game is difficult whether it's Brazil, Holland or Ghana.

"It doesn't matter about the history of the country or names of the players on the pitch. It doesn't matter because this World Cup has had some surprises."

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