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FOOTBALL

Beckham strike enough for England

story.beckham.jpg
Beckham celebrates as England secure a place in the World Cup last eight.

STUTTGART, Germany -- Captain David Beckham fired England into the quarterfinals with a trademark free-kick that earned them a scrappy 1-0 victory over Ecuador on Sunday.

Beckham crashed his shot home from 35 meters on the hour mark of what had been a scrappy second round game played in sticky conditions at the Gottlieb-Daimler-Stadion.

Sven-Goran Eriksson's side now play Portugal, who beat the Netherlands 1-0, in a later second round match.

Beckham, whose free-kick against Paraguay in their Group B opener was turned into his own net by captain Carlos Gamarra for a 1-0 win, became England's first player to score in three World Cups.

"We've done our job. It was ugly at times and we haven't played to our full potential. We're through to the quarter-finals,." said Beckham, who was physically sick on the pitch during the second half.

England coach Eriksson said he had no option but to substitute his captain shortly before the end. "He was gone physically," he said.

Ecuador coach Luis Fernando Suarez paid tribute to Beckham's talent.

"Whenever there's a free kick, obviously we have to be very much on the ball. We know of the precision that Beckham has when he takes their shots," he said.

"It was a very precise shot, it was impossible to stop. You just have to congratulate Beckham. It was perfect."

Lone striker

England were playing in a 4-5-1 formation with Wayne Rooney as a lone striker and Michael Carrick making his competitive England debut as a holding midfielder.

With Michael Owen out of the finals with a knee injury, the theory was to allow Steven Gerrard and Frank Lampard to get forward in support of Rooney.

The practice was that England failed to create a single goalscoring opportunity in a scrappy first half and were lucky not to go in at the break a goal down.

John Terry's poor headed interception after 11 minutes fell to Carlos Tenorio and the Ecuador striker had only keeper Paul Robinson to beat.

But Tenorio took a second too long and his deflected shot, under a challenge by Ashley Cole, hit the bar and flew over.

Ecuador, who reverted to the side which beat Costa Rica 3-0 to reach the last 16, looked sharper with strike pair Agustin Delgado and Tenorio back in the side.

Edison Mendez was the next to give Robinson a fright with a fizzing free-kick that ricocheted just wide of the post off Delgado.

England's passing, which was often poor before the break, failed to improve afterwards, though Ecuador were no more incisive.

Eriksson's men, who seemed intent on boring the South Americans into submission, finally got the breakthrough when Beckham's free kick flashed past keeper Cristian Mora, grazing the inside of the post.

It brought the game to life and England were only let down by the final pass in their attempts to add a second in the closing stages as Ecuador pushed forward.

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