• FT

    South Africa

    1

    Mexico

    1

  • FT

    Uruguay

    0

    France

    0

WORLD CUP

Green Point Stadium, Cape Town, South Africa

Referee: Yuichi Nishimura | Attendance: 64100

* Local time based on your geographic location.

0 - 0

FT

Uruguay 0-0 France: Drab draw for French

Uruguay youngster Nicolas Lodeiro became the first player to be sent off at the 2010 World Cup as his side played out a 0-0 draw against a lacklustre France in Group A.

• Domenech left frustrated

• Marshall: Glass half empty for France

• Gupta: Jabulani provides no joy

• Match Gallery

• Podcast: A Tale of two draws

Raymond Domenech's side, who drew their first two group games in 2006 before

going on to reach the final, struggled for ideas against a well-drilled South

American outfit.

Winger Sidney Govou had by far the clearest chance to score for France in only

the seventh minute, side-footing a Franck Ribery cross wide with the goal

gaping. Uruguay even played the last nine minutes with ten men after substitute

Nicolas Lodeiro's dismissal.

France, who are in South Africa thanks to William Gallas' highly controversial

goal in their qualification play-off against the Republic of Ireland, left former captain Thierry Henry on the bench with Manchester United left-back

Patrice Evra having inherited the armband.

Uruguay, meanwhile, boasted two of European club football's most potent

goalscorers up front at Green Point Stadium in Atletico Madrid's Diego Forlan

and Ajax forward Luis Suarez.

France should have opened the scoring in the seventh minute. Abou Diaby played

Ribery in down the left and when the winger's teasing left-footed cross flashed

across the face of goal, Govou failed to strike it cleanly and the ball went

well wide.

The first booking by Japanese referee Yuichi Nishimura came after 11 minutes

when Evra was cautioned for a cynical shirt pull while Ribery joined him in the

book before the break.

France striker Nicolas Anelka headed over while at the other end a bending

Forlan effort from the edge of the box forced Hugo Lloris to save.

Playmaker Yoann Gourcuff had two speculative efforts on goal as the half-time

whistle approached.

Egidio Arevalo and Forlan both had chances early in the second half but neither

could find the target for the two-time World Cup winning South Americans.

France were probing for the killer pass but Bordeaux talisman Gourcuff was

repeatedly denied by a well-drilled Uruguay defence.

Mauricio Victorino was carded for a late lunge on Evra in the 59th minute and

Ribery blasted wide from the resulting training-ground set-piece by Gourcuff.

Uruguay boss Oscar Tabarez sent on Lodeiro for Ignacio Gonzalez and he was

booked within a minute. In the 66th minute Lloris dropped a catch under pressure from Suarez, who could not capitalise before Jeremy Toulalan was booked for a lunge on Uruguay wing-back Alvaro Pereira two minutes later.

Domenech sacrificed Anelka to send on Henry in the 71st minute to the delight

of the 64,100 crowd, which was mainly comprised of locals.

Forlan had a 73rd-minute sight of goal when he dragged a first-time effort wide

from Suarez's flick-on, before his strike partner was swapped for veteran

substitute Sebastian Abreu.

Domenech threw Chelsea's Florent Malouda on for the disappointing Gourcuff but

still they were devoid of cutting edge. Lodeiro's hapless cameo was ended abruptly in the 81st minute when he was carded again for a late and high challenge on Bacary Sagna.

Domenech's last throw of the dice was to throw on Andre Pierre Gignac for Govou

with five minutes left but even his predatory instincts were insufficient and French appeals for a penalty were dismissed when Henry's stab towards goal

seemed to hit Victorino's lower arm in the 89th minute.

That, however, was as close as they came, with Henry hitting the wall from a

free-kick and for the third World Cup in a row, France failed to win their

opening game.