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Germany crushes England 4-1

BLOEMFONTEIN, South Africa (AP) -- Germany executed its gameplan to perfection in a 4-1 second-round World Cup win over England on Sunday which coach Joachim Loew described as a "grandiose" performance.

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AP photo Germany goalkeeper Manuel Neuer (second from bottom) reaches for the ball during Sunday's World Cup match in Bloemfontein, South Africa.

BLOEMFONTEIN, South Africa (AP) -- Germany executed its gameplan to perfection in a 4-1 second-round World Cup win over England on Sunday which coach Joachim Loew described as a "grandiose" performance.

The three-time champion essentially controlled the game but got a break when Uruguayan referee Jorge Larrionda refused to award a goal to Frank Lampard which would have allowed England to equalize at 2-2 before half time.

Lampard's shot hit the underside of the crossbar and clearly bounced inside the line before being collected by the German goalkeeper, but Larrionda ruled for play to continue.

Lampard's looping shot came one minute after Matthew Upson had pulled one back for England after Germany had taken control with goals from Miroslav Klose and Lukas Podolski.

"We clearly controlled the game until England's goal, then there was a short critical phase," said Loew, who outlined how his German squad had planned to unsettle the English defense. "We managed to expose the England defense. We wanted to get into the penalty area quickly and we did it a couple of times extraordinarily.

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"We had a feeling in the second half that England was slowing down. We can change the pace any time."

With England searching for an equalizer in the second half, Thomas Mueller scored twice within four minutes from counterattacks to seal the victory that sent Germany to the quarterfinals.

Loew said England's midfielders Steven Gerrard and Lampard always supported the forwards and "We knew there would be spaces."

"Our objective was to set (John) Terry up with (Miroslav) Klose to force him to come out of the defense. We knew the fullbacks would be very much to the side, and that would create space that we could penetrate."

Loew said his German team dominated so much it could have been leading 3-0 at halftime.

Argentina 3, Mexico 1

JOHANNESBURG -- Argentina needed a couple of breaks in its second round World Cup match. It got one from the referee and another from Mexico.

Carlos Tevez scored twice -- once on a disputed goal -- and Gonzalo Higuain added another as the Albiceleste beat Mexico 3-1 on Sunday to move into the quarterfinals.

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"We're not here on vacation, we came here to leave everything so that the Argentines can be proud of us," coach Diego Maradona said.

With Mexico getting the best scoring chances early on, Tevez headed in a pass from Lionel Messi in the 26th minute from close in. One problem: He was clearly offside.

Referee Roberto Rosetti of Italy awarded the goal after consulting with his linesman, the pair surrounded by angrily gesturing Mexican and Argentine players.

Then in the 33rd minute, Higuain rounded the goalkeeper to make it 2-0 after Mexico's Ricardo Osorio, under no pressure, played the ball straight into his path. In the 52nd Tevez blasted in one of the tournament's best goal, an unstoppable shot from 25 yards.

"Two mistakes ... drastically changed the course of the game," Mexico coach Javier Aguirre said. "There was a before and after."

The call on Tevez's first goal came just hours after the referee at Germany's 4-1 win over England failed to recognize that a shot by England's Frank Lampard, which would have tied the score at 2-2 late in the first half, clearly made it across the goal line after striking the crossbar.

Argentina, which also beat Mexico in round of 16 four years ago now plays Germany in the quarterfinals. That's a rematch, too -- a repeat of the 2006 quarterfinals, which the Germans won. The Germans also defeated Argentina in the 1990 World Cup final.

"We know Germany is a different team than the Mexico team we faced today," Maradona said. "It's more powerful, but we'll have the right players on the pitch to face them."

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Mexico's Javier Hernandez scored in the 71st.

Tevez proved difficult for Mexico's defenders to handle, and Higuain -- the leading scorer at the World Cup with four goals -- should have added another but headed a cross wide from close range just before halftime.

Messi, one of the best playmakers in the tournament, again failed to score and struggled in midfield for much of the game. Still he came close: His shot in the 91st minute was tipped over the bar.

The Mexicans enjoyed the better chances as the game started, with Carlos Salcido's fierce shot shaking the crossbar in the eighth minute.

After Tevez's opening goal, though, the Argentines slowly began to control the game.

"We had trouble getting into the game in the first few minutes," Tevez said. "We knew Mexico was going to press from the onset, try to take the ball away from us in the first minutes and try to hurt us."

The Mexicans couldn't, and Argentina has won all four of its matches in the tournament.

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