FINAL WHISTLE! Colombia are through, Uruguay dumped out!
90' +2
Uruguay make a last, fleeting surge forward to try to force what, at this point, will be no more than a consolation. But they can't even get the ball effectively into the box and it goes out for a throw in. That sparks a roar from the Colombian fans who know that it's so close...
90'
THREE MINUTES to go in this one as the fourth official holds the board up on the sidelines. Godin protests a free kick but it falls on deaf ears. Little matter with the game just about up. Colombia are moments away from going farther than they ever have before in the World Cup!
88'
It's all but over from Uruguay's point of view. They're getting increasingly desperate, pumping the ball into the area whenever they can but it reeks of a side without a plan. Colombia are dealing with everything quite comfortably and their fans know that victory is on hand.
86'
Some quarreling between Yepes and Godin following a Uruguay corner. They were both wrestling to get on the end of a corner and the Atletico Madrid just managed to sneak up for a header that was sent harmlessly wide. Some pushing and shoving followed, but nothing serious.
85'
A. Ramos enters the game and replaces J. Rodríguez.
Rodriguez's number is up and he's really hearing it from the Maracana crowd! No one in the World Cup has scored more than his five goals. And that's even before getting into the quality of his strikes - tonight's effort and the one against Japan surely will compete for goal of the tournament. On comes Dortmund's new man Adrian Ramos.
84'
SAVE BY OSPINA! Finally we see Cavani get on the end of a chance in a dangerous position. He strikes a first time shot that is heading for the bottom corner but once again Ospina gets into position to make the save, tipping it around the post!
82'
Off goes Cuadrado to a rapturous reception from the Colombia fans inside the Maracana. He's been excellent today, dribbling his way into many dangerous positions and setting up that second Rodriguez goal with an unlikely header. On comes Inter's Fredy Guarin for the final stretch.
81'
F. Guarín enters the game and replaces J. Cuadrado.
PEREIRA WITH A FANTASTIC CHANCE! That probably registers as Uruguay's best opening of the night but they fail to profit. Maxi Pereira finally comes through with a bonafide wingback play, making a late run into the box from a wide position to force an excellent save from Ospina at the near post!
80'
Armero was certainly to blame there, but Lugano is the man to be booked first for his complaints on the touchline. Little more than a ceremonial booking as it's unlikely that there will be a next time for Uruguay. After some delay, the referee finally points the finger at Armero and books him as well.
Minute
Description
78'
P. Armero gets yellow.
Armero and Ramirez go down in a scrappy heap right in front of the benches on the touchline. The Colombia left back tried a cheeky bit of gamesmanship, poking the ball away from Ramirez just before he hits a free kick, and Ramirez retaliates with a challenge.
77'
D. Lugano gets yellow.
76'
Colombia are edging closer to a quarter final date with Brazil. They're packing two banks of yellow shirts between Uruguay and Ospina. One way traffic, but Colombia are bottle-necking it where it counts. Getting harder to see a way back for Uruguay.
74'
MOMENT OF HESITATION! For one second, Ospina misjudges a looping ball headed towards his far post but takes the safety first route and tips it over the crossbar instead of risking a catch. It was Stuani who let loose with that ball and he has a cheeky smile to himself as he witnessed the keeper struggle.
72'
Jackson Martinez is now doing it alone up front, closing down the opposition centre backs lest they up and join this late Uruguay siege in the opposition half. To their credit, Colombia are doing excellently at limiting Uruguay to little more than speculative attempts from long distance.
70'
It's been all Uruguay in the last few minutes but they've lacked almost all of the drive and purpose shown by their opponents when it comes to the final third. Cavani tries to get something going, once again attacking the ball from out wide, but his cross is defended well by Sanchez.
68'
A. Mejía enters the game and replaces T. Gutiérrez.
Changes coming for both sides now. Colombia make their first swap of the match, bringing on Alex Mejia for Teofilo Gutierrez in a move designed to add more protection to their midfield. Uruguay swap out Alvaro Gonzalez for Abel Hernandez to add another body up front.
67'
A. Hernández enters the game and replaces Á. González.
66'
THAT'S BETTER! Ospina is called into action once again, this time to stop a dangerous effort from Rodriguez. The Atletico Madrid man looked like he wanted to take on the whole of the Maracana on that run, skipping past four players before testing the Colombia keeper.
64'
Perhaps Uruguay finally beginning to show a bit of urgency. 'What we have, we hold' seems to be the mantra of the moment from Colombia, who are starting to invite pressure on themselves by lessening their once suffocating pressing approach.
62'
Cuadrado wins an untidy free kick inside the Uruguay half. He left Godin in an ungainly heap on the floor with a lightning quick change of direction, before Rios returned the favour with an unapologetic shoulder barge. Took one for the team there, did Rios.
60'
For just the second time this game, Ospina is made to work by Uruguay. But this time, it's a shot that you wouldn't expect the keeper to have too much difficulty dealing with. Gonzalez lined one up from 20 yards with his left boot, but Ospina was able to see it all the way into his grasp.
58'
Rodriguez comes off worse for wear in a challenge with Cavani when the Uruguay striker trod on his toes mid-spin completely unintentionally, mind. I have to say that Cavani has been terribly underwhelming in this game. He's really not shown a thing in the second half but then again, neither has anyone else on his team.
56'
Gimenez gives away a free kick near the edge of the area in a position that is attracting the interest of a few in yellow - the same colour of the card shown to the Uruguay defender. Only one man looks likely to take this though. Rodriguez indeed steps forward but in a rather anti-climatic moment, he slams it into the first defender.
55'
J. Giménez gets yellow.
54'
Double change now from Tabarez. It was a dreadfully disappointing return to the world stage for Diego Forlan and he departs for Cristhian Stuani. Alvaro Pereira, who has been moving rather gingerly, is sacrificed for Gaston Ramirez - a left wingback off for a left winger.
53'
G. Ramírez enters the game and replaces Á. Pereira.
C. Stuani enters the game and replaces D. Forlán.
52'
Uruguay have to dig deep now. This game is slipping away from them fast. Rodriguez now has five goals in the tournament to go along with three assists. Player of the World Cup so far, no doubt. Cuadrado also deserves a mention - he just chipped in with his fourth assist in as many games.
50'
J. Rodríguez has scored a goal for Colombia! Assist by J. Cuadrado.
COLOMBIA HAVE TWO AND IT'S HIM AGAIN!
A splendidly worked goal from Los Cafeteros! Working the ball from right to left, Armero is freed on the overlap by Martinez to swing a dangerous cross to the far post. Cuadrado makes an almighty leap to head the ball across the face of goal, where Rodriguez is on hand to smash it in!
48'
Colombia win a corner after Rodriguez's free kick was just about taken off the head of Yepes in the area via a Uruguayan head. Los Cafeteros have started the second half like they did the first - completely in control of possession and penning Uruguay back.
47'
No changes at the break from either manager. Colombia remember are unbeaten in their last 10 games, winning four straight since drawing with Senegal back in May. It's going to take a big effort from Uruguay to get themselves back into contention here.
46'
Here we go again! Colombia are 45 minutes away from facing Brazil in the quarter finals. Uruguay have a game to chase.
45' +2
That's it for the first half.
45' +1
Into the first and only minute of added time. The first half has flown by with not a whole lot of stoppages. Tabarez will probably be eager to get his players in for a word. His side have improved towards the end and he hopefully has a plan to turn their recent advantage into a goal or two.
44'
Colombia have shown that they can defend when they need to. Uruguay have held the vast majority of possession in last few sequences, with much of it concentrated around the penalty area. But the defensive line has held firm and forced the action towards the wide margins of the box. There's not a lot of space for La Celeste to operate.
42'
You have to credit Uruguay, who have shown some urgency in their play since falling behind. There's far more purpose about their attacks. Perhaps the key point is that both Pereiras have been pushing forward, playing far more like wingbacks in the last few minutes.
40'
OSPINA CALLED INTO ACTION! For the first time tonight, the Colombia keeper is made to earn his corn. Through a sea of blue and yellow shirts, Gonzalez hits a well-taken volley that somehow manages to sneak through to the target, but Ospina reacts well to thwart the shot to his right.
38'
The fires flare up for a second as Forlan and Yepes get into it inside the Colombia penalty area. Alvaro Pereira had swung in a threatening cross and the two tussled unsuccessfully to make contact with it. Forlan's complaining of an illegal block, but the referee just tells him to calm down.
36'
Just saw Rodriguez's goal again on the replay and my goodness, do yourself a favour and catch that on the highlights at least a few times after the match! It beats Van Persie's header and in my opinion, probably ranks an inch below Tim Cahill's volley as the strike of the tournament so far!
34'
NOT FAR WIDE FROM CAVANI! Cristian Rodriguez wins a free kick in a splendid position thanks to Aguilar's foul and the former Napoli striker steps up to take responsibility. He gets plenty of pace and dip on it, but it's about a foot away from rippling the back of the net!
32'
VITAL touch from Sanchez! Cavani had broken into an inch of space down the left and he whipped in a devilish ball to the far post! Cristian Rodriguez was barreling into position to surely lash a header in, but with the slightest of flicks, the Colombia midfielder takes the ball off his head!
30'
Well, Tabarez must have been pleased with the defensive effort of his team up until that point. But how do you even begin to plan for a moment of audacity and genius like that? And what about James Rodriguez, lighting up this World Cup with his FOURTH goal! And that may be the pick of them all - not just from his collection but for the entire tournament!
28'
J. Rodríguez has scored a goal for Colombia! Assist by A. Aguilar.
Magnificent goal from Rodriguez! It seemed to be nothing but head tennis at the top of the Uruguay box. But when the ball looped his way, he took one touch on his chest, spun on a sixpence and SMASHED it into the roof of the net from the top of the box!
27'
SCRATCH THAT! WHAT A STRIKE FROM RODRIGUEZ!
25'
It's been so dogged at the back for Uruguay. From Cavani all the way down to Godin, they're closing down to a man. Colombia meanwhile are biding their time, playing patiently and waiting for that gap to appear. Rodriguez is demanding the ball at every turn, but he's not sparked yet...
23'
Zuniga's certainly not bashful in the slightest when it comes to having a go at goal. He flashes a free kick well wide of the target. That's his third attempt by my count. For a right back in the first 20 or so minutes of the game that's a lot, even for one as offensively minded as the Napoli man.
21'
Colombia are starting to turn the screw in the attacking third. Zuniga sees a snap shot blocked, before confusion from a set piece sees Jackson Martinez just miss getting proper contact on the ball from a good position at the far post. A few nervy moments there.
19'
Colombia look worried for a second as Uruguay go direct. Godin lofts a deep ball forward for Cavani who manages to get a touch - but it's not enough to keep the ball from rolling out for a goalkick. Don't expect that to be the only time we see such a route one approach from La Celeste.
17'
Not too much to talk about in terms of chances so far, but it's perhaps to be expected. Uruguay were probably the underdogs coming into this game and almost certainly take that tag given the direction of play so far. They're playing almost exclusively on the counter.
15'
Colombia are pressing high up the pitch, not giving Uruguay any route forward. They're practically forcing the Uruguay 3-5-2 formation into a 5-3-2, with the two Pereira's on the flanks defending very deep. We saw this suffocating approach from Colombia at times in the group stages.
13'
You would be forgiven for glancing at the stands and thinking that Colombia have an overwhelming majority of the support. But many of these fans are Rio natives, with their yellow Selecao kits blending almost seamlessly with those of Colombia, at least to the casual observer.
11'
Zuniga makes a darting run infield and draws a stop out of Muslera - though the shot was so weak that you would expect the keeper to eat that up for breakfast. With Uruguay employing two wingbacks just in front of a three man defence, there might be some space in unorthodox areas for him and Armero on the opposite flank.
9'
Forlan clips a free kick into the area that is easily headed away by the towering figure of Zapata. The former Atletico Madrid man will undoubtedly be key for La Celeste tonight playing just off Cavani. His unerring accuracy from set pieces will be fascinating to observe.
7'
It's really been all Colombia in the opening exchanges. They've held almost all of the ball - though there's been some strongarm tactics from Uruguay already that have drawn a few complaints from the men in yellow. We probably won't have to wait too long for a booking.
5'
Cuadrado has had a superb tournament, and the Fiorentina dribbling kind does what he does best. He shows great footwork to skip away from two markers to get free down the right hand side. Pereira, not for the first time, gets a meaty challenge in to concede a foul.
3'
Dutch referee Bjorn Kuipers is the lead official tonight. He's had his fair share of big games recently, taking charge of both the 2013 Confederations Cup final and the recent Champions League final in Lisbon. Fifa pulled out the big officiating guns today, with Howard Webb also taking charge of the earlier Brazil-Chile clash.
1'
Here we go!
Hello and welcome to the World Cup round of 16, where Colombia take on Uruguay at the Maracana. I'm Keeghann Sinanan, your designated scribe.
It's a tale of two M.I.A. strikers here in Rio de Janeiro. Radamel Falcao did not travel to Brazil due to injury, but with three wins from three in the group stages, Colombia haven't missed him much.
Time will tell if the same can be said of Uruguay, who are still reeling from the news of Luis Suarez's nine game international suspension. La Celeste lost their first game in the group to Costa Rica when the Liverpool man was out injured - winning the next two with him in the side. His absence makes them slight underdogs here.
Right, so let's have a look at how these two sides will line up.
It was something of a reserve Colombia side that dismantled Japan so easily in their final group game, so no surprise to see Jose Pekerman make eight changes to his XI. The regulars are back in business, including stalwart defender Mario Yepes and playmaking sensation James Rodriguez.
Speaking of Uruguay, look at this! Veteran striker Diego Forlan returns to the XI with Suarez banished. Forlan was probably the only player at the last World Cup to truly master the ridiculously unpredictable Jabulani ball. However, captain Diego Lugano remains sidelined with a knee injury which has kept him out of the Italy and England games as well.
Key then will be the performance of Diego Godin. In a back three with the raw 19-year-old defender Jose Gimenez and the unpredictable Martin Caceres, he needs to marshal his troops against a dangerous attack. He's been doing a good job of that so far to be fair, including the winner against Italy in their last outing.
It's also time for Edinson Cavani to lay the smack down. Suarez isn't playing, so the attacking spotlight falls on the PSG striker. He's often been forced to do the dirty work up front to accomodate the Liverpool man. But tonight, he's the first option offensively. With a €64.5 million price tag on his head, the hour has come for him to live up to his billing as one of the world's best strikers.
Brazil lie in wait at the quarter final stage for whoever navigates this tie. That's not quite as intimidating of a prospect as it once seemed though. The Selecao escaped by the SKIN of their teeth against Chile earlier in the day, needing penalties and probably a sacrifice to the woodwork gods to win.
Uruguay return to the sight of their most revered footballing moment. The Maracana was the venue when, in 1950, they stunned the world by upsetting heavily fancied Brazil 2-1 in the final. That result still looms like a cursed spirit around the entire nation - the Maracanazo is the name given to that cursed day in Brazilian football.
For Colombia, tonight's match bears significantly more sobering relevance. We're four days shy of the murder of their former defender Andres Escobar. Many fans will remember his own goal against Colombia that saw them lose to USA in the 1994 World Cup. Six days later in Medellin, he was tragically assassinated in a hit widely believed to have been orchestrated by drug cartels.
The anthems ring out with typical gusto and we're just about set for kickoff!
Key for Colombia will of course be Rodriguez. The Monaco midfielder has already racked up three goals and two assists in the tournament. His dovetailing with Juan Cuadrado has been almost impossible for teams to stop - just ask Greece, Cote d'Ivoire and Japan. Uruguay have an almighty defensive task on their hands.
Well, a first half that seemed to be trudging along in tight fashion was unclogged in the most glorious fashion by James Rodriguez. The Monaco prodigy lit up Brazil once again with a volley that dreams are made of. It stands as the only goal of this game so far.
Uruguay were on the back foot for much of the game up until that goal. But adversity seems to have brought them out of their shell. They've largely dictated the tempo in the latter stages of the half but haven't really made Ospina work as hard as he should.
I have to say it - surely Suarez's unpredictability would have helped to unlock a stubborn Colombian defence! Uruguay have looked one dimensional when trying to break down the opposition.
Cavani, to his credit, has tried his hardest to assume the attacking burden with Suarez missing. But he's only flirted with quality and has still shown an annoying tendency to drift wide to get on the ball.
Not entirely his fault though - for long spells, both Uruguay wingbacks could not get out of their own half. The Pereiras started to step it up late on and they will need to contribute more in an attacking sense.
So the Maracana doesn't witness another historic Uruguay triumph. Instead it's Colombia who advance with a convincing win to set up a South American epic against Brazil in the last eight.
James Rodriguez stole the show in this legendary stadium. He opened the scoring with a goal of magnificent technique before prodding home the second to finally break Uruguay's spirit. Five goals and three assists in the World Cup so far from possibly its best performing player.
Uruguay looked toothless without Suarez up top. Cavani tried and failed to take the mantle from the Liverpool man. They will now retreat back to Montevideo to lick their wounds in silence.
That's about all from me though, hope you found this one as captivating as I did. I've been Keeghann Sinanan, see you all soon!
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