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Spain edged Uruguay 1-0 on Friday to top Group H and reach the knockout stage of the World Cup, with Alex Baena’s first-half strike enough to settle a tense, physical contest and leave Marcelo Bielsa’s side out of the tournament.
Spain finished with seven points from two wins and a draw, while newcomers Cape Verde claimed the second knockout berth after three consecutive draws.
Uruguay bowed out with two points, level with bottom-placed Saudi Arabia.
“Today’s game really put us to the test,” said Spain coach Luis de la Fuente.
“We’ve played some very demanding matches, and the team always steps up. We played a different kind of game today, and the team stepped up again.
“We’re very happy because we’ve come through three very tough matches,” he added.
Baena broke the deadlock in the 42nd minute when he found space near the edge of the area and drove in a powerful effort that veteran goalkeeper Fernando Muslera failed to hold, the ball slipping from his grasp and trickling into the net.
It was a costly mistake from Muslera, who Bielsa said decided to come off at halftime.
The goal was scored with Manuel Ugarte and Lamine Yamal down injured as play continued, but Baena kept his focus, and Spain took full advantage.
“It might be one of the goals that has made me happiest,” Baena said.
“We knew it was going to be a tough match.
“They were fighting for their lives, and we were fighting for the top spot. We didn’t show our best form, but we competed very well,” he added.
Uruguay had begun aggressively, determined to deny Lamine space on the right, with Guillermo Varela and the rest of the defence keeping tight to the 18-year-old.
Spain mostly threatened from set pieces in the opening half.
Pau Cubarsi headed wide from a Baena corner in the 16th minute and missed again from close range four minutes later following another Baena delivery.
Uruguay’s best first-half chance came when Federico Valverde pressed Rodri into an error in the 27th minute and then found Darwin Nunez inside the area, but the forward chose to attempt a backheel rather than shoot, and the opportunity went begging.
The second half followed a similar pattern, with Uruguay pushing but lacking precision in the final third.
Federico Vinas replaced Valverde and almost made an impact, but his left-footed effort from a Maxi Araujo cross flew high and wide.
“I wasn’t able to make the most of the potential the Uruguayan players had. (After Valverde was substituted) I tried to get the team to be more aggressive on offence,” Bielsa said, adding it was aimed at improving Uruguay’s creativity.
Spain introduced Dani Olmo, who missed a chance from the middle of the box after a cross from Lamine in the 63rd minute, but Luis de la Fuente’s side looked in control.
Uruguay pressed late, but Unai Simon denied Mathias Olivera and then saved Nicolas de la Cruz’s right-footed shot from outside the box.
Ferran Torres nearly doubled Spain’s lead when he hit the crossbar with a right-footed effort from just inside the area following a pass from Fabian Ruiz.
Inside the Guadalajara stadium, Mexican and Spanish fans sang “Cielito Lindo” with the chorus “sing and do not cry” as Uruguay’s frustration mounted.
That boiled over in stoppage time when Agustin Canobbio was shown a red card for a reckless challenge on Cubarsi, capping a bitter end to Uruguay’s campaign.