Ivory Coast win 9-8 on penalties
It was now the Ivorians, who had a 23-year duck of their own to break, looking nervous and the better openings in what transpired to be barren second half and extra-time periods fell to Avram Grant's men too. John Boye headed just off target in the 69th minute and Atsu, the game's liveliest attacker by a distance, squared for a shot Asamoah Gyan should have done better with. There were shots wide by Atsu and Mubarak Wakaso in the added 30 minutes but this increasingly looked like a match set for penalties and, once Gervinho had controlled poorly from a Bony knockdown that threatened to send him clear, so it transpired.
It was unclear which side would have the greater composure in the shoot-out and, against all odds after missing their first two kicks, the Ivorians were the team that did not blink.
You could not blame Grant for restoring Asamoah Gyan to Ghana's starting lineup. The manager's refusal to substitute his captain with Ghana looking home and dry against Guinea had already come under scrutiny -- Gyan subsequently sustained a pelvic injury after an awful challenge from Guinea goalkeeper Naby Yattara -- but the former Sunderland man was certainly needed now. Although his fitness was estimated to be only 80 percent, he started alongside Appiah in attack.
Despite being such a success in the quarterfinal and semifinal stages against weaker teams, Appiah looked lightweight against the Ivorians, even though a more robust presence in Gyan should in theory have helped him. But Gyan, who was also laid low at the start of the tournament with a bout of malaria, looked like a man who had taken a blow too many and was a peripheral figure. It was a relief for Ivory Coast after the trouble that Dieumerci Mbokani, the strapping DR Congo centre-forward, had wreaked in their semifinal.
In the end, it was an indictment against Grant's options that Gyan remained on the pitch for 120 minutes. Jordan Ayew would come on for Appiah during the first period of extra time and then, even more curiously, Gyan was replaced by Emmanuel Agyemang-Badu at the end of extra-time when his status as a penalty taker had seemed likely. Badu's penalty was excellent, as it turned out, but there were surely other candidates to remove. Grant has been maligned often throughout his career but did a fine job with Ghana in Equatorial Guinea. Yet he might struggle to ignore the fact that with a couple of more timely substitutions over the past week, he could have done even better.


