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Dutch send Slovakia home

Durban - Arjen Robben and Wesley Sneijder scored in each half on Monday to give the Netherlands a 2-1 win over Slovakia and a spot in the World Cup quarter-finals.

The Dutch went ahead in the 18th minute when Robben cut inside from the right flank and found the target with a low, precise shot from 20m. Sneijder doubled the lead into an empty net in the 84th.

It was only a month ago when Robben and Sneijder were on opposite sides in the Champions League final, Robben with Bayern Munich and Sneijder with winner Inter Milan.

Netherlands goalkeeper Maarten Stekelenburg preserved the win with two key saves in the 67th, and the Dutch extended their team-record unbeaten streak to 23 games.

Robert Vittek pulled one back for Slovakia from the penalty spot in injury time.

Slovakia upset Italy 3-2 in its previous match, a result that eliminated the defending champions, and had to be satisfied with its tournament debut as an independent nation.

In the quarter-finals, the Netherlands will face either five-time champion Brazil or Chile.

Robben got his first start of the tournament, having injured his left hamstring on June 5 in the Netherlands' final warmup match against Hungary. He came on as a second-half substitute against Cameroon in the Netherlands' last group match and hit the post, after which Klaas Jan Huntelaar knocked in the rebound to seal a 2-1 win.

This time, Sneijder sent Robben sprinting upfield with a long, accurate pass and the winger did what he's been doing all season with Bayern - scoring with long shots from beyond the area.

The Moses Mabhida Stadium was filled mostly with orange-clad Netherlands fans and they blasted their vuvuzelas on Robben's first touch. After the goal, the sound became deafening.

With a sharp breeze blowing in from the nearby Indian Ocean, Robben nearly doubled the lead in the 50th but goalkeeper Jan Mucha deflected his shot just wide of the goal. A minute later, Robben sent a dangerous cross inside the area and Mucha blocked a close-range effort from Joris Mathijsen.

In the 71st, when he was replaced by Eljero Elia, Robben exited to a standing ovation.

Sneijder sealed the victory when Dirk Kuyt drew Mucha out of his net and had nobody to beat for his second goal of the tournament, also having found the target in a 1-0 win over Japan.

Slovakia's two best chances both came in the 67th. Stekelenburg leaped to tip a powerful shot from Miroslav Stoch over the crossbar and then Vittek, who scored twice against Italy, directed his shot too close to the Netherlands goalkeeper seconds later.

The Netherlands also won all three of its group games, with its last loss coming to Australia in September 2008, a run of 18 wins and five draws.

The Netherlands reached consecutive World Cup finals in 1974 and 1978 but lost both - to Germany and Argentina, respectively. Its only major tournament victory was the 1988 European Championship.

Slovakia coach Vladimir Weiss replaced suspended midfielder Zdenko Strba with his son, who is also named Vladimir, and the younger Weiss made an immediate impact, carrying the ball up the left wing and setting up Erik Jendrisek for a shot that went high in the second minute.

The Netherlands' first serious threat didn't come until the seventh, when forward Robin van Persie couldn't do enough with a header from close-range.

Slovakia allowed the dangerous Dutch forwards space and Van Persie set up Sneijder on the left wing in the 11th but Sneijder's low and weak shot was easily collected by Mucha.

After they took the lead, the Dutch controlled the ball for the rest of the half but only threatened twice more.

Van Persie sent a weak shot right at the goalkeeper in the 41st and then missed again from near the goal box in the 44th.

Lineups:

Netherlands: Maarten Stekelenburg, Gregory van der Wiel, John Heitinga, Joris Mathijsen, Giovanni van Bronckhorst, Dirk Kuyt, Mark van Bommel, Wesley Sneijder (Ibrahim Afellay, 90), Nigel de Jong, Arjen Robben (Eljero Elia, 71), Robin van Persie (Klaas Jan Huntelaar, 80).

Slovakia: Jan Mucha, Peter Pekarik, Martin Skrtel, Radoslav Zabavnik (Martin Jakubko, 88), Jan Durica, Miroslav Stoch, Juraj Kucka, Vladimir Weiss, Marek Hamsik, Robert Vittek, Erik Jendrisek (Kamil Kopunek, 71).

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