Colombia finished Group C with three wins from three as Jackson Martinez scored twice to seal a 4-1 win over Japan on Tuesday.
Jose Pekerman's side, so impressive in securing wins over Greece and
Cote d'Ivoire earlier in the tournament, were already assured of
qualification and knew a draw would be enough to secure their passage as
group winners.
Japan, meanwhile, needed to win and hope the result between Cote d'Ivoire and Greece went their way in order to progress.
The South Americans hit the front shortly after the quarter-hour mark,
Juan Cuadrado smashing home a penalty after Yasuyuki Konno had fouled
Adrian Ramos.
Japan equalised on the stroke of half-time, Shinji
Okazaki squeezing a header inside the near post to raise hopes of
qualifying.
Yet Colombia then pulled clear in the second half,
Jackson Martinez scoring twice following assists from half-time
substitute James Rodriguez, who added a delightful late fourth.
Colombia will now take on Uruguay in the second round, while Japan exit the tournament having finished bottom of their group.
Japan made the stronger start as Colombia struggled to find their feet
having made eight changes from their victory over Cote d'Ivoire.
However, it was the South Americans who went in front after 17 minutes, following their first real foray forward.
Konno needlessly brought down Ramos inside the area, and Cuadrado
dispatched the spot-kick, prompting further choreographed celebrations
from the Colombians.
Japan responded well, Shinji Kagawa
creating space on the edge of the box before firing in a low shot which
was tipped behind by David Ospina.
Keisuke Honda was the next
man to go close, sending a dipping free kick narrowly wide of the
right-hand post in the 33rd minute. Colombia ought to have doubled their
lead three minutes before the interval, Martinez firing wide of the
target from 14 yards after being picked out by Ramos.
They were
made to rue that miss soon afterwards, with Okazaki flicking home
Honda's right-wing cross with the final touch of the half.
Half-time substitute Carlos Carbonero wasted a golden chance to restore
Colombia's advantage in the 54th minute, stabbing the ball over the
crossbar after a devilish ball in from fellow replacement James.
It mattered little as Martinez made it 2-1 a minute later, taking a
touch and firing low beyond Eiji Kawashima after a nicely-weighted pass
from James inside the area.
Eder Alvarez Balanta was perhaps
lucky to escape punishment after his forearm struck the face of Okazaki
in the corner, drawing blood from the nose of the Japan goalscorer.
Honda continued to pose a threat from set-pieces, bringing a save out of Ospina with a rasping free kick in the 64th minute.
Yoshito Okubo went close a minute later, meeting Atsuto Uchida's low
cross at pace only to see his close-range effort fly over the bar.
Martinez doubled his tally eight minutes from time with a cool finish,
and moments later Kagawa summed up a disappointing campaign for the
Japanese by firing wide with just Ospina to beat from close range.
There was a notable moment five minutes before the end, as 43-year-old
goalkeeper Faryd Mondragon - retiring after the tournament - was brought
on in place of Ospina to become the oldest player in World Cup history. James, one of the players of the tournament so far, showed his class in
the 90th minute to round off the scoring, turning Maya Yoshida inside
out and dinking an impudent finish over Kawashima, before Mondragon made
an injury-time save to deny Yoichiro Kakitani.
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