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Costa Rica produced a breathtaking second-half revival at Estadio Castelao to be

at Uruguay for the first time in their history in their Group D opener.
The victory was inspired by Arsenal striker Joel Campbell, who scored one and ma
de another in the first match in England's group.
It was a far cry from a first half in which Edinson Cavani put a comfortable Uru
guay ahead from the penalty spot.
Key facts
Costa Rica scored more than twice in a World Cup game for the first time.
Uruguay have now gone six opening games without a win, last winning their first m
atch at a World Cup in 1970.
Costa Rica scored with three of their four shots on target, all of which came in
the second half.
Costa Rica scored twice in three minutes through Campbell and defender Oscar Dua
rte to spark scenes of jubilation in Fortaleza.
But they were not finished there as substitute Marcos Urena raced onto Campbell'
s through ball and clipped his shot beyond Fernando Muslera.
To make matters worse, Uruguay had Maximiliano Pereira sent off in injury time f
or a spiteful challenge on Campbell. He will now be suspended for Thursday's gam
e against England.
This was Costa Rica's first World Cup victory since 2002, and only their fourth
in the tournament's history, against a Uruguay side missing the injured Luis Sua
rez.
The result means Costa Rica are top of Group D after Italy beat England 2-1, whi
le Uruguay face an uphill battle to qualify for the last 16.
Uruguay looked in control for the opening 50 minutes. Cavani wasted a good early
chance after Costa Rica failed to clear a Diego Forlan free-kick, with the Pari
s St-Germain striker slicing high and wide with the goal at his mercy.
He soon made up for that miss.
Edinson Cavani (left) puts Uruguay in front against Costa Rica with a clinical p
enalty Edinson Cavani has scored 22 goals in 63 games for Uruguay
Costa Rica defender Yeltsin Tejeda conceded a needless free-kick wide on the Uru
guay left and when Forlan curled the set-piece into the area, Junior Diaz tried
to stop Diego Lugano by wrapping his arms around his waist.
The referee pointed to the penalty spot and Cavani did the rest, steering a pier
cing low shot beyond Keylor Navas's dive and into the bottom corner.
The goal settled nerves. Uruguay's passing improved, as did their movement. Forl
an, the player of the tournament in 2010, might have made it 2-0 before half-tim
e when his shot struck Duarte's leg, deflecting it high into the air and requiri
ng Navas to pull off an acrobatic save.
Costa Rica, though, were about to turn the game on its head with Campbell - who
is yet to make his Arsenal debut despite signing for the club in 2011 - to the f
ore.
The striker, who spent last season on loan at Olympiakos, first arrowed a shot n
arrowly wide from 30 yards, while Giancarlo Gonzales might have scored twice, mi
ssing a difficult headed chance and seeing a scrambled toe-poke deflected into t
he side-netting.
But in the space of three minutes, the game changed beyond recognition.
First, Cristian Gamboa chased a seemingly lost cause wide on the right flank, re
aching the ball on the byeline. He delivered a cross which flicked off the head
of Celso Borges and fell to Campbell, who controlled and fired beyond Muslera.
Two minutes later, they swept forward again and Walter Gargano conceded a free-k
ick for a crude tackle on Bryan Ruiz. Christian Bolanos's delivery was pin-point
, Duarte's low header was brave, the finish sublime.
And there was more drama to come.
With time running out, Costa Rica broke forward again and Urena raced away from
Godin and captain Lugano, making perfect contact with his right boot, lifting th
e ball over Muslera to seal victory for Los Ticos.

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