DURBAN, South Africa |  Arjen Robben and Wesley Sneijder scored in each half Monday to give the  Netherlands a 2-1 win over Slovakia and a spot in the World Cup  quarterfinals. 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 20 meters (yards). 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. “We  played a difficult match. Main thing is, we are through,” Robben said.  “Probably the perfect game has still to come.” 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. “At a crucial stage Maarten Stekelenburg saved us,”  Netherlands coach Bert van Marwijk said. In between the goals from  Robben and Sneijder, the Dutch wasted numerous chances. “We had a  good first half hour. And we started well in the second half,” Van  Marwijk said. “We should have scored 2-0, 3-0, maybe 4-0 there.” In  the quarterfinals, the Netherlands will face five-time champion Brazil. “We  must play better against Brazil … that’s for sure,” Robben said. Robert  Vittek pulled one back for Slovakia from the penalty spot in injury  time, tying him with Argentina forward Gonzalo Higuain for the  tournament scoring lead with four goals. 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. “We played with heart and courage and we are proud that we  made it to the second round, but the better team advanced,” Slovakia  coach Vladimir Weiss said. “The penalty made us feel a little better on  the flight home.” 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. “I was  pretty free in my game,” Robben said. “I know I’m not yet at my top  level, but I was pretty confident today and that was a great pass by  Wesley.” 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. “It’s  fantastic,” Van Marwijk said. “After such an injury that he has the  touch to score a goal like that.” Weiss said he has been preparing  his team specifically for Robben for three days. “But he’s a  total genius, and when I saw him in the starting lineup I thought he  makes the Dutch team 50 percent stronger — and I was right,” the  Slovakia coach said. 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 was awarded a penalty  in the third minute of injury time, when substitute Martin Jakubko was  taken down inside the area. Otherwise, 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.
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