
Kaka supplied Fabiano to hammer in the opener from an acute angle on 25 minutes. The Sevilla striker made it two on 50 minutes with a volley from the edge of the box after eluding three opposing players.
Fabiano was fortunate to avoid being penalised for handling before he scored, but there was no doubt about the quality of the goal.
There was certainly no question marks over the third goal as Kaka supplied Elano to finish with an exquisite finish in the box on 62 minutes.
Elano was carted off two minutes later after a late tackle by Cheik Tiote, which should have produced a straight red card as the Ivory Coast man clearly used his studs in a stamping motion on the Brazilian's shin.
All hell seemed to break loose in the death throes of a match witnessed by over 80,000 fans inside Soccer City Stadium in Johannesburg.
Kaka, booked minutes earlier for pushing the Galatasaray midfielder Kader Keita, was sent off on 87 minutes after another minor collision with Keita.
The Ivory Coast player invoked memories of Rivaldo's notorious piece of theatre during the 2002 finals in Japan and South Korea when the former Brazil player was guilty of a similar piece of animation.
Keita feigned injury and collapsed holding his face when the Real Madrid player only brushed his chest with an elbow.
Didier Drogba's deft 79th-minute header proved to be a small consolation for an outclassed Ivory Coast, who must beat
Brazil had never lost at the World Cup finals to a side outside of Europe or South America and they were never under genuine threat during a fairly droll first half.
After a feverish rendition of the respective national anthems, the opening 45 minutes was notable only for its lack of genuine flair.
Robinho managed to uncork the first shot on goal after only two minutes when he hammered the ball in from 25 yards, but it dipped narrowly over.
Despite failing to gain real control of the match, Brazil managed to move ahead with their best, and perhaps only real attacking move of note of the opening period.
Kaka managed to evade the Ivory Coast defence to play in Fabiano. He wasted little time in looking up before smashing the ball high into the net with the Ivory Coast keeper Boubacar Barry grasping at fresh air.
It was a brilliant finish from such an acute angle, but the match continued to struggle onwards.
Ivory Coast tried to restore parity, but they failed to gain any real momentum with Didier Drogba struggling to make any real impact before his late goal boosted the Ivory Coast's goal difference if nothing else.
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