GettyImagesRobinho
celebrates as the Luis Fabiano's shot hits the back of the net
Luis Fabiano scored a brace and Elano added another before Didier Drogba netted a consolation goal for the Elephants late on.
The striker, who looped the ball over two defenders before finishing his second goal, said: "It's true, the ball really touched my hand and then my shoulder. But it was involuntary. It was one of the greatest goals I've scored in my career."
Ivory Coast coach Sven Goran Eriksson was livid that that the second goal counted.
"It shouldn't have been allowed," Eriksson said. "They got a goal free. That's a 2-0 goal - that changed everything.
"It's even more difficult if he's allowed to use his hands. Of course it's a handball. It's not once, it's twice."
Kaka received two yellow cards late in the game and will be suspended for Brazil's next match, against Portugal. Kaka got into an altercation with Kader Keita near the end of the match.
"It was a totally unjustified sending-off of Kaka," Brazil coach Dunga said. "It was a very complicated game, a very physical game I might add.
"There were many fouls committed and all of us, who love football and desire beautiful football, always ask that the beautiful game is controlled.
"We have to know what is good football and what is not. So when the referee allows certain fouls or certain incidents to go unpunished that is not right, as happened today."
And he sarcastically added: "He (Kaka) was fouled and he was punished... he was given a yellow card. So it seems that the player that commits the foul is not the one given the yellow card, which means he can do it at will. I must actually congratulate that Ivory Coast player.
"We played much better than Ivory Coast and received more yellow cards than our opponents without really having committed any serious fouls. So we are left a little bit in doubt. What do we really have to do not to receive these yellow cards?"
Kaka did not want to talk about the sending off, but complained of rough play by Ivory Coast players.
"It was a tough match," he said. "It got violent in two or three plays there."
Handball twice, or the goal of the tournament so far? Both, probably. It was not exactly a Thierry Henry moment but when Luis Fabiano got the better of Ivory Coast's defence to seal the game in the 50th minute, an accompanying rendition of the Harlem Globetrotters' theme song Sweet Georgia Brown would have been as appropriate as any samba.
And yet, unlike Henry's winner in the World Cup play-off with the Republic of Ireland, Fabiano's goal was hard to begrudge.
Screamer: Luis Fabiano celebrates scoring with
team-mate Robinho
And finally, what Fabiano did with the ball when he was not juggling it with the top of his arm on his way to goal was rather wonderful.
There have not been enough stand-out occasions like this in the 2010 World Cup so far for us not to shine light on the magic of this one.
No stopping that: Luis Fabiano blasts the ball
past Boubacar Barry
Now faced with goalkeeper Boubacar Barry, Fabiano finished, smartly, his second of the night.
Double trouble: Luis Fabiano caps his fine run
with a cool volleyed finish
Having already given the goal he then seemed to be asking Fabiano if he had handballed as they trotted back to the centre circle, getting far from the whole truth in return. Bizarre.
That clinches it: Elano guides home Brazil's
third goal from close range
So Fabiano was sly and opportunistic. Keita by contrast was despicable in his behaviour and if there is any justice will play as little part in the third round of group games as unfortunate Kaka, dismissed for a second yellow card for doing, well, nothing.
The game had become scrappy and ill-tempered in its closing minutes when Keita, not looking where he was going, simply ran into the back of Kaka and fell to the ground.He did so, however, clutching his face as if struck off the ball and Lannoy bought it.
Players from both sides did not help, making entreaties for and against Brazil's No 10, but sympathy must favour the Brazilians, who were protesting a great injustice, not the Ivorians, who were attempting to perpetrate one.
Consolation: Didier Drogba nods in Ivory Coast's
solitary strike
The dark side prevailed and Lannoy showed blameless Kaka a second yellow. He was on his way off when the red was brandished, a contemptuous laugh his only protest.
Off: Referee Stephane Lannoy shows the red card
to Kaka
As for Keita, one can only hope he is punished as Brazil's play-acting Rivaldo was in 2002. Ivory Coast are all but out - and on this evidence will not be missed - but it would be a travesty if he was allowed to aid even their slender hopes.
When reasons are advanced for Brazil not winning this World Cup, chief among them is often the presence of Fabiano as the main striker. For a country brought up on sublime talents this is perhaps understandable.
Fabiano has had a chequered career, a series of scraps with Sao Paulo, dismal spells in Europe with Rennes and Porto, and five inconsistent years with Sevilla in Spain.
His troubles have seen him spend three years outside the national team, he failed to make the squad for the last World Cup and coming into this game he had failed to score for nine months.Most had him marked down as the weakest link in a team of creation.
MATCH FACTS
BRAZIL (4-2-3-1): Cesar 7; Maicon 6,
Lucio 7, Juan 7, Bastos 6; Gilberto Silva 7, Melo 6; Elano 7 (Dani Alves
67, 6), Kaka 7, Robinho 7 (Ramires 90); Fabiano 8. Sent off: Kaka.
IVORY COAST (4-3-3): Barry 6; Demel 5, Kolo Toure 6, Zokora 5, Tiene 6; Eboue 5 (Romaric 71, 5), Yaya Toure 6, Tiote 6; Dindane 5 (Gervinho 54, 5), Drogba 6, Kalou 5 (Keita 66, 4). Booked: Tiene, Tiote, Keita.
Man of the match: Luis Fabiano.
Referee: Stephane Lannoy (France).
IVORY COAST (4-3-3): Barry 6; Demel 5, Kolo Toure 6, Zokora 5, Tiene 6; Eboue 5 (Romaric 71, 5), Yaya Toure 6, Tiote 6; Dindane 5 (Gervinho 54, 5), Drogba 6, Kalou 5 (Keita 66, 4). Booked: Tiene, Tiote, Keita.
Man of the match: Luis Fabiano.
Referee: Stephane Lannoy (France).
How wrong this proved. Kaka's display last night revealed he most surely has the potential to be among the stars of this tournament and the awakening of a towering talent came with the beautifully weighted ball he slipped through for the first goal.
From there, it was the finish that caught the eye, Fabiano's powerful shot flying past Barry and into the net. It took his international record to 26 goals in 38 appearances. Some weak link.Emile Heskey, eat your heart out.
This may not be vintage Brazil, but they are still a team who have faced arguably the toughest test of any in the tournament and come through it, qualifying from the group of death with 90 minutes to spare.
Ivory Coast are the strongest of the African nations here and were considered among the favourites. Instead, they were matched in technique and imagination going forward, equalled in desire and might at the back.
Didier Drogba scored a header for the Ivorians after 79 minutes but it was too late. Brazil looked irresistible. Never more so than in the 62nd minute when Kaka cut the ball back for Elano to effortlessly snap up his second of the tournament.