Soccer at its best


well i'll try to track the World Cup, the world's most popular sporting event, tapping into the global conversation and providing updates and insights through to the championship game July 9 through this blog...

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Wednesday, May 05, 2010

Porque esto es africa... because this is africa



2010 FIFA World Cup South Africa
11 June - 11 July




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The journey begins...




"Freedom" Just like a waving flag....
Singing forever young...

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Tuesday, July 11, 2006

A Million Thanks and a Look Ahead

What a ride it has been. For more than a month i’ve been blogging about the World Cup and it hardly seems time for it to end. Well a lot of people who contributed to the unbelievable success of this project that i’d like to thank, but first here’s the scoop about what is coming up next.
I’m going to keep World Cup Blog alive. The tournament might be over, but there will still be plenty of news about national teams, especially with the build up to Euro 2008(starts from 6th Sept. 2006 with Italy playing France again) and qualifying for the next World Cup. With Sepp Blatter in charge of FIFA, we should have no problem staying busy and keeping you entertained.
A site cannot run on mere words alone. World Cup Blog has been blessed to have unbelievable marketing and technical teams. I have no idea how they keep things running, but I am grateful and humbled by their efforts. They are good people. Use them as a resource for your travel needs.
I would also like to thank all of the blogs and websites who have linked to this Blog and who have supplied us with story ideas, tips and information about the beautiful game. This World Cup will be remembered for many things. One of them will be the explosion of the blogosphere. We are all better informed because of it.
If it is possible to thank an entire country, than my sincere gratitude to Germany needs to be expressed. It has been home to such a great fest for the past six weeks and the German people have made it feel like home with their friendliness, help and willingness to put up with our broken German phrases.
Finally, I would like to thank all of you for visiting the site and for leaving your comments. Your passion and enthusiasm for the World Cup is what made this site a success and what made it so very much fun me.
Thank you, thank you, thank you.
Warmest regards,

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The 2006 World Cup Awards

The awards for the 2006 World Cup have been announced and from the looks of the discussion taking place about Zidane's selection as Golden Ball, everyone agrees with the choices. I don’t either, so I have made my selections for the various awards. You’re welcome to do the same just as long as the players know that World Cup Blog will not be shipping them any trophies.

Golden Ball
Winner: Zinedine Zidane, France
My Choice: Fabio Cannavaro, Italy. He was simply superb from start to finish this tournament. In a competition where no one player dominated, Cannavaro was in charge on a backline that propelled Italy to a championship. Forget Zidane’s meltdown in the final. He didn’t start the tournament strong and he really only had a couple of quality games.

Most Entertaining Team
Winner: Portugal
My Choice: Portugal, watching Portugal play really entertained everyone with dives all around the ground, especially with Ronaldo around the corner they really deserved something from the prestigious World cup, if at all not the cup.

Best Young Player
Winner: Lukas Podolski, Germany
My Choice: No one. None of the young guns particularly impressed me, including Podolski. I like the concept of this award, which was handed out for the first time this year, but the reality was that this was not a tournament where a whole lot of young players had a chance to shine.

Best Keeper
Winner: Gianluigi Buffon, Italy
My Choice: Portugal’s Ricardo. While buffon had a good defense to support him, it was only Ricardo's save that took the Portugeese team to their second best ever performence in the finals.
Golden Shoe
Winner: Miroslav Klose, Germany
My Choice: Klose did finish with the most goals so there is no disputing this one. I thought he had a wonderful tournament and will remember him just as much for his passing skills as I will for the five goals he scored.

Team Fair Play Award
Winner: Spain and Brazil
My Choice: This award seems like more of a joke than anything else. Spain and Brazil might have been sporting teams, but this tournament will be remembered less for its fair play than for its unfair play and shoddy refereeing. FIFA can try to feel good about themselves by endlessly promoting fair play, but until they hold the teams and players to a higher level it will mean nothing.

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Lip-reader reveals what riled Zidane

An Italian lip-reader last night claimed to have deciphered the words Marco Materazzi said to Zinédine Zidane that provoked the French captain into butting him in the chest during Sunday's World Cup final, the great midfielder's final act before a red card ended his career in top-level football.
According to the BBC, Materazzi said, "I wish an ugly death to you and all your family," and then told Zidane to "go fuck yourself".
A Paris-based anti-racism group, SOS-Racism, earlier said that "several very well informed sources" had suggested Zidane was called a "dirty terrorist".
But though video evidence is being used to judge Materazzi, it was not used by match officials to condemn Zidane. Fifa yesterday released a statement insisting that "the fourth referee saw the incident with his own eyes and told the referee and the assistant directly through their headsets".
The controversy did not stop Zidane from winning the Golden Ball as the World Cup's best player, ahead of the final's other captain, Italy's Fabio Cannavaro. The Frenchman earned 2,012 points in a poll of journalists covering the event, with Cannavaro on 1,977 and the Italian midfielder Andrea Pirlo third with 715.

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Saturday, July 08, 2006

Germany needs a grand finale to mark return of the great powers

If ever a World Cup deserved a decent finale it is this one. After a month of generally pleasing football, full of false trails and cunning sub-plots with not everything quite what it seemed at the time, an anticlimax would be hard to swallow.
True, the ambitious standards of entertainment set by the opening group stage have only partly been maintained. Almost inevitably, once the contest reached the knockout phase, a number of games were beset by cards and caution. Yet there have been more outstanding encounters in this World Cup than there were in the 2002 tournament which produced memorable results rather than memorable matches.
The established order of things in the world game, moreover, has been restored to its axis. In Japan and South Korea only three former winners survived to the quarter-finals. This time there were six. In 2002 South Korea, Senegal and Turkey reached the last eight when France, Argentina and Italy were long gone. In Germany the old football empires have struck back.
For the vibrancy of the atmosphere, the friendly fervour of the fans and, not least, the heat in which many of the matches have been played the 2006 World Cup has born some resemblance to the 1994 tournament in the United States; England did not compete in that one either. Twelve years ago open, entertaining contests went hand-in-hand with controversy and drama, not least when Diego Maradona failed a drug test. Then as now the refereeing lurched from the competent to the downright awful, a Syrian doing his best to spoil a compelling quarter-final between Bulgaria, the surprise team that summer, and Mexico.
Yet, watchable as much of the football in America was, the best matches this time have been even better: Argentina's narrow victory over Mexico in the second round won by that marvellous shot from Maximiliano Rodríguez, Germany's typical late comeback against the Argentinians in a breathtaking quarter-final marred only by the handbags after the hosts had won on penalties, the French revival which saw off Brazil and of course Italy's stunning victory over the Germans in the semi-finals.
Much mention has been made over the years of the Italians' 4-3 defeat of West Germany in the Aztec Stadium in Mexico City which took them to the 1970 final, as if this is the standard by which all subsequent World Cup epics should be judged. In fact the excitement of that encounter was confined to extra time, when the teams traded five goals.
In Dortmund the drama lasted two hours, not 30 minutes. Before future World Cups Fifa should make it mandatory that all participants view DVDs of this masterpiece to remind themselves how great matches are compounded. The players will be reminded that the less they dive, argue, feign injuries and generally behave like clots the easier it will be to get on with the game. The referees will be reminded that controlling matches sympathetically and with common sense, as the Mexican Benito Archundia did with such distinction, is more likely to win the teams' cooperation than constantly giving them their cards.
In Munich the following night a Uruguayan, Jorge Larrionda, refereed the semi-final between France and Portugal with similar restraint though in more difficult circumstances. Five of France's starting line-up were on yellow cards including French football's answer to Gandalf, Zinédine Zidane, and the Portuguese were diving like herring gulls. Happily the referee was having none of it and while France have lost Louis Saha, booked after coming on as a substitute, for the final they can live with that.
Luiz Felipe Scolari was surely jesting when he insisted afterwards that, while he had no quarrel with the penalty from which Zidane won the match, Portugal should also have had one for a push by Willy Sagnol on Cristiano Ronaldo. For one thing Ronaldo was already in full flight before Sagnol touched him, and for another he could have been pinioned by two French defenders while a third applied chloroform and still no penalty would have been given.
Ronaldo's reputation for diving did him no favours on or off the pitch. He is a gifted young footballer who apart from the theatricals had a good World Cup but in Munich the crowd shrilled their disapproval every time he touched the ball. For some reason they seemed to think he was a bit of a winker.
As to tomorrow's final, well, it could be a classic but it might be wiser to settle for a close contest of counter-attacks and hope for an early goal - as long as it is not scored by Italy. And remembering the barren anticlimax in Pasadena in 1994, when the Italians lost to Brazil on penalties after two goalless hours, it would be as well if any parallels with the World Cup in America stop well short of Berlin.

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Podolski beats Ronaldo to award

Germany striker Lukas Podolski has won the Fifa young player of the World Cup award, beating off competition from Portugal winger Cristiano Ronaldo.
The 20-year-old Podolski has scored three goals in six matches so far.
Podolski said: "I would have liked to have taken home the World Cup - but this is a great honour and is a great motivation to become more successful." Ronaldo was favourite for the prize but his antics in the quarter-final against England cost him the chance to win.
Holger Osieck, head of the Fifa technical study group that picked the winner, said: "We want to have decent behaviour and I admit we were critical of this. We had a number of criteria but we have to admit players of that age do have their weaknesses and are not fully developed. Players should be role models and fair play is a consideration. But we have to admit young players are not always mature tactically and they also have difficulties in handling stressful situations."
Germany legend Lothar Matthaus, who is patron of the award, added: "You will never have 100% fair play and maybe looking at Cristiano he was obviously doing something here. He may have accumulated a couple of minus points due to his gesture with Rooney but you sometimes forget what the laws are in the heat of the fight."
Portuguese winger Ronaldo, pilloried for his part in the sending off of Wayne Rooney, was leading the Fifa website vote by a huge margin. But an email urging fans to vote for Ecuador's Luis Valencia instead led to an incredible 24-hour turnaround. Ronaldo was deemed unsporting for appearing to try and get Wayne Rooney sent off for his challenge on Ricardo Carvalho.
Podolski also beat off competition from Cesc Fabregas, Lionel Messi and Tranquilo Barnetta to win the coveted prize. No England players were shortlisted for the award. Podolski scored in the final group game against Ecuador and bagged a brace in the 2-0 second round victory over Sweden.
Osieck added: "He not only scored three goals, he was a key element in Germany's attack. He showed a great understanding with Miroslav Klose and the two players formed a very effective partnership."

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Thursday, July 06, 2006

2006 World Cup Golden Ball Nominees

FIFA has releaed the list of the 10 players who have been short-listed for the Golden Ball Award presented to the tournament’s most outstanding player. It comes as no surprise that the list is comprised largely of players from the two finalists. Zinedine Zidane, who was beaten out for the award in 1998 by Brazil’s Ronaldo, is on the short list this year. The nominations are: Fabio Cannavaro (Italy),
Maniche (Portugal),
Michael Ballack (Germany),
Andrea Pirlo (Italy),
Gianluca Zambrotta (Italy),
Thierry Henry (France),
Gianluigi Buffon (Italy),
Patrick Vieira (France),
Miroslav Klose (Germany),
Zinedine Zidane (France).
You have to think that with no single dominant player this year the award will go to a player on Sunday’s winning side, especially since voting will remain open until after the end of the final. The winner will be announced the morning after the final.

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2006 World Cup Full Team Rankings

By now we know the teams that will finish in the top 4 spots in the 2006 World Cup. While their order is yet to be decided, the finishing spots for the other 28 teams are set. Using the following criteria that FIFA has used in previous World Cups, the teams are ranked below.
1. Stage reached.
2. Points earned.
3 for a win, including in extra time;
1 for a draw, including a game that was decided in penalties;
0 for a loss, including in extra time.
3. Goal difference. Includes knockout play.
4. Goals scored. Includes knockout play.

Complete Rankings
Top 4: Portugal, Germany, Italy, France
5. - Brazil 12 points and +8 goal difference
6. - Argentina 11 points and +8 goal difference
7. - England 11 points and +4 goal difference
8. - Ukraine 7 points and -2 goal difference
9. - Spain 9 points and +5 goal difference
10. - Switzerland 8 points and +4 goal difference
11. - Holland 7 points and +1 goal difference
12. - Ecuador 6 points and +1 goal difference
13. - Ghana 6 points and -2 goal difference
14. - Sweden 5 points and -1 goal difference
15. - Mexico 4 points and 0 goal difference
16. - Australia 4 points and -1 goal difference
17. - South Korea 4 points and -1 goal difference
18. - Paraguay 3 points and 0 goal difference
19. - Ivory Coast 3 points and -1 goal difference
20. - Czech Republic 3 points and -1 goal difference
21. - Poland 3 points and -2 goal difference
22. - Croatia 2 points and -1 goal difference
23. - Angola 2 points and -1 goal difference
24. - Tunisia 1 points and -3 goal difference
25. - United States 1 points and -4 goal difference
25. - Iran 1 points and -4 goal difference
27. - Trinidad and Tobago 1 points and -4 goal difference
28. - Saudi Arabia 1 points and -5 goal difference
29. - Japan 1 points and -5 goal difference
30. - Togo 0 points and -5 goal difference
31. - Costa Rica 0 points and -6 goal difference
32. - Serbia and Montenegro 0 points and -8 goal difference.

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Portugal 0-1 France

France booked a World Cup final spot against Italy after Zinedine Zidane's first-half penalty earned victory over a disappointing Portugal in Munich.
Zidane struck coolly past Ricardo on 33 minutes after Thierry Henry was tripped inside the box by Ricardo Carvalho. Henry saw another shot trickle wide and Franck Ribery forced Ricardo to save. Luis Figo and Deco saw shots saved by Fabien Barthez and Figo nodded over late on, but France stayed in control and thoroughly deserved their win.
The final will be Zidane's last game before he retires from professional football and is a chance to win his second World Cup after the 1998 triumph on home soil. Zidane's influence on proceedings was not quite as substantial as in the previous rounds against Spain or Brazil, but apart from a lively start Portugal rarely looked like ending their French curse. They have not beaten France since 1975 and have still never beaten them in a major competition.
But Luiz Felipe Scolari - who lost his 100% record as a coach at World Cup finals - saw his side begin well, with Deco and Figo both forcing saves from Fabien Barthez with low 20-yard drives.
Cristiano Ronaldo was being roundly booed every time he touched the ball after his histrionics against England, but he was in fine form and twice had shots blocked as he surged at the French defence. Having made a slow start, Domenech's side clinically took the lead just after the half hour mark.
Henry turned exquisitely just inside the area and was brought down by Carvalho, Zidane stepping up to decisively strike the penalty past Ricardo, who managed to get a hand on it.
Ronaldo tried to win a spot-kick of his own moments later, but his theatrical dive under the slightest challenge from Willy Sagnol was ignored by referee Jorge Larrionda. Henry had a chance straight after the restart to double the lead, but after twisting and turning in the box his shot squirmed under Ricardo and out for a corner. Portugal looked far from threatening with the out-of-sorts Pauleta on his own up front and Ricardo had to save Ribery's drive as France stayed in control.
The second half was a dire affair, scrappy and lacking any real creativity - it suited the French down to a tee because they never let Portugal back into the game. Their best chance was down to Barthez. He bizarrely parried a Ronaldo free-kick into the air but from six yards Figo could only head the rebound over. Figo and his team-mates tired badly and they simply could not muster a late rally to provide the French with any sort of threat.
Scolari furiously marched onto the pitch at the final whistle to remonstrate with referee Larrionda, but had little reason to complain. The 57-year-old, who had won 12 World Cup games in a row as coach of Brazil and Portugal, was finally left to suffer the bitter taste of defeat.

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Wednesday, July 05, 2006

French learn to expect rough ride from Scolari

Luiz Felipe Scolari arrived at his pre-match press conference to a standing ovation and left to a chorus of jeers and whistles yesterday. The applause came from Brazilian journalists delighted to have one of their countrymen left in Germany to follow, while the abuse was supplied by the international media, upset that a promise to answer questions in English and French had been broken.
The mixed reception was typical of how Portugal have divided opinions at this tournament, but as befits a man now unbeaten in 12 World Cup finals matches Scolari could not care less. As the FA discovered to its cost when attempting to recruit him as Sven-Goran Eriksson's successor, Scolari is far more concerned with winning that what others think of him.
Portugal's progress to their first World Cup semi-final in 40 years has been marked by a cautious, sometimes negative, gameplan in a series of explosive encounters. The second-round match against Holland featured 16 yellow and four red cards and Saturday's display against England was memorable for the worldliness shown by even the youngest of the Portuguese squad rather than the creativity of a side apparently bent on stifling their opponents above all else.
The approach has come as little surprise in France, where resentment still lingers at the behaviour of Portugal's players during the Euro 2000 semi-final in Brussels, when the award of a penalty three minutes from the end of extra-time prompted a brawl that saw the officials assaulted. Zinedine Zidane, one of 10 survivors of that game in the two squads, withstood a five-minute delay and repeated attempts to distract him to convert the spot-kick. The history between the two sides does not end there.
In 1996 the French coach Raymond Domenech was in charge of the French Olympic team that lost to Portugal in the quarter-final, a game that saw Jérôme Bonnissel sent off and 11 players booked. In 2003 meanwhile Domenech's Under-21 team met Portugal in the European Championship. Djibril Cissé was sent off for kicking Mario Sergio, Portugal's players declined to take a drugs test after the game and Domenech accused the Portuguese of "loutish behaviour".
Scolari dismissed suggestions that his side will again seek to upset their opponents rather than beat them. "This is a joke," he said. "It is stirred up to sell newspapers, but all you have to do is count the red cards that my team has had in the last 3½-years and the number the French have had then you have your answer," he said. "France are the hardest team we could have faced. They are the best organised and most talented team in Germany. We have to work as a team and in football you never know which team is going to win."
Few would bet with confidence against Scolari coaxing another odds-defying performance from his side. He has instilled fierce belief into his players and despite regular rotation of the side, in part because of suspension, they will test Domenech's France. Deco returns after a red card removed him from the quarter-final - "He is crazy to play," said Scolari - as does Costinha, who will step into the suspended Petit's destructive shoes at the base of the midfield. Cristiano Ronaldo and Luis Figo are both carrying knocks but are expected to start.
In the French camp an intense evening is anticipated. "We must be fully focused for 90 minutes because Portugal are a good team and they will try and do everything they can to destabilise us," said William Gallas. "I think they have the ability to destabilise teams with actions and little fouls and it's essential that we keep cool. In this sort of match we must be careful of the Portuguese - they like diving, you can see that."
Zidane, Lilian Thuram, Patrick Vieira, Willy Sagnol, Louis Saha and Franck Ribéry will not play in the final if they pick up a yellow card tonight.

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Monday, July 03, 2006

Frings suspended for semi-final

Fifa has suspended Germany midfielder Torsten Frings for Tuesday's World Cup semi-final against Italy.
Frings, 29, was banned for punching Argentina forward Julio Cruz in a fracas which followed the quarter-final between the two countries. He has been given a two-match ban, but the second match is suspended meaning he will be available for the World Cup final, if Germany qualify.
Germany team manager Oliver Bierhoff said he was disappointed by the ban.
"We found out about it on the plane on the way to Dortmund (for the semi-final)," Bierhoff told reporters. "We haven't seen the written reasons but will accept the Fifa decision. Frings will get a special training programme to be completely fit for the final. Torsten is obviously not very happy about it. He'll be able to go at full steam for the final, though."
The ban is a blow for coach Jurgen Klinsmann, who would have started the Werder Bremen player had he been available. Klinsmann said before the verdict that he was confident Frings would be cleared, saying Argentina were to blame. "I don't think we were the culprits. He should be in the line-up on Tuesday," Klinsmann said.
Fifa had announced on Sunday that it would take no action against the German players.
Football's governing body is considering action against officials of both teams and cases have already been opened against two Argentine players.
Non-playing substitute Leandro Cufre was red-carded by referee Lubos Michel for his part in the incident. A Fifa spokesman said Maxi Rodriguez may be punished for an "apparent attack on Bastien Schweinsteiger".
The referee and Fifa officials were caught up in the fighting, with punches and kicks appearing to be thrown during the ugly scenes which lasted 90 seconds.

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Sunday, July 02, 2006

Semifinalists in the number game....

1 – Number of goals Italy and Portugal have each conceeded.

5 – Number of wins for Germany and Portugal each this World Cup.

6 – Number of goals scored by Portugal and France, the least of the four remaining teams.

11 – Number of goals scored by Germany, the most of the four remaining teams.

21 – Number of saves by Italy keeper Gianluigi Buffon, the most of any remaining keeper.

2 – Number of teams to win a penalty shoot out this tournament. They are Germany and Portugal.

12 – Number of shots on goal by Germany’s Miroslav Klose, the most of anyone in the competition.

22 – Number of tackles by Portugal’s Nuno Valente, the most of anyone left in the World Cup.

22 – Number of cards accumulated by Portugal, the most of the remaining teams.

8 – Number of cards accumulated by Germany, the least of the four remaining teams.

7 – Number of combined World Cups titles won by the four countries.

0 – Number of World Cups won by Portugal, the only team left without a title to their name.

5 – Number of combined times the four countries have finished third at the World Cup.

6 – Number of combined time the four counties have hosted the World Cup.

4 - Number of teams from Europe

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