Showing posts with label argentina. Show all posts
Showing posts with label argentina. Show all posts

Monday, 14 July 2014

DEFAULT GERMAN VICTORY IN A CORPORATE BEHEMOTH OF A WORLD CUP

D. Ray Morton, 14th July 2014.

That cherubic scoundrel Mario Götze kisses the World Cup shortly after scoring the goal that won it for Germany

A month ago when World Cup 2014 started, football fans were greeted with the possibility of a truly great showcase of the game and we very nearly got one. Somewhere along the line it became altogether very serious. Germany were able squeeze past a stubborn Argentinian side thanks to a late goal in extra time from substitute Mario Götze to win the whole damn thing. Perhaps a fitting conclusion amidst the corporate flatulence that had filled this newfangled Maracanã stadium. Götze, afterall, is the guy who jilted the romantics of Borussia Dortmund to seek fame and fortune at the global powerhouse that are rivals Bayern Munich. Such dignitaries as German prime minister Angela Merkel and...the guy from "That '70s Show", Ashton Kutcher, were in attendance for that special moment.

Irreverence had probably seeped into the mind of any avid fan of the sport as this final developed. The game was flat, rather boring for the most part. Occasionally Argentina would carve out an opportunity but could not add a finishing touch. Gonzalo Higuaín was guilty of a bad one-on-one miss in the first half. Indeed, Higuaín (or Ó hUiginn, poet of Connacht) was at the heart of another controversial incident that probably went over the heads of many spectators as the game veered towards inevitable full-time stalemate and subsequent extra time. Chasing a loose ball in the second half, the Napoli striker was baring down on goal until German goalkeeper Manuel Neuer leapt out of the air. His knee rising like that of a Muay Thai fighter, Neuer nearly took Higuaín's head off as he snatched the ball from his opponent's path. The incident was nearly very ugly, reminiscent of Harald Schumacher's assault of Patrick Battiston in 1982. Somehow, Italian referee Nicola Rizzoli awarded the decision against the Argentine. That moment was decisive in the course of the game as the correct call would have resulted in a penalty for Argentina and a red card for Neuer.

Manuel Neuer's reckless knee smash of Gonzalo Higuaín, remarkably, went completely unpunished
 
With the game spiralling towards penalties, Germany's extra rest day and the fresh legs of Götze proved to be decisive. Another substitute, André Schürrle, was able to skip past the exhausted duo of Javier Mascherano and Pablo Zabaleta down the left flank where he crossed in. Götze controlled well with his chest and knocked it past the on-rushing Sergio Romero who had left most of his goal open. Beer steins were lifted all over Germany as the country, in its unified form, won its first World Cup.

Argentina were crushed and could not even threaten in the few minutes thereafter. It must have been an especially frustrating night for Lionel Messi. He did not have his best game and missed a pretty decent chance in the second half of normal time. To makes matters worse, he was awarded the Golden Ball award for best player at the World Cup though he himself will feel embarrassed to receive such a prize. Realistically, it has not been Messi's World Cup since the group stage. Someone like Colombia's James Rodríguez, who performed brilliantly in each of his matches, would have been far more worthy. Even Diego Maradona felt Messi was unworthy sensing that the award had a corporate angle behind it.

Anyway, it is done. Germany have their prize and the rest of the world just want to move on and forget about this. In Europe, the Germans do not have many fans outside of their own country. Only an English victory would have been more offensive. However inclined, one must admit that Germany are a good team in an international football scene without many others. They can build on this and stroll into Euro 2016 as favourites, a pedestal they have not enjoyed since the 1990s.

Sunday, 6 July 2014

TALKS OF BEST WORLD CUP EVER DASHED AS BRAZIL 2014 TURNS INTO ITALIA '90


D. Ray Morton, 6th July 2014.

Dutch goalie Tim Krul cuts a wrestling villain style promo on each Costa Rican spot-kicker to demonstrate the increasingly dark side of this World Cup

Samba soccer, the football carnival and with all things South American attacking flair, many people have World Cup 2014 down as the best quadrennial FIFA showcase ever. They might well have a case. For the most part, the beginning of the competition was riveting. High scoring matches, very few draws and that beautiful unpredictability that comes with a tournament played in a mysterious non-European climate. With the semi-final fixtures set, it has gotten a bit pragmatic all of a sudden, however.

The knockout stages have featured chess matches rather than sexy football. After the freestyle fun of the opening games, the serious business has begun and it was no wonder that each group winner triumphed against the second placed teams in the last sixteen. With the exception of Costa Rica's heroic journey to the quarter-finals, it is all starting to look very systematic.

Cynicism has entered the fray as the World Cup reaches its climax. Brazil vs. Colombia typifies that. Brazil had set themselves up to fight and Colombia duly walked into that trap. The game turned into a kick-fest and ended Neymar's tournament. Look at the gamesmanship of Tim Krul in last night's penalty shoot-out. He taunted each Costa Rican before their penalties, a cocky tactic which worked a charm. Krul will not have won over many neutrals, however, despite making two fine match-winning saves.

There is now bitterness in accepting defeat too. Belgium, especially, are under the impression that they blew it against Argentina. Daniel van Buyten was quoted as saying in the aftermath: "Of course Argentina have superb players, but I think a team like Germany would easily beat them." A thinly-veiled jab at a side who comfortably dealt with a full half hour of Hail Mary passes lumped at a furry lamppost of a man named Marouane Fellaini. His team-mate Jan Vertonghen also jumped in on the Eric Cartman-like gripes: "I think Argentina will crash out of the tournament against Netherlands in the semi-finals. I really think so." The Tottenham stopper fuming and hoping that his European neighbours do a job on the only team that have won five games in a row in the tournament.

Jan Vertonghen decided to launch a hubris-filled prediction for Argentina going forward clearly frustrated at Belgium's own shortcomings

Another parallel to Italia '90 is that Costa Rica journey that I mentioned. Does it remind anyone of Jack Charlton's boys in green twenty-four years ago? Well don't let it! Costa Rica have played some excellent football at times and beat both Uruguay and Italy cleanly. They may be from a small nation and may have made it to their first ever quarter-finals like the Republic of Ireland did a quarter of a century ago but they can actually play a bit rather than the bland stalemate-based football bleary-eyed Irish fans cheered on back then.

Hope is not lost though. The semi-finals contain two potential classics between historic World Cup heavyweights in Brazil vs. Germany and Argentina vs. the Netherlands. Hopefully, we will see more inventiveness with the shackles of the minimum expectation of reaching that stage removed. With Colombia and James Rodríguez out, the Golden Boot is still up for grabs so that could be a decent side story as well. Let us hope the remaining four sides get their respective mojos back in the upcoming rest days.

Wednesday, 11 June 2014

WORLD CUP TRIUMPH IN MESSI'S HANDS


D. Ray Morton, 11th June 2014.

Lionel Messi will play in his first World Cup with Argentina built around him

The World Cup finally gets under way tomorrow evening (Brazil vs. Croatia K/O 9pm GMT) and speculation mounts as to who will win the competition on the back of many injuries and players who have endured sixty-game seasons. Lionel Messi, having surrendered his Balon d'Or crown to Cristiano Ronaldo last year, is many pundits' tip to be the star individual of the tournament.

There are several reasons as to why people think Messi will dominate at the World Cup. At one point last season, former Barcelona assistant manager, Angel Cappa, accused the Argentine of losing his passion for the game. Indeed, many felt that he had taken his foot off the pedal as his domestic season wound down in order to save himself for Brazil's football carnival. It is harsh to judge a player's professionalism like this and Diego Simeone's Atlético Madrid, who pipped Barça to both a Liga BBVA title and a place in the Champions League final, deserve a lot of credit for keeping Messi quiet throughout their series of games. Therefore, La Pulga Atómica has a lot to prove and a lot of pundits to silence. Included in this is the ever-opinionated Zvonimir Boban who recently accused Argentina's No. 10 of "not trying" (whilst also stating Barça teammate Neymar will never become the world's best player).

The reason for Messi optimism is as follows. Fair enough, his performances did dip a little towards the end of last season but it was on the back of a year that involved a serious hamstring injury. Between Barcelona's last game of the campaign and the start of the World Cup, he has been able to rest and is enjoying his time with the Argentina camp. There may be a sense of pressure too, however. Messi has vomited during play on several occasions in recent times and though he maintains it has nothing to do with nerves, it is odd that the medical staff cannot find an explanation for this. Messi believes it merely some undiagnosed, minor illness that just happens to him sometimes. Merely a weak stomach.

Assuming Messi is 100% fit and happy, he finds himself in an Argentina team built around him away from the pressures of Camp Nou. This was not the case in the past. Sergio Agüero and Gonzalo Higuaín should join him to form a formidable attacking force, arguably the best at the World Cup. Other major stars from top nations are either missing or struggling for fitness too which gives Messi the chance to shine above all others. Germany's Marco Reus, France's Franck Ribéry and Colombia's Radamel Falcao are all ruled out and there are question marks over the condition of Portugal's Ronaldo and Uruguay's Luis Suárez. Five top players who could have each taken the tournament by storm.

Considering Messi turns twenty-seven on 24th June, he should be at his prime in this World Cup. Argentina's potential path to the final is not the worst either and they could be looking at a semi-final against Spain and perhaps Brazil in the decider, the ultimate South American football rivalry. Spain are thought to be a little bit weaker than in their last three international championships and there are still questions over whether this Brazil team are really that good. There will be a lot more pressure on Neymar & co. than on Messi & co. Even playing the World Cup in South America helps. Obviously not against Brazil but against the European teams.

So will Messi cement that World Cup legacy that places Diego Maradona above him in the annals of the Argentine game? The conditions seem to be right for what Argentinians have been waiting for since 1986. With a much better supporting cast to boot.

Wednesday, 19 March 2014

MESSI'S CALCULATED DIG AT ROBBEN

MESSI'S CALCULATED DIG AT ROBBEN

D. Ray Morton, 19th March 2014.




As Bayern Munich announced that Arjen Robben has extended his contract at the club until June 2017, Barcelona's Lionel Messi unleashed some calculated criticism in the direction of the Dutch winger in regards to Spain's World Cup triumph against the Oranje four years ago.



Messi was quoted as saying: "You need the luck of the champions in order to win the World Cup, just like Spain had in South Africa."


The Argentine continued: "Spain were the best team at the 2010 World Cup, but they were fortunate that Robben missed two huge chances in the final."




An interesting line considering the few months ahead for the two superstars. Messi and Barcelona are still hurting from the 7-0 aggregate thrashing they suffered at the hands of Die Bayern last season and considering both sides' recent form in the competition, they could very well meet again in the remaining rounds.



Robben enjoyed a sensational run of form late last term scoring the 89th minute winner that saw Bayern lift the Champions League crown in a 2-1 win over domestic rivals Borussia Dortmund. Before that, however, Robben had been labelled as something of a big game "bottler" having lost out to Chelsea in the 2011/12 final after missing an extra time penalty which should have won it for the Bavarians.



Perhaps Messi is shrewdly aiming his words at Robben in order to revive those creeping doubts that plagued the Dutch man before his return to big game form. It should be interesting to see how this rivalry unfolds should we see Barcelona face Bayern again this season or even if Argentina face the Netherlands at the World Cup.