PREVIEW: World Cup Third Place Play-Off

Diego ForlanOften the forgotten match at most World Cups, the third place play off in this tournament has the potential to be a classic – assuming both sides are up for it.

The promising thing is, both teams have players with worthwhile achievements within reach.

Uruguay have Diego Forlan looking to win the Golden Boot. He currently has four goals, one behind David Villa and Wesley Sneijder, both of which will compete in the final. Forlan will be hopeful of grabbing two or three goals to make it especially difficult for those two.

Unfortunately for Forlan, Germany have Miroslav Klose, also on four goals, also vying for the Golden Boot and, perhaps more importantly, looking to beat the great Ronaldo’s 15 goal record in World Cup finals.

That is, of course, assuming that both players are fit. Klose is struggling with a bad back and Forlan has a thigh injury to overcome. The game needs both players, so fingers crossed on that one.

Personal glory aside, the match itself pits an attacking force in Uruguay against a counter attacking Germany and should produce a lot of goals. I certainly hope so, as I see the World Cup final between Spain and Holland being a tight affair, won by a single goal. So if this World Cup is to go out in style, it is relying on the play off.

Uruguay will welcome back Luis Suarez (himself not out of the race for the Golden Boot just yet) to partner Forlan, increasing their potency. Germany will be boosted by the return of Thomas Muller from suspension as well – many think if he had played against Spain it would be them in the final. I wouldn’t go that far, but they would certainly have offered more up front.

Head to Head: History says Germany will win this. In nine matches between the two, they’ve won six, drawn two and lost only one – the first meeting between the sides in…wait for it…1928!

Prediction: I can’t see any other winner than Germany, though I would love Uruguay to end their brilliant campaign on a high. 3-1 to the Germans.

World Cup Highlights: The Semi Finals

Carlos Puyol scores semi final winnerIt is slightly odd that a comparatively poor game involving Holland and Uruguay boasted five goals while a match of high intrigue was won by a single goal. Nevertheless, that’s what happened and we are blessed with a World Cup final featuring two teams never have to won it, namely Spain and Holland.

Holland’s 3-2 victory over Uruguay was deserved, but their usual ‘cool’, evident in every match in this tournament to this point, abandoned them towards the end as Uruguay applied pressure, desperate themselves to reach the final.

Goals came first from Giovanni van Bronckhorst, a delightful screamer from 35 yards out wide on the left, then an equaliser from Diego Forlan, equally spectacular from distance. We settled in for what we hoped would be a classic, but it didn’t happen. The Dutch were finding Uruguay difficult to break down and without Sneijder and Robben could have lost this.

But in those two Holland have match winners. Both scored within three minutes of each other to give the Dutch a seemingly unassailable 3-1 lead with 17 minutes left. Uruguay tried hard, pressing and unnerving their opposition, even scoring a late, late goal through Pereira, but Holland hung on to reach their first World Cup final since 1978.

Spain beat Germany through a surprising source, Carlos Puyol heading home a Xavi corner with venom, but were again below their own high standards and Germany will rue defending so deep as with more pressure they might have wont this.

Germany’s success so far has come from the counter attack, breaking on opponents quickly, but they got no such opportunity against Spain and were slowly pushed back by the Spanish passing game, though they allowed very few actually chances.

What made this game so intriguing was the battle between Spain’s clearly superior passing ability and Germany’s discipline and shape. In the end, it was the passing that won out, as Spain threatened more and more, especially in the second half and the breakthrough via Puyol with 17 minutes left was deserved.

Seriously, if Germany had pressed for victory themselves instead of looking for the counter attack they could have won this but once again Spain’s patience paid off and they have the opportunity to win their first World Cup on Sunday.

I’m shockingly bad at predictions but I’ll give it another go in my World Cup Final preview over the weekend. I’ll say now, though, that I am anticipating a very good final.

VIDEO: van Bronckhorst & Forlan light up semis

I’ll be doing a full review of both semi final matches tomorrow, but for now…you gotta see these!

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dwZcHNxu3Nw[/youtube]

Giovanni van Bronckhorst scores a beauty from 35 yards to give Holland the lead against Uruguay

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CKz2rRt0H4Q[/youtube]

Diego Forlan equalises in slightly less spectacular fashion – but still good!

World Cup Highlights: Day Six

Switzerland celebrateThe reigning European Champions and nailed on favourites Spain, humbled by the lowly Swiss. Who’d have thought? In all probability, no-one, yet that is precisely what happened on Day Six to provide us with the biggest shock of the tournament so far.

Spain didn’t play too badly either, they enjoyed much of the possession, put together some wonderful moves and were far more positive than their opponents. Yet their strike force was blunted by a well-drilled, committed Switzerland. It was a case of substance winning over style.

Spain will no doubt qualify from this group regardless but if ever there was a wake up call this was it. 67% of possession is impressive, but without a final product it’s pointless. 22 shots on goal, yes, but most of them tame or off target. 12 corners won and wasted through poor delivery.

For fans of defence this was a joy to behold as the Swiss repelled wave after wave of Spanish attacks, especially as the second half wore on and Spain tried to recover from going a goal behind.

Don’t be fooled into thinking defending was all the Swiss had to offer though. Their 52nd minute goal may have been a scrambled effort finally put in by former Manchester City striker Gelson Fernandez, but they could have gone 2-0 up in much better fashion when Derdiyok cut inside the very impressive Pique, past Puyol and flicked his shot passed Casillas, only to see it come back off the post.

The introduction of the clearly unfit Fernando Torres showed how desperate Spain were getting but even he couldn’t find a way through the Swiss defence and when the final whistle blew after five minutes of stoppage time it was the Swiss celebrating and Spain wondering how they’d lost, their World Cup plans in temporary tatters.

Spain’s problems were made worse by the fact that Chile beat Honduras 1-0 earlier in the day in Group H. It was Chile’s first win at the tournament for 48 years but they were too good for the Hondurans.

The scoreline doesn’t reflect their superiority or their ambition – Chile put in a far more skilful and committed display than many of the so-called bigger teams have done so far. The BBC described their play as “refreshing”.

Honduras, on the other hand, looked as naive as you would expect them to be, lacking in organisation. There’s no way they will get past this group stage.

The win confirms many people’s view that Chile are favourites to qualify from the group, but who will join them now is not certain at all. It’s become perhaps the most interesting group in the tournament.

The last game of the day saw hosts South Africa return to the action in Group A, taking on Uruguay. There was, sadly for the country, the tournament and the neutrals, to be no repeat of the opening game in which they gained a well earned and valuable point.

Uruguay and Diego Forlan in particular were ruthless in their efficiency. It was Forlan who scored the first from 30 yards, his shot taking a deflection off Mokoena that took the ball past the stranded Khune.

If you’ve been annoyed by the constant drone of the vuvuzelas then this was the match to watch – they were silenced when Forlan hammered home a penalty won by Suarez. As the striker cut across the six yard box he was caught by the boot of Khune, resulting in the penalty and a sending off for the unfortunate keeper.

South Africa were done and dusted and many supporters began leaving the stadium. There was still time for Uruguay to underline their superiority with a third goal in the fourth minute of stoppage time, Forlan again involved. His cross was picked up by Suarez on the far side of the box, he chipped it back in and Alvaro Pereira was on hand to bundle the ball in.

The result leaves Uruguay firm favourites to qualify top of the group, but for South Africa the chances of going through are slim. They must beat France without their first choice keeper and midfielder Dikgachoi who received his second yellow card of the tournament.

The joy of the draw against Mexico has gone and it’s a shame, as the continued involvement of Bafana Bafana in the competition woild only be a good thing. Nevertheless, this is a ruthless game and if they fail to qualify it will be because they just weren’t good enough.