RIO DE JANEIRO: A Germany side chasing a place in
history will attempt to wreck Lionel Messi’s dream of a
World Cup coronation with Argentina on Sunday (today) as
the month-long football carnival hits a climax at the
Maracana Stadium.
The 64th game of one of the best World Cups of all time pits
Europe against South America — a duel between two football
superpowers in one of the sport’s most evocative arenas.
Germany are attempting to become the first side from Europe
to win a World Cup in the Americas, determined that a golden
generation will finally gets it reward after a string of near-
misses.
Messi, meanwhile, is seeking the triumph which will silence
forever the remaining critics who argue that the absence of a
World Cup title precludes him from a place alongside Diego
Maradona in football’s pantheon.
The momentum is firmly with Germany after their astonishing
7-1 semi-final demolition job of Brazil, through a combination
of superb attacking play and defensive incompetence.
Ominously for Argentina, Germany say they quickly put the
win firmly in the rear-view mirror.
All German eyes are now on the historic Maracana and a
chance to claim the ultimate prize after losing in either the
final or the semi-finals in their last four major tournaments.
“We enjoyed the game against Brazil, but we ticked it off after
24 hours,” said Germany striker Miroslav Klose.
That same steely determination has characterised Germany’s
road to Rio, notably in coming from behind to snatch a 2-2
draw with Ghana in Group G and outlasting an awkward
Algerian challenge in the last 16.They coolly neutralised a
dangerous-looking France 1-0 in the quarter-finals and swiftly
turned their attention to dismembering Brazil.
“As a player or a manager I have never seen a team celebrate a
big victory so quietly,” German team manager Oliver Bierhoff
said after the France win.
From top to bottom, the German spine has exuded quality.
Manuel Neuer has looked unbeatable in goal while Mats
Hummels has been a silky and solid presence in defence.
Bastian Schweinsteiger and Sami Khedira have proved a
formidable midfield duo, allowing the likes of Toni Kroos and
Mesut Ozil to flourish.
Thomas Mueller has been a deadly goalscoring threat — five
goals so far in the tournament — while the 36-year-old Klose
has chipped in with two goals, becoming the World Cup’s all-
time leading scorer in the process.
Germany’s 17 goals in the tournament — more than double
Argentina’s total — have come from eight different players, a
testament to the team ethic which pervades Joachim Loew’s
squad.
“Brazil have Neymar, Portugal have Ronaldo, Argentina have
Messi and Germany have a team,” ran one widely retweeted
summary on Twitter this week.
Ranged against Germany’s attacking arsenal are an Argentina
side led by 27-year-old Barcelona superstar Messi.
The four-time world footballer of the year came into the
tournament determined to atone for two disappointing World
Cups in 2006 and 2010.
Like Maradona 28 years ago, he has dragged his team over the
line at key moments in Brazil. He opened with an individual
goal against Bosnia, an injury-time winner to beat Iran, and
two more goals against Nigeria.
Messi’s run and pass created the extra-time winner for Angel
Di Maria against Switzerland in the last 16.
While he was largely anonymous in the semi-final win over the
Dutch, Germany will know that one slip on Sunday could
present Messi with a match-winning moment, just as it did for
Maradona in the 1986 final against the Germans.
Man-marked out of the match by Lothar Matthaus, Maradona
still created the game’s winning goal — a sublime first-time
through ball which released Jorge Burruchaga to clinch a 3-2
victory.
“Regardless of whether he scores goals or not, his influence is
decisive,” Argentina coach Alejandro Sabella said of Messi
after the quarter-finals.
“A game has many aspects, apart from goals. When you have a
player such as Messi, who never, or almost never, loses the
ball, it’s water in the desert — and not just when he scores.
“Yet for all the parallels with 1986, the last World Cup
meeting between the two nations may be more relevant —
Germany’s 4-0 romp in the 2010 quarter-finals.
Seventeen players involved in that Cape Town match featured
in this week’s semi-finals, 10 for Germany and seven for
Argentina.
But many observers have wondered whether Messi’s dip in
form last season was due to a pre-occupation with the World
Cup.
It could be that the diminutive genius has been plotting all
along to claim the crown on Sunday at the Maracana.
“If he is saving his best performance for the final,” said former
England manager Glenn Hoddle, “it will be a joy to watch.”
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Sunday, 13 July 2014
Maracana brace for showdown as German history boys prepare to wreck Messi dream
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