SANTIAGO, Chile: Though Argentina carry Latin
America’s only hope of lifting the World Cup, many in the
region are balking at the prospect of their “insufferable”
peer landing the ultimate football triumph.
The football-obsessed region is a house divided ahead of
Sunday’s (today’s) showdown against Germany in Rio de
Janeiro’s Maracana stadium. While it seems Latin American
loyalty has a slight upper hand, a significant number of fans
also say they cannot stomach an “albiceleste” (white-and-
blue) victory.
“I don’t want the Argentines slobbering about how they’re
champions, that they won in Brazil, their biggest rival, and that
they have one trophy more than we have,” said Alberto
Scaglia, a 44-year-old shopkeeper in Montevideo, Uruguay, a
small nation often dwarfed by its imposing Argentine
neighbour.
“I’d be happy for South America to be in the finals, aside from
Argentina,” added Scaglia, who will be rooting for Germany.
Argentina, which has a significant population of European
extraction and in the 1930s was one of the world’s richest
countries, has a reputation for arrogance in much of
historically poorer, more racially-mixed Latin America.
“If the Argentines win they’re going to be insufferable,” said
Juan Carlos Chavez, 37, a publicist in Bogota, Colombia.
That sentiment has found an echo in Brazilian stadiums via the
chant “Latin America, except for Argentina!
“To be sure, many in Hispanic Latin America, which shares
language, history and cultural references, say they will back
Argentina, like a cousin with whom you may have differences
but remains family at the end of the day.
“They’re arrogant, they’re stuck up, they’re all of that, but
they’re Latin American,” said Elizabeth Solar, a 61 year-old
retired accountant in Santiago, Chile.
“We’re brothers, we’re Latinos, we have to support them. I was
raised that way, that’s what I was taught at school.”
Many Latin Americans relate to the often poor upbringing of
local players and are mesmerized by their ascent to global
fame.
The region tends to close ranks around them, especially when
the rival is an affluent, distant European country such as
Germany.
But many would rather have closed ranks around other
smaller, surprise Latin American teams, and there is
disappointment that it is familiar Argentina, already a two-time
World Cup winner, who got so far.
“It would have been beautiful if Colombia or the ‘Ticos’ (from
Costa Rica) had made it to the finals,” lamented Maria
Angelina Tello, 68, a housewife in Lima, Peru. She too will be
rooting for Germany on Sunday, in part because she feels
Peruvian immigrants face discrimination in Argentina.
Latin American angst about Argentina only really reaches
fever pitch in Brazil, where already devastated fans are
horrified at the thought of their archrivals hoisting a Cup they
had hoped to win on home turf.
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Sunday, 13 July 2014
‘Won’t cheer for you, Argentina,’ say some Latin Americans
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