Stage set for exciting World Cup
Tony
Becca, Senior Sport Editor
THE
WORLD Cup of football is underway and if the opening matches are
any indication of what is to come, it should be a thrilling contest
packed with surprises and highlighted by brilliant play.
In
a fairytale performance, Senegal got the show on the road with a
stinging 1-0 upset of defending champions France, and on day two,
three-time champions Germany blasted Saudi Arabia 8-0 to register
their biggest victory margin ever in the finals.
Going
into the match as rank outsiders, Senegal, playing in their first
World Cup finals, brought back memories of Cameroon's stunning 1-0
upset over defending champions Argentina in the first match of the
1990 finals.
Was
it really an upset? Not according to coach Bruno Metsu who, after
reminding of the impact of Jamaica four years ago, the enthusiasm
that the Reggae Boyz brought to the finals in France, said that
Senegal are the new Jamaica.
"We
had this belief that there is no little team anymore," said
Metsu. "We believed that we could have won defeated France,
and we have proved that any side can beat any other."
Was
it luck? Based on the number of chances France had to score, and
the times they hit the upright and the crossbar, maybe they were
a bit lucky. As Metsu also said, however, winners always have some
luck - including France in 1998.
The
irony of the situation was that France, with only one member of
the team playing in France, with one of their players, Patrick Vieira,
born in Senegal, were beaten by a team of players who all play in
France and by a team coached by a Frenchman.
With
France going down and now under pressure to qualify for the next
round, when Germany took on Saudi Arabia, they must have been a
bit concerned.
In
a beautiful exhibition of text book football, however, they totally
dominated the opposition, and while their victory was not an upset,
the margin, their biggest since trouncing Mexico 6-0 in 1978, certainly
was surprising.
Saudi
Arabia were weak, very weak, and for a team in their third successive
appearance in the finals, that was surprising. That, however, should
not take anything away from the Germans who passed the ball well,
ran into position well, and with their heads and not their feet
doing most of the damage, rounded off some classy moves with deadly
finishing.
Miroslav
Klose knocked in a hat-trick - his third of the year, and Michael
Ballack was brilliant with his passes.
The
lasting memory of the match, however, was Bernd Schneider's free-kick
from about 20 yards.
Like
the left-foot volley, again from some 20 yards out, by Dario Rodriquez
in Uruguay's 2-1 loss to Denmark, it was a beauty.
With
one upset, one rout, some brilliant goalkeeping by Tony Sylva of
Senegal and some lovely goals after four matches, the stage is set
for an exciting World Cup
|