Posts Tagged ‘Germany’

WORLD CUP ANALYSIS: Group D

Sunday, June 13th, 2010

by Philip Cramer

Group D: Germany, Ghana, Serbia, Australia

Germany is frustratingly predictable; steady, organized and efficient they always find a way to win when others like England and Holland always seem to find a way to lose.

This is a different German team that is younger and is also more cosmopolitan with sons of immigrants spread across the roster. There are only seven who played in 2006 and 13 of the 23 are 25 years or younger. Experience is critical and in defense they still have Philip Lahm, Arne Friedrich and Per Mertesacker. In Jerome Boateng and Serdar Tasci they have more than adequate defenders, both in their early 20’s who will be around for the next decade. Lahm is menacing on the attack which he does frequently while the others are all strong and tall and rarely get beaten in the air.

They might not even miss Michael Ballack in midfield thanks to the emergence of Mesut Oezil who almost single-handedly destroyed England in the Euro U-21 final last year. Oezil is one of those gifted players who comes along very often and has already shown that he can make the transition from the U-21 world. Bastian Schweinsteiger and Thomas Mueller, another emerging star will ensure a steady supply of opportunities for the forwards where Germany is weakest.

Miroslav Klose and Lukas Podolski are still around, although expect Klose to play a part time role only. The newly minted German citizen, Cacau originally from Brazil will add a flair that they have often lacked. Stefan Kiessling has been on the cusp of the national team for some time but an excellent season in which he finished second in the Bundesliga scoring earned him a trip to South Africa.

I expect Germany to advance fairly far despite their relative inexperience but the organization and style of play will win games.

Disclaimer – as an unrepentant Anglophile whose first awareness of the World Cup was England in 1966 forced me to into the ABG (anyone but Germany) camp and their totally undeserved progress to the final in 1982 secured my lifetime membership. Still nothing will stop them from marching into the second round.

I wouldn’t be so certain of forecasting their progress if it wasn’t for the absence of Michael Essien for Ghana. They don’t have the same luxury as Germany in compensating for the loss of Essien whose world class talent in midfield is at the heart of the Ghanaian team. This was evident in 2006 when Ghana were a different team in the round of 16 against Brazil when he was suspended.

Ghana still has an excellent team with many players returning from the 2006. Defenders, John Pantsil and John Mensah both play in the Premier League. Sulley Montari of Inter Milan will have to pick up the slack in midfield although his disciplinary record could be a problem. In a league game in Italy this season he got two yellows in his first two touches within three minutes of coming on as a sub.

Derek Boateng and Stephen Appiah are two other experienced midfielders that have the experience and skill to play at this level. Up front Ghana needs to be more disciplined and more patient than in ’06 when they constantly wasted opportunities with rushed shots from too far. Asimoah Gyan and Kevin Prince Boateng both have experience and we might see quite a bit of Dominic Adiyiah who has just finished his first year at AC Milan. He was chosen as the best player at the FIFA U20 World Cup last year won by Ghana scoring eight goals in seven games.

They have talent, speed and strength but can be ragged and undisciplined at times. They will probably battle it out with Serbia to see who moves on with Germany.

Serbia’s debut in the finals in 2006 saw them finish last with no points in the ultimate group of death including a 6-0 loss to Argentina at their best. Don’t be fooled by the fact that it was their debut in the finals. As part of the former Yugoslavia they have a longer soccer tradition including a couple of fourth place finishes.

They qualified with ease edging out France for the top spot giving up only 8 goals in 10 matches which reflects their uncompromising toughness associated with many of the former iron curtain countries.

At the back they have two of the toughest Premier League defenders in Nemanja Vidic of Man. Utd and Branislaw Ivanovic of Chelsea. In midfield they have Milan Jovanovic who made his debut at 26 but proved his pedigree with 5 goals in qualifying as well as making quite a few more from his attacking role down the left. He signed with Liverpool prior to the World Cup with Valencia and A.C. Milan both chasing after him as well. The defensive midfield is anchored by Dejan Stankovic who, despite a quiet season with Inter Milan is still the heart and soul of the team.

They are relatively weak up front with Marko Pantelic coming off a strong season with Ajax and Nikola Zigic of Valencia. The ability of Jovanovic and Stankovic to score goals will take some of the burden off the front two. Zigic is listed at 6 foot 8 inches, the Serbian in the Peter Crouch mould which is not necessarily a plus in my book.

Long time coach Radomir Antic has coached both Barcelona and Real Madrid and has been the Serbian coach since 2004. His experience has allowed Serbia to achieve a high level of consistency.

This leaves Australia facing an uphill task in one of the ‘groups of death’. Despite their impressive performance in Germany where they lost to Italy on a penalty in the last minute, they do not appear as strong as they were then.

They still have the ever reliable Mark Schwartzer in goal and a solid defense with Luke Wilkshire and Lucas Neill in defense. Up front they have Tin Cahill and a fit Harry Kewell who has been brilliant on occasion during his career but whether he can still play up to that standard remains to be seen.

The U.S. team beat Australia quite easily in their final warm up game a week ago and if that is any indication Australia will struggle to win any of their games.

Fearless forecast:

1 – Germany
2 – Serbia

Read more from Philip Cramer at Irritable Liberal Syndrome!

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BAFANA, BAFANA!

Thursday, June 3rd, 2010

by Philip Cramer (contributing writer & South Africa correspondent)

It’s almost upon us. The dream that was so cruelly shattered by one abstention that gave Germany the cup in 2006 is now a reality. Despite the naysayers in Europe and sadly particularly among some soccer reporters in America who said the stadiums wouldn’t be ready, that the infrastructure was totally inadequate to host the cup, that there wasn’t enough accommodation and that there was too much crime.

They were wrong. Five new world class stadiums were built and another five were upgraded. The new stadiums in Durban and Cape Town are both quite spectacular as you will see once the games start.

Bafana, Bafana (boys, boys) the South African team were also written off as almost certain to be the first host team not to make it out of the first round with good reason. The team suffered a spell where they could barely beat even the weakest teams. In Africa, the World Cup and the African Nations Cup were combined into one competition. While South Africa were guaranteed qualification for the World Cup as hosts they couldn’t even qualify as one of the 16 teams for the Nations Cup.

The team was dispirited and it showed in their performances until they fired the previous coach Joel Santana and replaced him with another Brazilian, Carlos Alberto Parreira who coached Brazil (twice, with a win in ‘94), Kuwait, Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates in previous world cups. He has assembled a South African team that is unbeaten in 11 games and should contend for a place in the second round.

Home advantage in a World Cup is enormous. Consider South Korea had a dismal record of ten losses, four draws and no wins in the finals before playing host when they made it to the semi final albeit aided by some awful refereeing. Another built in advantage will be the altitude. Johannesburg is at 5,700 feet where they face Mexico in the opening game while there other 2 games are at venues of over 4,000 feet. It’s now winter in South Africa so temperatures will be cool dropping into the 30’s at night. There will also be little or no rain except in Cape Town which is cool, rainy and windy in winter. This should help the European teams that are used to playing in cool conditions rather than the energy sapping hear often experienced at finals played in midsummer.

The passionate South African fans will be a huge ally especially with the ubiquitous vuvuzelas which Bafana love but drive foreign players insane. Some have complained they can’t hear each other on the pitch. I have no problem with that.

Parreira’s biggest achievement has been changing the way the team plays from too many individualists into a cohesive team that moves the ball in the midfield with quick sure passing. Their biggest weakness is up front where they will be without all time leading goal scorer Benni McCarthy who has had a love/hate relationship with Bafana. He arrived completely out of condition despite having just finished a Premier League season where he admittedly was injured for much of the time but he had obviously eaten one too many pies and was overweight.

Here is a breakdown of the key players:

In Goal:

Itumeleng Khune – a great young talent, acrobatic with a keen sense of finding the open man when he has the ball.

Defense:

Matthew Booth – the only white player on the team. Tall and bald, he reminds me of Peter Garrett, the lead singer from Midnight Oil. Imposing in the air and tough as nails is much loved by Bafana fans. You will hear what sounds like boos every time he touches the ball but it’s the crowd going Booooooooooooth.

Aaron Mokoena – Experienced captain who got his 100th cap recently. Tough with lots of Premier League experience but sometimes tends to give away unnecessary free kicks in vulnerable areas.

Tsepo Masilela – Solid reliable on defense and always willing to take the ball upfield down the side.

Sibosiso Gaza and Licas Thwala should also feature prominently.

Midfield:

Steven Pienaar – Everton player of the year and the engine of the team. Great distributor of the ball and a great sense of where everyone is. Creates a lot of goals but scores very few.

Siphiwe Tshabalala – Together with Pienaar, he drives the team. Hard worker, takes most of the corners and free kicks.

Teko Modise – One of the best locally based players coming off a mediocre season but has come on strong in training camp and in friendlies. Great ball skills and scores quite often except for the recent season.

Kagisho Dikgaco – plays for Fulham and is a strong defensive midfielder. Few get by him.

Macbeth Sibaya who plays for Russian champions Kazan and Surprise Moriri will also feature prominently. Thandyise Khuboni was virtually unheard of six months ago but played brilliantly in warm up games should also see some action off the bench.

Forwards:

Katlego Mphela – a rising talent who scored on a stunning free kick to tie Spain in the last minute at the Confederations Cup.

Bernard Parker – Plays for FC Twente, Dutch champions has a great nose for the goal but is sometimes erratic.

Siyabonga Nomvete.- a solid veteran who will need to be at his best. He will probably start most games on the bench.

Great Expectations:

To prepare for the World Cup, South Africa condensed their league season by two months so the locally based players have had three camps in Durban, Brazil and Germany to gel. Parreira has emphasized physical fitness and it shows in their recent performances in friendly games. Their spirits are sky high and the country has become besotted over the team. Local support should be worth at least a goal a game as long as their Achilles Heel up front doesn’t let them down. They have a tendency to take too many speculative long shots which can sometimes pay off in the thinner air at high altitude.

They have no easy games in their group and all three opponents are more than capable. They open against Mexico who does not always travel well and the problems with the Dos Santos brothers could be a distraction.

Uruguay is a useful team. The key is Diego Forlan. Close him down and Uruguay will struggle. Bafana’s last game is against France and with a bit of luck it and a couple of wins Bafana can have already secured a spot in the second round. France is a schizophrenic team that can be brilliant and can equally be awful. They needed luck and a horrible referee call to make it to the finals. They failed miserably in Korea and looked like they were going nowhere in Germany until they put it all together against Spain and then Brazil.

All in all it will be both an interesting and exciting group with the added flavor of Bafana being the home team. You will appreciate how boisterous and passionate their fans are.

Philip Cramer is a South Africa native who currently resides in California. He is the creator and voice of a must-read blog: ‘irritable liberal syndrome’.

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WORLD CUP PROFILES: Germany

Wednesday, March 24th, 2010

By Jake Glavies

After finishing third on their home soil at the 2006 World Cup, Germany is one of a handful of teams with a legitimate chance to take home the title in 2010.

Aiming for efficiency over flash, the Germans dissect the game – slicing through their opponents with ease. Finishing first in European Group 4 qualifying, Germany is headed by longtime captain Michael Ballack and feared Bayern Munich striker Miroslav Klose. Ballack is without question the leader of the German team. With 97 caps to his name, the Chelsea midfielder will be the driving force behind any German success in South Africa.

The squad has tasted its share of success in recent years, though it’s consistently fallen short of taking home the top prize. Germany has finished in the top four in its last three major competitions, as they were runners up at the 2002 World Cup in Korea and Japan, third in 2006 and second at Euro 2008 in Austria and Switzerland.

Ballack in an ‘09 qualifier – photo credit: AFP

If Joachim Loew’s team is to win in Africa, it’ll have to score. A lot. And that’s where Klose comes in. Though he has just one club goal to his name this season, Klose earned the Golden Boot Award as the top goal scorer at the 2006 World Cup when he netted five scores. He also notched five goals at the 2002 World Cup, giving him 10 for his career – leaving him six shy of overtaking Brazil’s Ronaldo as the all-time leading scorer in World Cup history. His 48 career scores put him third all-time in German history behind Joachim Streich and Gerd Muller.

The only question mark surrounding the team in the build up to the cup is just who will be the man in goal. After the retirement of Jens Lehmann, and the tragic suicide of Robert Enke in 2009, Germany will need one of its young keepers to step up and fill the spot at the back. Rene Adler is at the top of Loew’s list right now, but with just over 80 days left before kickoff, nothing is for sure. Manuel Neuer and Tim Wiese will also look to catch the coach’s eye before the squad leaves for Africa.

An easy draw means that Loew’s men will have time to get into fighting shape before facing some of the world’s best. Opening with group matches against Ghana, Australia and Serbia, Germany should cruise into the Round of 16. One of the more imposing teams in the tournament, don’t be surprised if Germany physically pounds its opponents into submission.

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TITLE RACE IN GERMANY

Friday, February 19th, 2010

By Jake Glavies

The race for this season’s Bundesliga title has become one of the tightest competitions in Europe as surprise leader Bayer Leverkusen tries to hold off powerhouse Bayern Munich. Currently tied atop the Bundesliga table with 48 points each, the two teams are in a dead heat heading into the final stretch of the season.

Bayern – winners of seven of the last 10 German league crowns – has put together nine-straight wins and has gone 11-0-4 in its last 15 matches. Stocked with world-class talent, Louis van Gaal’s team is one of the best in Europe. Led by 24-year-old forward Mario Gomez at the front, Franck Ribery in the middle and defender Daniel van Buyten at the back, the squad is rock-solid from start to finish.

With just two of its next seven matches against teams in the top five in the league, Bayern will certainly be able to extend its already impressive winning streak over the coming weeks. Though every match poses a challenge, Gaal and Co. have certainly circled April 10 on their calendars. In just under two months, Bayern will travel to BayArena to face Leverkusen in the hopes of coming home with sole possession of the league lead.

While Bayern has won nine-straight, Leverkusen has managed to stay out of the loss column the entire season – a major factor in its quest for a first Bundesliga title. Working to debunk the nickname Neverkusen, manager Jupp Heynckes boasts the league’s top scorer in Stefan Kiessling, another double digit scorer in Eren Derdiyok and even a third option in Toni Kroos. This trio has helped Leverkusen to a league-high 48 goals, where it’s tied with Bayern.

The squad’s defense is what’s kept it in title contention all season, though. Allowing a league-low 18 scores, the defensive team of Sami Hyypia, Manuel Friedrich, Michal Kadlec and Daniel Schwabb has left a number of team’s frustrated.

Whatever transpires between now and the end of the season though, Bayern and Leverkusen have added an element of suspense to this Bundesliga season that will surely get even the most casual soccer fans on the edge of their seats.

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WORLD CUP DRAW – GROUP C: USA, ENGLAND, ALGERIA, SLOVENIA

Friday, December 4th, 2009

This is great news for the USA.  Opening match for the group is June 12th – US vs England.  The word cup kicks off in Soccer City Stadium – Mexico vs South Africa June 11th.

Picture 4

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EURO 2012 SEEDINGS ANNOUNCED

Friday, November 20th, 2009

Picture 9

UEFA today announced the qualifying groups for EURO 2012. Poland and Ukraine will co-host the tournament and first-round fixtures will be announced in February, 2010.

Here is the breakdown…

Pot One: Holland, Italy, England, Croatia, Portugal, France, Spain, Germany, Russia.

Pot Two: Greece, Serbia, Czech Republic, Sweden, Switzerland, Turkey, Denmark, Slovakia, Romania.

Pot Three: Israel, Bulgaria, Finland, Norway, Republic of Ireland, Scotland, Northern Ireland, Austria, Bosnia-Herzegovina.

Pot Four: Slovenia, Latvia, Hungary, Lithuania, Belarus, Belgium, Wales, FYR Macedonia, Cyprus.

Pot Five: Montenegro, Albania, Estonia, Georgia, Moldova, Iceland, Armenia, Kazakhstan, Liechtenstein.

Pot Six: Azerbaijan, Luxembourg, Malta, Faroe Islands, Andorra, San Marino.

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IVORY COAST STILL A THREAT SANS DROGBA

Thursday, November 19th, 2009

Picture 2

Among the underdog teams headed for SA 2010, none seems to be as dangerous as the Ivory Coast. Today’s match with Germany proved that the African squad could hold their own without their national treasure, Didier Drogba, in the lineup. Talk of infighting suggested that Salomon Kalou would sit out for discplinary reasons, though he found his way onto the pitch. And even Kalou, certainly the second-highest profile player in the country, seemed to be swept up in a team-oriented display that had no real use for extravagance. They were at times a completely cohesive unit.

It’s difficult to judge the German squad so close to the loss of Robert Enke. When they play well, there is no stopping them. But it’s also not fair to make excuses for a team of their quality. They managed to pull off a draw against a formidable opponent. There is no telling which of these teams will have the bigger impact in South Africa, but it was interesting to seem them square off.

photo credit: Getty Images

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SOUTH AFRICA 2010: MEET THE COMPETITION

Monday, November 16th, 2009

Picture 39

Just to refresh everyone’s memory, here’s a list of qualified teams for South Africa 2010…

Click on Countries for official profiles.

Brazil
Chile
Paraguay
Argentina
New Zealand
USA
Mexico
Honduras
Denmark
Switzerland
Slovakia
Germany
Spain
England
Serbia
Italy
Netherlands
Korea Republic
Korea DPR
Australia
Japan
Cameroon
Nigeria
Ghana
Côte d’Ivoire

And here are those still in the running…

Republic of Ireland
France
Ukraine
Bosnia-Herzegovina
Russia
Slovenia
Greece
Portugal
Costa Rica
Uruguay
Algeria
Egypt
Saudi Arabia

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