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Germany–Argentina, a tournament classic

 


poorna
Germany–Argentina, a tournament classicWhen the ball gets rolling on Friday at 17:00 local time at Berlin’s Olympiastadion, millions around the globe will take sides. FIFA World Cup™ meetings between Germany and Argentina are often the stuff of legend, and with a semi-final spot up for grabs on Friday, this latest clash should be no exception.
Colours for the game
Germany: White shirts, black shorts and white socks
Argentina: Blue shirts, black shorts and white socks

The story so far
After a convincing last-16 win over Sweden, there has been nothing but good vibes emanating from the German camp. The players have enjoyed spending some well-deserved time with their families and friends, while several squad members took up the offer of archery lessons for a bit of additional target practice. As for the team, all the indications are that coach Jurgen Klinsmann will start with the same 11 players who earned the hosts their place in the quarter-finals last Saturday.

As for Argentina, Jose Pekerman has also declined to confirm his starting XI ahead of the game, though he too is unlikely to make unforced changes to the side that saw off Mexico in their Round of 16 tie. Pekerman’s only doubts concern the right side of his defence and midfield. At the back, it is not yet clear whether Nicolas Burdisso, who started in the team’s first two games, will line up on Friday. If not, then either Lionel Scaloni, Fabricio Coloccini or Leandro Cufre will be ready to step in. As for midfield, Porto’s Luis Gonzalez looks likely to return on the right side, although it is conceivable he could yet lose out to the in-form Esteban Cambiasso.

Past meetings
Although this will be the teams’ fifth encounter at a FIFA World Cup, it is the last two games – the Finals of Mexico 86 and Italia 90 – that cemented the fierce rivalry between the sides. In the first of these, the inspiration for the South Americans’ 3-2 win came from one Diego Maradona, who will doubtless settle for a repeat of that scoreline as he roars his compatriots on from the stands. Four years later, the Nationalmannschaft exacted immediate revenge, when Andreas Brehme's 84th-minute penalty handed them a 1-0 victory and the world title in the decider in Rome.

Two interesting facts add even more spice to Friday’s showdown. The first is that at Italia 90, the Albiceleste reached the Final after eliminating the hosts in the previous round. The second is that since Germany’s victory over the South Americans in that year’s decider, they have not beaten their old foes once.

The duels
Not one, but two spring to mind for Friday’s showdown:
Michael Ballack v Juan Riquelme and Miroslav Klose v Hernan Crespo


Ballack and Riquelme are both intelligent midfielders with great vision and shooting skills, although the pair have their differences. The German is more direct than the Argentine playmaker, who prefers to vary the tempo of the game and cut swathes through defences with his long and short-range passing. No one has any doubt that the effectiveness of both teams’ play, and thus the outcome of the game itself, will depend a great deal on how the pair perform.
The second battle will be fought in front of goal and pits Klose, scorer of four goals already at Germany 2006, against Crespo, who has three strikes thus far. Both are leading candidates for the adidas Golden Shoe. The German sharpshooter has picked up where he left off four years ago in Korea/Japan and now has an impressive nine FIFA World Cup goals to his name. Not to be outdone, the Argentine front-runner has found the net in his last four FIFA World Cup games – his team’s final game of Korea/Japan 2002 against Sweden followed by his three appearances for the Albiceleste here in Germany: against Côte d'Ivoire, Serbia and Montenegro and Mexico (he did not play against the Netherlands). It seems almost certain that one of the lethal pair will have a say in the final outcome today.
mayur
well written i must say!

And a very fitting match it was. Argentina drew first blood and the hero of the world cup(so far) equalised for Germany late in the second half.

30 minutes of tense soccer set up the most thrilling finish! It drew down to the shootout and two men, had to guard the posts with their lives. One will become a hero, and the other wil... well save his honor.

Lehmann saved 2 shots and that put Germany in the last 4.!


brilliant match....
tidruG
Can someone tell me why Messi didn't play?
I didn't watch the whole match... I watched the penalties though... and a few minutes in the middle too...
SpellcasterDX
tidruG wrote:
Can someone tell me why Messi didn't play?
I didn't watch the whole match... I watched the penalties though... and a few minutes in the middle too...

I have no clue as to why Argentina's coach didn't put Messi in. Maybe he thought he didn't need him for this game? Maybe he thought his line-up was good enough? Confused
skynet
WEll it wasn't that game that all expect, but was a nice game.... We will see the semi final - Italy against Germany.
Ironz
yeah, argentina's coach made some major mess-ups.
Why did he put Riquelme on the bench? He's the key to argentina's offense.
and Messi and Saviola should have both played. There were some major gaps in the german defense but there was no one that could use those gaps and produce a goal.
If Messi or Saviola or Requelme were on the field in that second half, things would have defenetely changed but they weren't. Too bad.
Alienz
Agree. Argentina's coach make a huge mistake by taking out Riquelme so early. Maybe he think that he will get away with 1 - 0 win over Germany. Anyway just found out that he resigned as Argentina coach after losing to Germany.
abdu
Argentina's coach is very stupid , because he change Crespo and put
Cruz , he is shame for Argentina .
It is strong lesson for Argentina's coach in future .
Kamu8recon
I strongly agree that the argetine coach is a retard. WHAT WAS HE THINKING???? How much depth do you need? You have messi or saviola that would have change the tide of the game easily. one suprise for me was tevez though. he attacked and ran a long ways to play defense. what the coach should have done with the 1-0 lead was sub out crespo who everyone knew was lagging. he should have put tevez up top then put messi between tevez and their midfield just to maintain control on the offensive end. speaking of offense, what happened to the argetines offense at the 75 minute mark? it seemed liked they thought they had already wont the game. they were playing defense right up until the point that germany scored. i mean the argentines dominated the game up until the 70 minute. another stupid move was to take out riquelme, seriously what was he thinking???? he could have moved riquelme back as a defensive midfielder until he cought his wind. then use him on the attack with messi. all in all those substituions were the worse decisions made in this cup. argentina had the game, they just gave up in the second half and bad decisions made by their coach sends them home.
Kamu8recon
poorna wrote:
Germany–Argentina, a tournament classicWhen the ball gets rolling on Friday at 17:00 local time at Berlin’s Olympiastadion, millions around the globe will take sides. FIFA World Cup™ meetings between Germany and Argentina are often the stuff of legend, and with a semi-final spot up for grabs on Friday, this latest clash should be no exception.
Colours for the game
Germany: White shirts, black shorts and white socks
Argentina: Blue shirts, black shorts and white socks

The story so far
After a convincing last-16 win over Sweden, there has been nothing but good vibes emanating from the German camp. The players have enjoyed spending some well-deserved time with their families and friends, while several squad members took up the offer of archery lessons for a bit of additional target practice. As for the team, all the indications are that coach Jurgen Klinsmann will start with the same 11 players who earned the hosts their place in the quarter-finals last Saturday.

As for Argentina, Jose Pekerman has also declined to confirm his starting XI ahead of the game, though he too is unlikely to make unforced changes to the side that saw off Mexico in their Round of 16 tie. Pekerman’s only doubts concern the right side of his defence and midfield. At the back, it is not yet clear whether Nicolas Burdisso, who started in the team’s first two games, will line up on Friday. If not, then either Lionel Scaloni, Fabricio Coloccini or Leandro Cufre will be ready to step in. As for midfield, Porto’s Luis Gonzalez looks likely to return on the right side, although it is conceivable he could yet lose out to the in-form Esteban Cambiasso.

Past meetings
Although this will be the teams’ fifth encounter at a FIFA World Cup, it is the last two games – the Finals of Mexico 86 and Italia 90 – that cemented the fierce rivalry between the sides. In the first of these, the inspiration for the South Americans’ 3-2 win came from one Diego Maradona, who will doubtless settle for a repeat of that scoreline as he roars his compatriots on from the stands. Four years later, the Nationalmannschaft exacted immediate revenge, when Andreas Brehme's 84th-minute penalty handed them a 1-0 victory and the world title in the decider in Rome.

Two interesting facts add even more spice to Friday’s showdown. The first is that at Italia 90, the Albiceleste reached the Final after eliminating the hosts in the previous round. The second is that since Germany’s victory over the South Americans in that year’s decider, they have not beaten their old foes once.

The duels
Not one, but two spring to mind for Friday’s showdown:
Michael Ballack v Juan Riquelme and Miroslav Klose v Hernan Crespo


Ballack and Riquelme are both intelligent midfielders with great vision and shooting skills, although the pair have their differences. The German is more direct than the Argentine playmaker, who prefers to vary the tempo of the game and cut swathes through defences with his long and short-range passing. No one has any doubt that the effectiveness of both teams’ play, and thus the outcome of the game itself, will depend a great deal on how the pair perform.
The second battle will be fought in front of goal and pits Klose, scorer of four goals already at Germany 2006, against Crespo, who has three strikes thus far. Both are leading candidates for the adidas Golden Shoe. The German sharpshooter has picked up where he left off four years ago in Korea/Japan and now has an impressive nine FIFA World Cup goals to his name. Not to be outdone, the Argentine front-runner has found the net in his last four FIFA World Cup games – his team’s final game of Korea/Japan 2002 against Sweden followed by his three appearances for the Albiceleste here in Germany: against Côte d'Ivoire, Serbia and Montenegro and Mexico (he did not play against the Netherlands). It seems almost certain that one of the lethal pair will have a say in the final outcome today.


So what website did you steal this article from?
tidruG
Kamu8recon wrote:
So what website did you steal this article from?

Believe it or not, I ran a few of those sentences through Google, but I couldn't get a site... I'm being led to believe that this guy probably wrote this himself... Shocked
Kamu8recon
tidruG wrote:
Kamu8recon wrote:
So what website did you steal this article from?

Believe it or not, I ran a few of those sentences through Google, but I couldn't get a site... I'm being led to believe that this guy probably wrote this himself... Shocked

that would be pretty crazy, unless he's a writer. well i guess we will find out when he writes back. lol. maybe he took it off msn?
poorna
Source of "Germany–Argentina, a tournament classicWhen " news : is fifaworldcup.yahoo.com
I'm sorry . argetine loose in penalty shoots. Crying or Very sad Crying or Very sad
houyin
Actually, Argentina earn a penalthy shoot in the 90 minutes game.
The refree didn't give them but booked the argentina player.

So, I think they should not lose their match.

Some more the first choice keeper injured.

This is the reason why they will lose in the penalthy shoot-out.
But the second choice keeper did well too.
cheh
argentina totally deserved to win this game nut they didn't. like in most matches on this WC! Evil or Very Mad
that hotshot ballack almost crippled the argentinas goalkeeper and the second unwarmed keeper had to fill his place. and because of the lousy goalkeeper they received the tying goal plus he didn't block any of the penalty shots.
oh and ballack of course didn't even get anything for that tackle.
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