Asian Teams Disappoint in
World Cup 2006
Will Marquand
For those who thought Japan-Korea signalled the start of a new
new hierarchy in world football Germany 2006 will demand a rethink.
Four years ago Senegal shocked France in the opening game and
went on to the quarter-finals. Meanwhile Turkey and South Korea
found their way to the last four while Argentina and France went
home early. For all that, the final was contested by the traditional
powerhouses Germany and Brazil. This year football's old world teams
have been dismissive of their new world challengers.
There are often demands to give more spaces to teams from Asia
or Africa to make the World Cup a more global event but the results
don't back the argument up. All four Asian teams failed at the group
stages, one of five Africans made it through and just Mexico from
the four CONCAF teams squeaked out of their group only to run into
the Argentineans.
The European and South American teams have been dominant, each
qualifying three-quarters of their entrants to the final sixteen.
They weren't especially troubled on the way as even the beleaguered
French team
managed a comfortable 2-0 victory over Togo
when they had to. The Ivory Coast and South
Korea offered some spirited resistance but only after they had
fallen behind.
Each region must find their own solutions. Asia can take solace
in their relative inexperience of their teams at this level, the
progress their players have made in the past decade and the confidence
players like Park Ji-Sung and Hidetoshi Nakata have shown playing
with Europe's best clubs. Iran,
Japan and
Korea showed high standards of passing and organization that gave
them opportunities in every game they played while only the Saudis
looked poor, unable to turn their wealth into results.
But all teams from the Asian region struggled to cope with the
physicality of the other nations and they need to come up with a
system to negate more powerful opponents. The awesome levels of
energy displayed by Korea in 2002 offer one answer but it is difficult
to maintain this level over long periods.
The CONCAF region receives massive support from FIFA who are desperate
to maintain strong markets in Mexico and the USA. FIFA give three
and a half spots to CONCAF which all but guarantees qualification
for Mexico and the US and FIFA's Byzantine ranking
system rated these countries as the 4th and 5th best teams going
into the World Cup.
There's nothing wrong with FIFA supporting football in the area
but the extra spaces mean that the top teams are not challenged
in qualifying while the high rankings breed false expectations and
jealousy from other nations. Mexico
gave Argentina a
tough game but struggled through their group and team USA showed
plenty of athleticism but little of the guile required at this level.
The other teams, Costa Rica and Trinidad and Tobago added to the
party but not much to the overall quality.
Africa will have the most hope for the future and can look forward
to South
Africa 2010 with some confidence. They qualified three new teams
to the tournament this year, a good indicator of rising standards.
Ghana came
through a tough group with an all action style to become just the
fifth African team to qualify for the final stages. The absence
of Essien from their last 16 clash with Brazil
is a disappointment for neutrals everywhere.
The Ivory Coast won plenty of admiration for their attacking intent
and would surely have progressed from an easier group but some of
their defending was suicidal against the quality of Argentina and
Holland and they only turned it on after falling behind. Angola
seemed overawed and Togo wrecked their chances by sacking the manager
who saw them through to the finals, replacing him with an arrogant
European and then fighting over how the spoils should be divvied
up. The Tunisians met most expectations with their all-round dullness.
Individually Africa can produce the players and the naivety seen
in earlier tournaments is long gone. Many top African players ply
their trade across Europe but collectively the whole is less than
the sum of the parts. We still await the African team that is not
just dangerous but deadly.
The Europeans and South Americans have upped their standard this
year. The worn-out adage that their are no easy games any more has
finally been taken to heart with the top teams now more focused
on and aware of their opponents than in the past. The new soccer
nations need to match their effort and desire just to keep up but
there is hope. Oceania's one qualifier Australia have stormed the
World Cup with little respect for reputation. The verve they have
shown should be a beacon to emergent nations everywhere.
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