Anyhow, Nick Ames’ report is in…
… which means we’re finished here. Thanks all for your company and comments – sorry I couldn’t use them all, but please do keep them coming – and enjoy the next game!
“Sorry Daniel,” begins John Donnelly, “but did you really say if Curacao keep their composure against Ecuador you never know? The same Ecuador that finished second to Argentina in the South America qualifiers, ahead of Brazil, Uruguay and Colombia? Hmmm ... I highly doubt it…”
“You never know” is hardly an emphatic pronouncement, but it’s also worth noting that Quito is the second-highest capital city in the world; Kansas City is not. But of course, Ecuador are strong favourites.
“It would have been interesting to see how Germany would have coped without the first-half water break,” reckons Luke Jones. “They were actually reeling a little before that, and totally regrouped and regained momentum after the break. It’s crazy how we have accepted three-minute quarter breaks as just a routine part of the game. This game was played inside with climate control!”
I’m not sure what choice we’ve got but agree with all the rest. It confers an artificial, unearned advantage, and the man with ultimate responsibility, Gianni Infantino, doesn’t grasp that football doesn’t exist to make money, rather makes money – and lots of it – because it exists.
Rob Smyth is building us up to Netherlands v Japan, which might well be one of the matches of the group stages.
I say that, but at 18, Lamine Yamal, though not at his peak, is good enough right now to be worthy of noting.
And two countries, Brazil and the Netherlands, famous for fantasy attackers, have one, Vinicius Jr, between them. Across the board, we’re probably missing all-time greats at their peaks, but the depth of quality is an outrage.
I’m not sure I can remember a World Cup with this many potential winners – and aside from the countries I mentioned, look out for Morocco, USA and Cote d’Ivoire, all of whom can beat the traditional powers. There are so many brilliant players in the world these days that lots of countries have them, and the athleticism that helps shut them down is uniform.
Do Germany look like potential winners? Well, the best sides tend to improve through the tournament, and it’s rare that the best one in the first round of matches is the one running about with the trophy at the end of the final. But Musiala is good enough to win them any game and Pavlovic is also excellent, but I’d not fancy them against France, Portugal or Spain, and I also think England and Argentina could beat them.
I enjoyed that. As Peter Oh emails, “Despite the scoreline, Curaçao continue to work hard and see out the match with intensity and desire. Lovely to see” – and I agree. There was no headloss, and if they keep their composure against Ecuador, you never know.
FULL TIME: Germany 7-1 Curaçao
Germany are away, but if these group stages deliver a more affirming moment than Curacao’s equaliser, we’ll be doing very well – and we know for almost-certain that they will.
90+5 min Raum, who almost scored a while ago, clearly facies himself a World Cup goal … no, he chips over the wall, but an awkward bounce takes the ball away, and that’ll be full time.
90+3 min Germany are going for eight, mercilessly snapping into challenges and hurling men forward. They'll want this to be a statement victory and win a free-kick just outside the D, just left of centre…
90+2 min The maddest thing about that Germany 7-1 Brazil game is that Brazil came out for the second half. At 5-0, surely you just do a mass runner?
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90 min We’ll have five additional minutes.
GOAL! Germany 7-1 Curacao (Havertz 88)
Are Curacao now as good as Brazil? Goretzka slides into a hard challenge, robbing Antonisse, and when the ball squirts loose, Undav slips a perfect pass in behind for Havertz, lanking through the middle. He does really well to hold off the defender and actually movers slightly wider making his finish harder, but he waits and waits then, when the keeper feels obliged to act, wedges an expert’s finish over his dive, a finessed version of his Champions League final goal.
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88 min I don’t often feel this way about 6-1 tousings, but this has been an enjoyable contest, Curacao sticking in it for almost a half and Germany taking their goals nicely, the whole match played at decent tempo.
86 min Undav pulls left and slips a pass in behind for Raum, who shoots low, hard … and straight at Room, who saves well with his feet.
84 min I guess this is giving us decent gen on who Nagelsmann likes – the players not getting on today feel like those least likely to get on during the tournament. I was hoping to see Angelo Stiller, another I think might thrive in slower-paced games, but I guess IU’m not surprised to see Goretzka deployed instead of him.
83 min another Curacao change, Kastaneer replacing Chong, while Germany send on Anton for Kimmich.
80 min I like what I’ve seen of Cote d’Ivoire recently – they’ll be a good test for Germany and the two meet on Saturday – 9pm BST.
GOAL! Germany 6-1 Curacao (Undav 78)
Havertz crosses low from the left and though it runs between the various attackers therein, Kimmich retrieves. A poor first touch ruins his own chances of scoring, but he squares for Undav, loitering about the six-yard box, and he finishes off the defender for his seventh goal in his last seven international appearances.
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75 min “Comenencia has now scored more goals against Germany than Messi, CR7, Zlatan, Henry, Iniesta and Wayne Rooney ... combined,” says Waw Waw, “including WC, Euro, and friendlies.”
Meantime, Curacao fancy another, Margaritha trying a curler from the left of the box and only just missing the far angle.
74 min A triple change for Germany, Tah, Nmecha and Schlotterbeck taking a blow, with Rudiger, Raum and Goretzka replacing them.
72 min So, back to Michael Meagher, who says “Nagelsmann changed his shirt at half-time! Was he reading the MBM?”
It’s the only plausible conclusion to draw, but what does the writing say?
70 min …and so he is. The goal stands, and it’s now time for a water break, though it’s not especially hot. I daresay Curacao are glad of it.
69 min Was Brown offside? I think he’s on, just…
69 min But VAR wants a look…
GOAL! Germany 5-1 Curacao (Brown 68)
Wirtz punches another pass into the box and Undav’s adroit first-time flick around the corner puts Brown in … and he keeps his knee above an awkward bouncing ball to lace a fine finish into the far corner.
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68 min Curacao have the ball i the net but the naked eye tells us Leandro Bacuna was miles offside. Meanwhile, Michael Meagher emails …
67 min The other teams in this group, by the way, are Ecuador and Cote d’Ivoire, who meet four-and-a-half hours from now. If Curacao hit a similar level of performance, they may yet surprise us.
65 min Changes: Germany send on Undav for Musiala, who needs protecting, and Curacao try Margaritha for Locadia.
63 min Tah espies Sane running off the shoulder and flights a gorgeous ball that sticks him in! He takes a shot, steadies, opens his body, and punches his first World Cup goal into the far corner … except he sends it wide. You’ll go a long way before you see as clinical, emphatic a miss.
62 min Curacao attack for the first time in a while and win a free-kick down the left. Antonisse swings out, Leandro Bacuna is up … but the ball’s behind him and he can only contort to send it over.
61 min I’ve not seen loads of Brown, but I’ve heard plenty about him. As a good german player, he’s about to do what almost all of them do: leave the club that made him, Eintracht, to join Bayern. I’m not sure where that leaves Alphonso Davies, but it’d be a decent choice to have.
60 min Havertz slides into Brown, running off Floranus and into the box, but there’s a little too much on the ball and I think he’s offside anyroad up.
58 min I wonder if we might see the best of Wirtz in this environment. We know he’s got brilliant imagination and touch around the box – the problem he has is the speed of the game in England, and his relative physical and defensive weaknesses. I fear he may be a player around whom a team needs to be built, which is not something the best ones tend to do.
56 min “With public broadcaster ARD here in Germany having simply shocking commentators,” says Francis Lee, “I elected to watch their kids’ channel stream with a 12-year-old on co-comms. Far more bearable – oh, plus he said “Scheisse!” when Curacao grabbed that unlikely equaliser.”
This sounds incredible. Is it on YouTube?
54 min Germany are pushing for five, Nmecha having a shot blocked and Havertz firing wide when the ball break back to him. It’s a bit like when England beat San Marino 7-1 in 1993 – all anyone remembers is Davide Gaultieri’s goal.
52 min “Making the most of the country’s spotlight,” says Daniel Voskoboynik, “I would encourage people towards the liberatory literature of Elis Juliana, the music of Oswin Chin Behilia and Izaline Calister, the genre-universe of tambú. Smallness is not the opposite of greatness.”
Absolutely not – I’ll look forward to looking that stuff up when we’re done here but, in the meantime, feel free to send in any playlist you have.
50 min A quickly taken free-kick and Nmecha is down the side of the box, leathering a rising shot which Room beats away.
49 min “Can you offer some insight into why Herr Nagelsmann is wearing a bowling shirt in a World Cup match as gaffer?” asks Blair Stewart. “Is going to hang out with Tony Soprano and the rest of NJ crew after this?”
Ha, I was getting to this.
But as it goes, he’s actually improving – and when he turned up looking like this, his team were gubbed 5-0.
GOAL! Germany 4-1 Curacao (Musiala 47)
Jamal Musiala, the electric snake, runs down the outside of Bazoer and Kimmich feeds him in, the defender looking to have all the shooting lanes covered … or not. Because Musiala somehow finds the space to slide a low shot across Room and into the far corner when no such thing looked possible. It’s so good to see him back fit, and if he stays that way, he can be a big player in this competition.
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46 min And off we go again…
Change for Curacao: Antonisse replaces Hansen.
The great Rob Smyth is up and away over here…
I’m excited for this one, but we’ve got another 45 to go here. If Curacao score next, you never know.
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Half-time email: “There’s another reason why members of the fourth estate should be cheering on the little island this month, reckons Justin Kavanagh. “That lovely Caribbean blue Curaçao drink is the key ingredient of a very fine cocktail called a Journalist, also involving gin, dry vermouth, lemon juice and Angostura bitters. I made one last week and didn’t regret it.”
It sounds a lot more civilised than the flaming blue lamborghinis of my youth, which I’d like to regret but don’t.
Half-time reading: a piece on a shock defeat for Germany and one of the most iconic goals of the 90s.
HALF-TIME: Germany 3-1 Curacao
A terrifically entertaining half of World Cup FootballTM. Germany are clear now, but everything we saw in the first tells us the second will be a lot of fun too.
GOAL! Germany 3-1 Curacao (Havertz pen 45+5)
Havertz ambles up and pauses; Room dives left, and Havertz rolls into the right corner. But it was fun while it lasted, and we’ve got ourselves an eternal moment that’ll stay with us whatever happens from here.
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PENALTY TO GERMANY!
45+4 min Nmecha, inside the box, shapes to shoot and Bazoer buys it, sliding in, as the ball is moved one more. He doesn’t fall immediately but when he realises he’ll not be able to get his effort off, he collapses, and the ref has no option but to point to the spot.
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45+2 min Chong finds Comenencia, who doesn’t give it back, but Curacao continue probing, Hansen’s eventual shot blocked. I’m really enjoying their conviction on the counter.
45+1 min We’ll have four additional minutes.
45 min Again, Musiala beats men, and though the ball is half-cleared, Wirtz tees-up Pavlovic, whose shot is blocked by Leandro Bacuna.
44 min Another Germany corner, this time from the left, and again, Scholtterbeck is the target, leaing at the back post to head back in, winning another … which comes to nowt.
44 min This has been a hugely enjoyable half. Germany have played pretty well, but the way they play – and in particular, their rest defence, which is aggressive and high – necessarily leaves space for opponents to exploit.
42 min Musiala is so good in tight spaces – he and Kobbie Mainoo are the two I currently watch and find myself shocked they’ve come out of one with the ball, while also not being shocked at all. He bets tow on the edge, but then overhits the delicate pass required to put Havertz in.
40 min “Watching Germany v Curacao,” says Peter Rehwaldt, I can’t help but be struck by the math. If each team gets half the tickets at the stadium (yes, I know that’s not how it works, but bear with me), you could put around 1/4 to 1/3 of the whole Curacao population in the stands...”
Based on what I’ve seen of those who are there, that’d be a pretty decent party.
GOAL! Germany 2-1 Curacao (Schlotterbeck 38)
This time, Kimmich’s delivery is good and no one follows Schlotterbeck, attacking the near post from the far; he glances back the way he ran, and not only does he have his first Germany goal, he has a World Cup goal. No one can ever take that away from him, just as Comenencia will forever be known for the joy he bestowed.
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37 min The Germany players won’t be panicking, but they’ll be fearing the shame. They have, though, won a corner down the right.
34 min “Nibble nibble” returns Jeffrey Lilley. “This is what it’s all about. Yeah, it could still end 10-1 for the Germans, but they got nibbled by the minnow ... who will now have the confidence to go for a bite.”
Yup, it’s the beauty of a low-scoring game – the underdog has a chance in a way that other team sports don’t really allow. Football is quite good, in my opinion.
32 min It’s getting untidy at the back, but Curacao are doing enough, Musiala threading a delectable pass into the box for Sane, who collects, then swivels into a shot … blocked brilliantly by Fonville, the rebound eluding Havertz.
30 min Germany are back dictating, working the ball across the face of the penalty area for Pavlovic, who shoots hard and low from the edge … but Comenecia blocks. What a few minutes he’s having and, for the rest of his life, he’ll be known as the man who scored Curacao’s first World Cup goal. I’d like to describe how he’s feeling, but it’s completely beyond my comprehension; my eyeballs are sweating even thinking about it.
29 min Room fists the corner away but Gerany sustain the attack, Sane attacking Obsipo on the outside, down the right … and the tackle is perfect, risky but beautifully timed. The resultant corner comes to nothing.
28 min And the delivery is excellent, flighted towards Schlotterbeck on the far side of the box, and he’s up, the connection is decent … and Room tips over.
27 min We get going again and Germany win a free-kick down the right, not far from the by-line; Kimmich is behind it.
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26 min “I know exactly which bar and drink you’re referring to here, after having had it once you wouldn’t soon forget,” says Dave Cross. “I was so naive at that age I assumed it was a popular drink and asked for it at bars here in Toronto, obviously to impress my fellow university students with my knowledge of how to get blitheringly drunk. More than one bartender gave me a confused stare and simply said no.”
Probably for the best. After three, a couple of my mates decided it’d be a good idea to play a game entailing alternate straight punches to the jaw. That turned out not to be the case.
24 min Time for a water break.
23 min Now Locadia goes at Tah on the outside, looking like he’s gone by only to be eased into the turf. Suddenly, this is a contest!
GOOOOOAAAAAALLLL! Germany 1-1 Curacao (Comenencia 21)
Do not adjust your screen! This is actually happening! And you know what? It’s almost been coming! Again, Curacao attack, slipping a pass into the box, and when the ball breaks to Locadia, he shoots, the effort blocked, but Comenencia arrives on to it, his shot flicks off a Kimmich, the deflection taking it over Neuer’s hands, and CURACAO HAVE LEVELLED IT AGAINST GERMANY! THIS IS WHAT IT’S ALL ABOUT, AND IMAGINE THE SOUTH CARIBBEAN RIGHT ABOUT NOW!
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20 min Better from Curacao, attacking down the right with Hansen, whose cross is intercepted by Chong, leaping to take it away from the man behind. But they’ve men forward and, when the ball breaks to Leandro Bacuna, on the edge, he lashes an effort high and wide.
19 min Curacao win a free-kick in the centre-circle, but instead of getting the big men and the ball launched, they go backwards. I’m sure they’re keen to keep the score social, but they’ve got to take every opportunity to it down the other end.
17 min Curacao heads must be spinning, lungs burning. This what they wanted, and the challenge is every bit as intense as they’d have imagined. But it’s only 1-0, and the numbers Germany are committing forward might just offer them a chance on the counter.
15 min Wirtz moves infield off the left, Brown’s run down the outside helping to create the space, and he too unfurls a curler, the shot flying just wide. If Germany score in the next 15 or so, this could get messy.
14 min “Top wind-up player joins top wind-up manager – makes sense,”.says Charles Antaki on Cucurella to Madrid. “Robbie Savage next to join the club. Others checking emails.”
Tell you what, though: since he started managing, Savage’s co-commentary has become really good. You can tell he’s become obsessed with the tactical side of the game, and he’s pretty good at communicating it.
12 min Gosh, Nmecha shoots again, from the edge, but straight at Room.
11 min I keep trying to publish emails but Germany keep trying to score. How rude. This time, it’s Musiala finding Sane, who dips inside, doesn’t catch all of his shot, and the ball trickles wide of the far post – via deflection, I think, but the ref signals a goalkick and we’re only checking VAR when that happens the other way around, to avoid a goal coming from an error.
8 min Nmecha fancies this, pulling right and lashing a shot that won’t quite curl back in sufficiently. But I’m afraid Curacao are in trouble.
7 min “As an Icelander, I’m rooting for my fellow islanders” writes Kári Tulinius. “I know how thrilling it is for a country with a small population to make the World Cup. One of the beauties of international football is that it’s just eleven against eleven, and a nation of thousands can compete with a nation of millions with some hope of success. I can’t claim any connection to Curaçao, beyond having enjoyed my share of Blue Bols, but I’ll be rooting for them throughout. Come on you Blue Wave!”
I first came across Curacao at a bar in Jerusalem called the Tavern, which was famous for a drink called Polish Butterfly that contained it, grain alcohol and grenadine. It was served with a pint of water, such was the burning effect, and three was enough to bid one a good night, sleep tight.
GREAT GOAL! Germany 1-0 Curacao (Nmecha 6)
Germany looked poised to score when a ball into the box found Nmecha, whose shot was blocked by Obispo, but Nagelsman’s men come again, Nmecha playing short to Wirtz on the edge. He rolls studs over the ball and he return is perfectly weighted, glanced off the side of the foot with no-look disguise and, from 17 yards, a curling finish, punched into the far side-netting, halfway up, secures the lead.
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3 min Germany move down the left with Brown beating his man and nudging across the box … but there’s no on able to profit. So Curacao get it forward quickly and, though they can’t threaten, we can see they plan to attack when the opportunity presents itself.
1 min Gosh, the camera angle in Houston is vertiginously high, White Hart Lane and the some; we’ve been denied their away kit, but Curacao look banging in their blue and yellow.
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1 min Curacao get us under way. They’re here!
“This game is one of the reasons I love the World Cup,” says Jeffrey Lilley. An established power versus a debutante that most people don’t know much about. It’s fascinating for many reasons. It looks like a mismatch but I’ve seen Germany get nibbled, and sometimes bitten, by supposed minnows before.”
And even so, this one would be unprecedented. What I also love – and the Scotland game showed the same aspect – is what just being involved means to those for whom it’s not de rigueur. Georgia at the last Euros is another example of the same; I can’t think of many times I’ve seen that level of fervency.
A real turn-up for the books…
I was broadly fine with the water breaks because player safety has to be paramount, but already, it looks like the opportunity to show ads it what’s really going on here, and the change to the nature of the game, halting momentum and allowing for a reset, is not acceptable.
Anthem time…
Our teams are tunnelled … and here they come!
“I mean, Scotland scored four against Curaçao in a recent friendly so, you know, I don’t think Germany are in too much danger here,” begins Simon McMahon. “But we also conceded first and only really took control once the South Caribbeans had gone down to 10 so, you know, maybe it’s not a foregone conclusion. But anything other than a win for Germany would be up there with the biggest World Cup shocks of all time.”
I expect Curacao to be organised and to believe in what they’re doing – in the past, enough to beat Scotland. The shock here is that they managed to get the job done.
“The smallest country, but lots of fans in the Netherlands, writes Louise Devries. “Many of us have been in Curaçao. We know all the players as they (-1) were born here and play(ed) here. About 8 players wore the oranje shirt in youth selections. Chong was expected once to get in Oranje. Great to see him play in the WC. He is the one to watch.
Hup Blauwe Golf!”
Yes, Chong is the only player born on the island. He’s got some pace and trickery, and I guess it makes sense that he play centrally so they can get him on the ball as often as possible.
In other football news, it seems that Marc Cucurella is leaving Chelsea for Real Madrid. I’m a little surprised by that – he’s a decent player, but there are better left-backs around.
Here’s today’s Football Daily.
Email! “Tiny Curaçao has just 158,000 citizens, apparently,” says Justin Kavanagh. “So after tonight (assuming they throw on at least four subs), one in every 10,500 Curaçao’s will have played against Germany at a World Cup finals.”
It’s amazing isn’t it? With the expansion of the competition, Curaçao saw the glimmer of an opportunity, backed themselves by appointing first Guus Hiddink then Patrick Kluivert, and Advocaat finished the job. There’ll be a decent atmosphere on the island this lunchtime, I shouldn’t wonder.
Where is the game? It’s not easy to find an obvious weakness in Germany’s defensive set up, but both full-backs like to get forward and Kimmich can often be found inverting, so I’d be looking to target the space they leave. Otherwise, runs in behind the centre-backs that get them turned and facing their own goal might work, so too set-pieces.
Germany, meanwhile, will keep the ball moving, with Musiala and Wirtz looking to pick holes. I wonder if they might lack a bit of natural width, Wirtz not being a winger and Sane playing on the right, but they can always change things and look to put crosses in – they’ve got Nick Woltemade and Deniz Undav on the bench, both of whom can change things.
Stop press: Wikipedia advises me Chong’s full name is Tahith Jose Girigorio Djorkaef Chong and yes, he is named after the Bolton legend, who his dad loved at Inter.
As for Curaçao, Advocaat has resisted the urge to go with a back five – it hamstrung South Africa against Mexico, for what thats worth – to match up against Germany. Leandro Bacuna, of course, played for Villa in the Premier League, while Tahith Chong, who played for Man United a few times and is now at Sheffield United.
Manuel Neuer, meanwhile, becomes Germany’s oldest World Cup player, coming out of international retirement at the age of 40. If I was Dick Advocaat, I’d be trying to put him under pressure as soon as possible.
Looking at the Germany team, it’s pretty much as expected. I might’ve gone with Antonio Rudiger not Jonathan Tah, but there’s some serious footballing chops in that back four while, in front of them, Aleksandar Pavlovic is a potential superstar. It’s a shame Lennart Karl is injured, but Jamal Musiala will be the creative hub, while the slower pace of international football – all the more so given the temperatures – might just suit Floran Wirtz, who has plenty to prove. And up front, though Kai Havertz isn’t everyone’s idea of a centre-forward, he’s a big-game player with the feet and cunning to bring those behind him into play.
Great news: Emma Hayes is in the ITV studio. There aren’t many better pundits, and she’s currently extolling Mauricio Pochettino who, for the first time since he was at Spurs, has players who fit his high-energy, ego-free style of football. I quite fancy USA to do well; don’t be surprised if they beat more vaunted opponents.
The teams
Germany (4-2-3-1): Neuer; Kimmich, Tah, Schlotterbeck, Brown; Pavlovic, Nmecha; Sane, Musiala, Wirtz; Havertz. Subs: Baumann, Nubel, Rudiger, Anton, Goretzka, Leweling, Woltemade, Gross, Beier, Stiller, Amiri, Raum, Thiaw, Ouedraogo, Undav.
Curaçao (4-2-3-1): Room; Floranus, Bazoer, Obispo, Fonville; Comenencia, Leandro Bacuna; Hansen, Chong Juninho Bacuna; Locadia. Subs: Bodak, Doornbusch, Sambo, Gaari, van Eijma, Roemeratoe, Antonisse, Noslin, Gorre, Martha, Margaritha, Kuwas, Kastaneer, Brenet, Felida.
Referee: Jalal Jayed (Morocco)
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Preamble
There’s a concept in Jewish practice and learning that we call “lishma”; for its own sake. Roughly, it means that, in their purest expression, commandments aren’t fulfilled and texts aren’t studied for performative purposes, nor for any kind of reward or benefit, but in pursuit of truth and connection with the divine.
You can feel a segue coming, right? Well, here it is: the group stage of this World Cup features 72 matches to eliminate just 16 teams, which means those of us with no financial interest in proceedings watch them knowing the majority have little bearing on who stays and who goes, never mind who lifts the trophy at the end. Rather, we’re here for the simple beauty of football and joy of the competition.
But what beauty and what joy! Curaçao have never previously qualified for this competition and now they have, they’re its smallest ever participant, by population – less than 160,000 – and area – 171 square miles. Dick Advocaat, their manager, left in February to look after his ill daughter, but happily her condition improved so he’s back at the helm; we can be certain his team will be organised and ready.
Germany, meanwhile, have endured a miserable time at the World Cup since winning it in 2014 – in both Russia and Qatar, they were eliminated in the group stages, losing to Mexico and South Korea, then Japan. This is not what is expected from or of Turniermannschaft, the tournament team and, with a blue-chip coach now in charge, they’ll surely improve on those that pair of embarrassments.
Whether they’ve the firepower to go all the way, though, remains to be seen. At the back, they look strong and in midfield, they’ve so many options it’s ridiculous, but up front, they lack a reliable scorer – though, given the creative brilliance of what’s behind, the retired and 48-year-old Miroslav Klose would probably have fancied himself to bag a few, even if his signature somersault is probably harder to perform.
That being the case, it’s hard to see any outcome here other than a convincing Germany win. But if Curaçao can start well, things might just get tense and, if they do, our attention will shift from enjoying whatever the game throws at us to contemplating one of the biggest shocks in World Cup history. And if that happens, celebrations in the south Caribbean will give the term “lishma” an entirely new aspect.
Kick-off: 12pm local, 1pm EDT, 6pm BST, 3am (Mon) AEST
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