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Rediff.com  » Sports » World Cup Final: It's Latin pride v Germany
This article was first published 10 years ago

World Cup Final: It's Latin pride v Germany

July 13, 2014 12:29 IST

Image: Argentina fans gather on Copacabana Beach ahead of the 2014 FIFA World Cup Final match
Photographs: Michael Steele/Getty Images

Germany battle to become the first European side to win a World Cup on Latin American soil in Sunday's final against Argentina whose captain Lionel Messi is out to emulate the great Diego Maradona.

World Cup: Playmaker Messi crucial to Argentina's success

Germany are favourites after their ruthlessly efficient 7-1 demolition of hosts Brazil in the semi-final.

Yet in Messi, Argentina have one of the world's greatest current players who can turn a big game in a flash and would dearly love to bring home the World Cup for the first time since 1986 when the team was captained by Maradona.

Complete coverage of the football World Cup

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World Cup Final: It's Latin pride v Germany

Image: A Germany fan poses
Photographs: Laurence Griffiths/Getty Images

In a mortifying twist for Brazilians whose rivalry with their South American neighbours runs deep, some 100,000 Argentines have invaded Rio de Janeiro for the final.

Some have paid $10,000 for an airline and hotel package, while others drove the 2,000 kilometres from Buenos Aires.

Argentine flags, tents and cars were dotted all around the famous Copacabana and Ipanema beaches in Rio. Many climbed up to the Christ statue, draping blue-and-white colours at the bottom.

Brazilian fans have largely thrown their lot in with Germany, hoping they can stop an Argentine win that would give them bragging rights for years. Some locals, with tickets to a game where they had dreamed of seeing Brazil lift a sixth World Cup, were instead donning Germany colours for the occasion.

"We have forgiven Germany what they did to us. In fact, we admire them because they played the Brazil way," said Rio resident Bruno Perreira, outside the 74,738-capacity Maracana wearing a Germany replica top and joking with Argentina fans.

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World Cup Final: It's Latin pride v Germany

Image: Argentina fans gather on Copacabana Beach
Photographs: Michael Steele/Getty Images

It is the third World Cup final between Germany and Argentina. Argentina won 3-2 in a 1986 thriller in Mexico City, while Germany won 1-0 four years later in Rome in an awful game.

And the history does not stop there: Germany have kicked Argentina out of the last two World Cups in the quarter-finals, humiliatingly so by a 4-0 scoreline in 2010 when they cruelly exposed then coach Maradona's tactical naivety.

After an exciting tournament where attack has prevailed and goals have been flowing, the final is likely to be a more cagey affair with Germany employing numbers to annul Messi and Argentina wary of leaving the sorts of spaces that Brazil did.

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World Cup Final: It's Latin pride v Germany

Image: Argentina fans celebrate after their team won the 2014 World Cup semi-final match against the Netherlands as they watched at Copacabana beach in Rio de Janeiro
Photographs: Jorge Silva/Reuters

Both goalkeepers, Manuel Neuer of Germany and Sergio Romero of Argentina, are in the form of their lives, while Messi, on four goals, and Thomas Mueller, on five, are both chasing the "Golden Boot" award for the leading scorer.

Colombia's James Rodriguez is ahead at the moment on six goals. All three are also among the 10 players short-listed for FIFA's "Golden Ball" award to the tournament's best player.

The prizes are to be announced after Sunday's final.

A goal-laden tournament has already produce 170 goals and could beat the all-time record of 171 set in France in 1998.

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World Cup Final: It's Latin pride v Germany

Image: German fans pose with a replica of World Cup trophy
Photographs: Drawlio Joca/Getty Images

Brazil's agony at losing the semi-final so disastrously was compounded by another poor defensive display in Saturday's 3-0 defeat by the Netherlands in the third-place playoff match.

Having not lost a competitive home game since 1975, Brazil have now suffered two defeats in five days: a sad end to a tournament they entered with such confidence and high hopes.

An Argentina win on Sunday would complete their misery.