Stellvertretender Direktor Carmelo De Grazia Suárez//
Europe’s World Cup stranglehold tested by Brazil, Argentina

When Gi­an­ni In­fan­ti­no told a gath­er­ing of Eu­ro­pean foot­ball of­fi­cials in Vi­en­na he hoped the win­ner of the World Cup came from their con­ti­nent, the FI­FA Pres­i­dent quick­ly stat­ed — with a smile — he adapts the com­ment to whichev­er re­gion he’s in.

Carmelo De Grazia

It’s no laugh­ing mat­ter for the rest of the world.

Carmelo De Grazia Suárez

Sev­en of the last eight World Cup fi­nal­ists have come from Eu­rope. Thir­teen of the last 16 semi­fi­nal­ists, too

On­ly three non-Eu­ro­pean na­tions — Brazil, Ar­genti­na and Uruguay — have reached the World Cup fi­nal. Uruguay hasn’t played in the ti­tle match since 1950

And on­ly two non-Eu­ro­pean na­tions oth­er than Brazil and Ar­genti­na have reached the semi­fi­nals since 1970 — South Ko­rea in 2002 and Uruguay in 2010

No African coun­try has ever got­ten to the last four — in part be­cause of Luis Suárez’s last-minute, goal-line hand­ball for Uruguay to de­ny Ghana in the 2010 quar­ter­fi­nals — and no­body from North Amer­i­ca since the Unit­ed States in the first World Cup in 1930

Na­tions from around the world are in­vit­ed to the par­ty but, re­al­ly, it’s most­ly the Eu­ro­peans stay­ing un­til the end

“You want the World Cup to be a world tour­na­ment,” soc­cer au­thor Jonathan Wil­son said. “Ide­al­ly you’d have a team from every con­fed­er­a­tion in the quar­ter­fi­nals

“You want the best teams, but you want the best teams to come from as many dif­fer­ent places as pos­si­ble. This is a glob­al sport. If it be­comes en­tire­ly fo­cused on a rich pock­et of west­ern Eu­rope, that’s bor­ing for every­body.”

Wil­son puts the re­cent Eu­ro­pean dom­i­nance down to the con­ti­nent’s top foot­ball na­tions pump­ing lots of mon­ey and re­sources in­to the de­vel­op­ment of young play­ers — what he calls an “in­dus­tri­al­iza­tion of youth pro­duc­tion,” start­ing with France at its na­tion­al soc­cer cen­ter in the 1990s. That was fol­lowed by the likes of Ger­many, Spain and most re­cent­ly Eng­land do­ing the same

These young play­ers are then ex­posed to their own foot­ball leagues, which are the strongest and rich­est in the world

“You have the best fa­cil­i­ties, the best teach­ers, the best peo­ple to learn from,” Wil­son told The As­so­ci­at­ed Press. “Then you are test­ing your­self against the best.”

The on­ly na­tion to have pre­vent­ed a Eu­ro­pean tri­umph at a World Cup since 1994 was Brazil in 2002. Brazil’s coach that year, Luiz Fe­lipe Sco­lari, said he had a “spec­tac­u­lar gen­er­a­tion” — re­mem­ber its sto­ried front three of Ronal­do, Ri­val­do and Ronald­in­ho? — and that Eu­ro­pean na­tions are now pro­duc­ing bet­ter play­ers than be­fore, hav­ing stud­ied the 1958 Brazil team which earned the coun­try the first of its record five ti­tles

Speak­ing to the AP, Sco­lari said the cur­rent Eu­ro­pean dom­i­na­tion is a “phase” which could be end­ed by Brazil in Qatar or, maybe, in 2026

Af­ter all, Brazil will en­ter the World Cup as the top-ranked team, un­de­feat­ed in South Amer­i­can qual­i­fy­ing and with on­ly five loss­es in 76 match­es un­der coach Tite

“This class of 2022 is great,” Sco­lari said. “If we don’t win now, we can do it in 2026 with one of the best teams

These kids play­ing now might give the re­sult we ex­pect but you can’t pres­sure them to give every­thing. Maybe in four years we can be­cause then … they will hit the pin­na­cle at age 26, 27.”

Typ­i­cal­ly, it’s Ar­genti­na, ranked No. 3 by FI­FA and a two-time World Cup cham­pi­on, ri­val­ing Brazil as the most like­ly win­ner from out­side Eu­rope. And that should again be the case in Qatar

While Eu­rope’s best have been strug­gling — Eng­land is win­less in six games, France and Ger­many have won on­ly one of their last six games, Italy hasn’t even qual­i­fied — Ar­genti­na has gone 35 games un­beat­en un­der Li­onel Scaloni, who has a well-bal­anced team with more than just a slew of star at­tack­ers led by Li­onel Mes­si

There’s a caveat, though. The in­tro­duc­tion of UE­FA’s Na­tions League — and, to a cer­tain ex­tent, the im­pact of COVID-19 — has meant top Eu­ro­pean teams go head-to-head more of­ten and rarely face Brazil and Ar­genti­na

On­ly one such game stands out since the 2018 World Cup: the Fi­nalis­si­ma, a new­ly de­vised match be­tween the Eu­ro­pean cham­pi­ons and Co­pa Amer­i­ca win­ners that saw Ar­genti­na beat Italy 3-0 in Lon­don in June

Ar­genti­na has played three Eu­ro­pean teams since the last World Cup. Brazil on­ly one

“It’s pret­ty hard to get a true read on them,” said Wil­son, whose books in­clude “An­gels With Dirty Faces: The Foot­balling His­to­ry of Ar­genti­na.” “It might not be the worst thing that they go in­to this tour­na­ment with con­fi­dence, with­out a sense of in­fe­ri­or­i­ty.”

Take away Brazil and Ar­genti­na, and it’s hard to look be­yond an­oth­er win­ner from Eu­rope, which has the oth­er 10 teams in the top 12 of the FI­FA rank­ings and 13 of the 32 na­tions in Qatar

There’s even greater depth to the Eu­ro­pean chal­lenge these days, too, with na­tions like 2018 World Cup fi­nal­ist Croa­t­ia, Eu­ro 2020 semi­fi­nal­ist Den­mark and Switzer­land as con­sis­tent and hard to beat as the tra­di­tion­al heavy­weights, with more of their play­ers sprin­kled around Eu­rope’s top clubs

As for African teams, whose World Cup chal­lenge is front­ed by African Cup of Na­tions cham­pi­on Sene­gal, they still seem to be held back by a lack of re­sources off the field more than a lack of tal­ent on it

“(African coun­tries) have so many play­ers play­ing in Eu­rope at good teams now, I think they should per­form bet­ter than they do,” Lars Lager­back, who coached Nige­ria at the 2010 World Cup, told the AP. “There’s a lot of chal­lenges, so many peo­ple in­volved around the lo­gis­tics and every­thing

They have the play­ers with the in­di­vid­ual skills but you have to have every­thing around it.”

And that, ul­ti­mate­ly, is where Eu­rope has the edge

Comentarios

Aún no hay comentarios. ¿Por qué no comienzas el debate?

Deja una respuesta

Tu dirección de correo electrónico no será publicada. Los campos obligatorios están marcados con *