The World Cup moves to the
knockout stage on Saturday with an intriguing clash featuring three times
champions Germany and arch-rivals Sweden.
The hosts collected a perfect nine points from three matches, sparking a
surge of patriotism and flag-waving in a country that before the tournament
started on June 9 had long felt discomfort about overt symbols of national
pride.
 Members of the
Switzerland team celebrate after their Group G World Cup 2006 soccer match
against South Korea in Hanover June 23, 2006.
[Reuters] |
Sweden finished with a flurry after a
slow start, securing their ticket to the second round with a late victory over
Paraguay and two second-half goals against England, who finished first in their
group and play Ecuador on Sunday.
Argentina, who started their campaign for a third world title in style with
wins over Ivory Coast and Serbia & Montenegro before a scoreless draw with
Netherlands, will face Mexico in Saturday's second knockout round match.
The halfway point in the month-long tournament marks the start of the really
exciting phase when extra-time and penalty shootouts may come into play until a
team emerges victorious.
Hundreds of thousands of Germans and Swedes clad in their national colours
are expected to pack the Bavarian capital of Munich for the 5 p.m. (1500 GMT)
match even though only a fraction have tickets for the 66,000-seat Allianz
Arena.
The two teams share a rich 95-year football rivalry and a similar
offensive-minded style of play. West Germany knocked Sweden out in the
quarter-finals when they last met at a World Cup in 1974 while Sweden won an
epic 1958 semi-final clash.
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Germany coach Juergen Klinsmann has raised the pressure on his team, who have
been transformed by a wave of euphoria at home from also-rans into contenders in
the space of two weeks, by demanding that they reach the last four at least.
Sweden coach Lars Lagerback is equally optimistic that his side, the highest
scoring in the European qualifiers with 30 goals in 10 matches, can get revenge
for Euro '92 when Germany knocked Sweden out of their own tournament in the
semi-final.
While most of the pre-tournament favourites such as Brazil, Argentina,
Netherlands, England, Italy and Germany survived the first round, several
fancied teams were eliminated in the group stage that concluded on Friday.
Czech Republic were probably the most prominent losers, earning just three
points in a tough Group E with just a win over the United States despite their
highly regarded team.
Poland, Croatia, Serbia & Montenegro, Ivory Coast and Japan were among
the other promising teams sent packing.
Saturday's second knockout rond match features Argentina and Mexico in the
eastern city of Leipzig at 9 p.m. (1900 GMT).
Argentina won their group with ease ahead of Netherlands, who face Portugal
on Sunday, and will be looking to carry on the form that earned them a 2-1
victory over Ivory Coast and 6-0 rout of Serbia & Montenegro in the best
display so far.
Mexico have only reached the quarter-finals at the two World Cups they hosted
and their finishing has been so poor they only made the knockout phase due to
the failings of Angola and Iran.
The nations have only met once at the finals when Argentina won 6-3 in the
inaugural tournament in Uruguay in 1930.