MUNICH, July 4 - History and a revitalised Zinedine Zidane suggest France
will have the upper hand in Wednesday's World Cup semi-final against Portugal.
The 1998 world champions have fond memories of semi-final clashes with the
Portuguese, having met them twice at that stage in European Championships -- in
1984 and 2000.
Les Bleus won both matches after close battles and, each time, went on to win
the title.
Michel Platini, who scored a fantastic extra time winner in a 3-2 victory at
Euro'84, is no longer at the helm but France can still rely on Zidane, whose
controversial golden-goal penalty gave them a dramatic 2-1 win in 2000.
The 34-year-old Zidane, who will retire after the finals, seems to have
recaptured his brilliant best and was magnificent in France's 1-0 win over
holders Brazil in the quarter-finals.
"There's nobody who treats the ball like he does," Portugal defender Miguel
said of the France captain. "I hope he keeps a low profile."
The Euro 2000 semi-final ended in chaos and defender Abel Xavier was banned
for nine months, reduced to six, as Portugal's players went crazy after the
penalty was given for handball.
"The rivalry is enormous," Portugal striker Helder Postiga said before the
next meeting between the two rivals in Munich.
"The 2000 game has stuck in our throats a bit. The way we lost was
frustrating. We started well and thought we would win. I hope the story is
different this time."
TOP FORM
France, who have hit top form after a sluggish start to the tournament, have
not got carried away after defeating Brazil.
"I think it will be tougher against Portugal," said midfielder Franck Ribery.
"They have talented individuals like Brazil and they are better organised as a
team."
"We can see the summit but we're not up there yet," added coach Raymond
Domenech.
Portugal, who have not beaten France since 1975, reached the last four by
knocking out England on penalties on Saturday following a goalless draw.
The beaten finalists in the 2004 European Championship which they hosted
feature in the semi-finals of a World Cup for the first time since 1966, their
best previous performance.
Miguel said the return of midfielder Deco, who was suspended for the England
game, was a great boost.
"Deco's our magician," he said. "He's the player who can see a pass that
others don't see."
Probable teams:
Portugal (4-5-1):
1-Ricardo; 13-Miguel, 16-Ricardo Carvalho, 5-Fernando Meira, 14-Nuno Valente;
6-Costinha, 18-Maniche, 20-Deco, 7-Luis Figo, 17-Cristiano Ronaldo; 9-Pauleta.
Coach: Luiz Felipe Scolari
France (4-2-3-1):
16-Fabien Barthez; 19-Willy Sagnol, 15-Lilian Thuram, 5-William Gallas,
3-Eric Abidal; 4-Patrick Vieira, 6-Claude Makelele; 22-Franck Ribery,
10-Zinedine Zidane, 7-Florent Malouda; 12-Thierry Henry.
Coach: Raymond Domenech
Referee: Jorge Larrionda (Uruguay)
Linesmen: Walter Rial (Uruguay), Pablo Fandino (Uruguay)