STUTTGART - Germany coach Juergen Klinsmann returns to his home city of
Stuttgart on Saturday for the World Cup third-place match determined to finish
the campaign in style and give the fans something to celebrate.
Klinsmann, who was born in a small town near the city and made his name as a
clinical finisher at VfB Stuttgart, has every reason to be proud of returning
there to face Portugal.
The hosts, who went further than most people expected and only lost to Italy
after extra time in the semi-final, want to give the fans something to cheer in
their final appearance.
There is also the matter of clinching the golden shoe award for striker
Miroslav Klose, who tops the World Cup scoring charts with five goals so far but
is doubtful through injury.
"We definitely want to win the match. In the Olympics the bronze medal counts
for something," said goalkeeper Jens Lehmann, who may drop out of the starting
lineup to give Germany's number two Oliver Kahn a taste of the action.
Portugal coach Luiz Felipe Scolari has his own reasons for wanting to finish
the tournament with a victory.
"We have to get rid of this melancholy, we still have a target," said the
upbeat Brazilian. "Third place at the World Cup is not to be sniffed at. We'll
go on to the field with the same dedication we've shown so far."
LAME DUCK
The third-place match is often criticized as a lame duck but the hosts,
Portugal and FIFA have all put on a brave face before the game and a sell-out
crowd will ensure a vibrant atmosphere.
The fixture is notorious, though, for pitting two emotionally shattered teams
against each other when they might prefer to slink off home and bury their
sorrows quietly.
Germany, in particular, will have a big job to lift themselves after their
dramatic semi-final defeat on Tuesday, when Italy scored twice at the end of
extra time.
Portugal's dream of a first appearance in the World Cup final ended with a
controversial penalty as they lost 1-0 to France on Wednesday.
Their exit was less traumatic as they surpassed expectations by making the
last four for the first time since 1966.
FIFA defends the third-place fixture's existence at every World Cup and
spokesman Markus Siegler was clearly prepared when, inevitably, he was
questioned about it on Wednesday.
"I believe there is still a high value in this match," he said. "For the
players it matters whether they come in third or fourth."
"Especially with Germany playing in the match I think the interest will be
high. It is a prestige thing. It's about knowing where the teams finished on the
field of play."
INJURY DOUBTS
Germany are certainly taking the game very seriously and Klose will be
desperate to play since his five-goal tally is two ahead of Thierry Henry and
three in front of Luca Toni, the France and Italy strikers who are preparing for
Sunday's final.
However, the tournament's top scorer may have to miss the match with a calf
problem and Germany will also be without defender Per Mertesacker, who will have
surgery on his foot this week, and right back Arne Friedrich with a knee injury.
Portugal also have at least one player missing with defender Ricardo Carvalho
suspended and right back Miguel doubtful after limping out of Wednesday's 1-0
defeat by France.
Possible teams:
(4-4-2)
Germany - 12-Oliver Kahn; 6-Jens Nowotny, 21-Christoph Metzelder, 4-Robert
Huth, 16-Philipp Lahm; 19-Bernd Schneider, 5-Sebastian Kehl, 13-Michael Ballack,
18-Tim Borowski; 20-Lukas Podolski, 11-Miroslav Klose
Portugal (4-5-1)
1-Ricardo; 2-Paulo Ferreira, 5-Fernando Meira, 4-Ricardo Costa, 14-Nuno
Valente; 6-Costinho, 18-Maniche, 7-Luis Figo, 17-Cristiano Ronaldo, 20-Deco;
9-Pauleta
Referee: Toru Kamikawa (Japan)
Linesmen: Yoshikazu Hiroshima (Japan), Dae Young Kim (Korea)
(Additional reporting by Kevin Fylan)