The Road to the World Cup ends here

by Gareth Freeman on November 12, 2009

The Road to the World Cup ends hereIn a week’s time we will know a near com­plete list of the nations who will be com­pet­ing to lift the World Cup in South Africa.  The first legs take place on Novem­ber 14, with the sec­ond legs on the 18th.  The African nations qual­i­fi­ca­tion process takes a lit­tle longer, so I’ll be focus­ing on the Repub­lic of Ire­land Vs France, Bosnia-Herz Vs Por­tu­gal, Rus­sia Vs Slove­nia and Greece Vs Ukraine.  Before kick­ing off I will say I thought it was extremely harsh and a lit­tle under­hand of the rul­ing bod­ies to decide to seed the teams at such a late stage.  This guar­an­teed that France, Por­tu­gal and Rus­sia would not meet each other and would ther­fore stand a bet­ter chance of qual­i­fi­ca­tion.

Any­way, that lit­tle grum­ble aside I’ll start with a brief look at Ire­land and France.  The French have some great play­ers such as Thierry Henry and Karim Ben­zema but they will be with­out Franck Ribery.  They have strug­gled a bit under Ray­mond Domenech and I think it is safe to say if he doesn’t man­age to qual­ify then he will be out of a job next week.  Ire­land have some qual­ity within their ranks as well, such as Spurs striker Rob­bie Keane and Celtics Aidan McGeady.  I quite fancy Ire­land to cause an upset to be hon­est, espe­cially in the home leg.  Ire­land boss Gio­vanni Tap­at­toni has really made his mark on that team and there seems to be a great belief within the Irish camp.  It should be a crack­ing tie and def­i­nitely worth catch­ing if you can, I’ll cer­tainly be watch­ing both legs with inter­est anyway.

Bosnia had a great qual­i­fi­ca­tion cam­paign but they face a mas­sive test against the Potuguese.  One mas­sive bonus for the under­dogs is that it looks as if Por­tu­gal will be with­out Cris­tiano Ronaldo, who has an injury although he has linked up with the national side.  They are still a qual­ity team full play­ers such as Chelsea’s Deco, Sport­ing Lis­bon pair Joao Moutinho and Miguel Veloso and Simao Sabrosa of Atletico Madrid.  Bosnia have their own star in the shape of Wolf­burgs Edin Dzeko and are cer­tainly capa­ble of trou­bling Por­tu­gal, but over two legs I expect Por­tu­gal to prove just too strong.

Slove­nia have been handed a very hard task in the shape of Rus­sia.  I’ll admit I don’t know a mas­sive amount about Slove­nia, though I saw them face North­ern Ire­land a cou­ple of times in qual­i­fi­ca­tion and they look very well organ­ised and tight. They will have to hope the likes of West Brom’s Robert Koren and Rene Krhin of Inter­nazionale put in great per­for­mances and carve out open­ings against a very strong Russ­ian side.  In play­ers like Sergey Semak of Russ­ian cham­pi­ons Rubin Kazan, Zenit trio Igor Denisov, Kon­stan­tin Zyr­i­anov and Igor Semshov and Pre­mier League stars Diniar Bilyalet­di­nov of Ever­ton and Arse­nal play­maker Andrey Arshavin they have some immense tal­ent and will take some beating.

Last but not least Greece take on the Ukraine in what I would argue is, on paper, the most evenly matched tie.  The Ukraine are fairly lucky to still be involved after pip­ping Croa­tia to sec­ond spot in the last few games but that doesn’t mat­ter any­more.  The Ukraine have some tal­ent amongst their ranks such as for­mer Milan striker Andriy Shevchenko (now at Dynamo Kiev), Olexiy Gay of Shakhtar Donetsk and Bay­ern Munich’s Ana­toly Tymoschuk who are all capa­ble of per­form­ing at the high­est level.  While the Greeks have Celtic striker Gior­gos Sama­ras, Ange­los Charis­teas of Ger­man out­fit Nurem­berg and Panathi­naikos pair Kostas Kat­soura­nis and Gior­gos Karagou­nis who all have the tal­ents to trou­ble even the best defenders.

For the final eight Euro­pean nations who have a chance of com­pet­ing in South Africa next sum­mer the next week is vital, and it should pro­duce some exhil­a­rat­ing ties.

Writ­ten by Gareth Free­man, a sports writer pro­mot­ing Irish Rac­ing and rac­ing tips for today for Betfair.

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