UEFA World Cupdate, 10 October
11 October 2009
Rather a dull day, actually. What looked set to happen did with few diversions.
In other qualifier news, Bahrain tied New Zealand at home. Any draw at the second match will favor the Bahrainis as long as it isn’t scoreless. New Zealand should be worried about this. (Though I suppose New Zealand should be more worried about not being good.)
WON
Denmark 1-0 Sweden (Group 1)
Portugal 3-0 Hungary (1)
Switzerland 3-0 Luxembourg (2)
Israel 3-1 Moldova (2)
Greece 5-2 Latvia (2)
Czech Republic 2-0 Poland (3)
Slovenia 2-0 Slovakia (3)
Finland 2-1 Wales (4)
Germany 1-0 Russia (4)
Azerbaijan 4-1 Liechtenstein (4)
Spain 2-1 Armenia (5)
Bosnia and Herzegovina 2-0 Estonia (5)
Belgium 2-0 Turkey (5)
Belarus 4-0 Kazakhstan (6)
Ukraine 1-0 England (6)
Austria 1-0 Lithuania (7)
Serbia 5-0 Romania (7)
France 5-0 Faroe Islands (7)
Cyprus 4-1 Bulgaria (8 – and the ouch of the day)
Montenegro 2-1 Georgia (8)
DREW
Irish Republic 2-2 Italy
QUALIFIED
Denmark
Germany
Serbia
Italy
GUARANTEED PLAYOFF BERTHS
Russia
Bosnia and Herzegovina
France
Republic of Ireland
WHO’S UP, WHO’S DOWN
Portugal 3rd to 2nd; Sweden falls (1)
Israel 4th to 3rd; Latvia falls (2)
Czech Republic 4th to 3rd; Northern Ireland falls (3)
Azerbaijan 6th to 5th; Liechtenstein falls (4)
Ukraine 3rd to 2nd; Croatia falls (6)

Sean St Ledger, the bipolar anima of the Irish team
Of course the sole draw was also one of the most decisive matches. Ireland were on fine form and Italy, though not up to their 2006 standard, were exciting nonetheless. But Italy was also standoffish, so in that sense the match was a showcase for the best and worst of the Irish team: the Italians seemed to be merely “dropping by”. The best was the late header by Sean St Ledger – his first for Ireland – off a free kick by Stephen Hunt; the worst was when, in the ninetieth minute, an Italian push failed to be picked up by a surely-shellshocked St Ledger and effortlessly sent a Gilardino strike past the hapless Shay Given to tie it. (Credit where due: itself a beautiful goal.) Perhaps the problem is that Ireland doesn’t yet know how to win? It has been awhile.
The game was probably irrelevant – both Ireland and Italy will win their final match which would have left Italy ahead anyway and Ireland got clear of 3rd place Bulgaria regardless – but I must admit it struck some slice of Celtic pride buried deep inside me to see the win slip away. Hopefully Ireland, as well as they may have done, will be a bit more put together for the playoff rounds.
WHAT THE FUCK?! MOMENT
I could subtitle this section “OPPROBRIUM.” It goes out to the entire English team – working together. They decided to be asleep at the wheel against Ukraine, which handed that side a desperately needed win whichwill see them through to the playoffs at the expense of Croatia. No disrespect to Ukraine, but they should not have won if England played at full speed (just as they didn’t before and neither did Croatia). They didn’t.

Cheering for England - fresco in oils
Perhaps this was further revenge for the Croats’ sending off of England in 2008; and if it is, it’s shameful. But I don’t think so. I think England did what they always do – got just enough to do the job and decided to coast the rest of the way through. The Spanish haven’t done this. The Dutch didn’t. Neither did the Germans. But that’s the difference, isn’t it? They play every single game while the little princesses on the England squad don’t want to take the risks required to win lest they get hurt. Because of their diffidence a weaker team will get through. The Greeks killed Socrates for less.
Perhaps a coach from another football can sum it up better.
WINNERS
Portugal – Only towards the end, faced with the abyss, did they find it. Their 3-0 trouncing of Hungary was exactly what they needed to get ahead. Now only a sure thing against Malta stands between them and a certain playoff berth – though Denmark must be given the honorable mention for beating Sweden, which benefits Portugal at least as much as it does them.
Slovenia – They beat the Slovaks. They beat them handily. This was quite unexpected. When the Slovenes first made my giney tingle shortly before the 12 August mini-qualifiers they were fifth place in the group and were checkered at best, and it was mostly dumb instinct and mathematics that suggested I favor them. But the thought that they could crawl up 5 places to the very top was unheard of. It is now a possibility; see below.
Ukraine – They beat England. I wrote in August that this would be a “shock of epic proportions.” And how. It was mostly ignored in the press, partly because the England-Ukraine game was streamed online only via a shoddy connection in a first for useless technology and partly because England already made it. But that shouldn’t take away from Ukraine’s accomplishment despite my above tirade. They played well and bought themselves a playoff birth.
Cyprus – I know it doesn’t matter, but they badly battered Bulgaria (alliterative win), which is nominally a far superior team. I’m a little sorry they weren’t paired in a group with Turkey, considering what they appear to be capable of. But that’s probably my sick way of seeking vengeance for Turkey’s own bust-out.
LOSERS
Sweden – Don’t confuse yourselves, my erstwhile Scandinavian countrymen: you’re done. (And it didn’t stop me from quietly flailing for Denmark – personal loyalty before genetic, I suppose, though thank God my grandfather is dead.) Even if Sweden won Denmark would have got the better of a tie, which would have shut the door to Portugal for good. Perhaps I should have pulled for the Swedes after all. But this seems unsporting.
Either way Sweden’s play was not worthy of them. The Danes flagged at the end and Sweden’s attempt at exploitation were two goals marred by offsides. Even then they could have meekly held the line for the last ten minutes and taken their chances with Albania and a tie with Portugal on points. They did not. Their World Cup ends here for it. The stain at Parken is lifted.
Norway – The vanquishers of Scotland will almost certainly have nothing to show for it. Barring some extreme fluke they will be the weakest of the 2nd place finishers and so excluded from the second round. Unfair perhaps, but they were in a group with one very strong team and three relatively weak ones. I’ve heard (though I can find no evidence) some griping about how this went down in the first round; I think should this occur again (which the addition of a Kosovar team might prevent) they ought to exclude from the final group one of the Pot A “best” teams and instead include two “E” teams. None of the second place runners had a chance against a Dutch side like that. They just sucked all the air out of the room and lacked the politeness to throw one at the last minute. Eh, England? Eh?

There's always 201...mumble
Everybody else – For fully half the teams the qualifiers are done, though almost all still play on Wednesday. When you consider teams that aren’t technically “out” but have no real shot that number shoots up to include almost everybody besides those whose berths are already secure. End of the line. Have your tickets ready.
WHAT WILL MATTER WEDNESDAY
Despite the large number of games to be played on the 14th, almost none will be of any significance. Here are the few which will:
Group 2: It is not impossible that Greece tie or even lose to Luxembourg. They’ve won only a single game – against group leader Switzerland, and drawn two to last-place Moldova. It is also not impossible that Israel defeat leaders Switzerland. If they did they’d sneak past the Greeks by either a point or on the tiebreaker. I am most certainly not holding my breath, but keep your eye peeled on them – especially Greece-Luxembourg. If Greece struggles, get your slide rule.
Group 3: Fascinating to the last. Slovakia is holding Slovenia by a mere two points with one game left in a group where everyone has fucked someone else over at least once. The Czechs are a close third but are ultimately irrelevant – they needed Slovakia to win today.
Slovenia are certain to win their final match against San Marino; the crucial game (indeed the only game) will be Slovakia’s. Despite the numbers their loss today has put Slovakia on the back foot; assuming Slovenia’s already won (and they have) Slovakia will have to beat Poland. A draw will drop them to second; right now they’re even on goal difference but the Slovenes will pound San Marino to run up the numbers. Though Slovakia’s final match is away, the location in Poland is relatively close to Slovakia, lending a less hostile atmosphere than they could otherwise expect, and their away record is 3-1. But Poland are still a threat.
Whichever team comes in second will nevertheless be a distinct underdog going into the playoffs, especially with this newfound extensively ridiculous seeding system – out of spite I’ll call it the French system – so first place is quite the plum. I stand by my original rankings; Slovakia have one last victory in them. Either way we will see either a fourth- or fifth-seeded team gain an automatic qualification. That’s something special.
ALMOST EVERYPLACE ELSE
As an added bonus! (Except Africa. Probably racist but I haven’t even begun to pay attention to it. I blame my parents. Actually, fuck it. On no basis at all, Ghana, Cote d’Ivoire and South Africa will be joined by… uh… Algeria, Nigeria and Cameroon. Special attention to Algeria-Egypt (14 November) and Nigeria-Mozambique.
In South America you want to watch Argentina-Uruguay and, perhaps far below that, refresh the page with Chile-Ecuador. This(ese) will be the decisive game(s) there. (I like Uruguay for a narrow win and the final automatic spot; Argentina will settle for the playoff.)
In North America Costa Rica will play the US and a win there will get them the third spot. If they don’t get it Honduras can clinch with a win over El Salvador; I think there’s even odds on a tie between the two favoring Costa Rica, with Honduras playing off (and falling to) Argentina in November. That’s six months for Argentina to sack Maradona and get a real coach. It really is too bad. Hand of God; head of Dog.
—
After Wednesday’s (very truncated) recap I’ll mention the playoffs, though we won’t know much about those until the seeding (yes, they’re seeding, the bastards) on the 19th.
UEFA World Cup recap, 9 September
9 September 2009
Same system as before. Honorable non-European mention goes to the Bahrain-Saudi Arabia playoff in Riyadh, where two goals in stoppage time – including a remarkable Bahraini equalizer at 90+4! – saw the former go through on the away goals rule to face New Zealand in a two-game playoff.
Not many rank changes today, but lots of new math.
WON
Sweden 1-0 Malta (Grp 1)
Portugal 1-0 Hungary (1)
Israel 7-0 Luxembourg (2 – and the ouch of the day)
Czech Republic 7-0 San Marino (3)
Slovakia 2-0 Northern Ireland (3)
Slovenia 3-0 Poland (3)
Germany 4-0 Azerbaijan (4)
Russia 3-1 Wales (4)
Armenia 2-1 Belgium (5)
Spain 3-0 Estonia (5)
Kazakhstan 3-1 Andorra (6)
England 5-1 Croatia (6)
Faroe Islands 2-1 Lithuania (7)
Italy 2-0 Bulgaria (8)
Netherlands 1-0 Scotland (9)
Norway 2-1 Macedonia (9)
DREW
Denmark 1-1 Albania (1)
Latvia 2-2 Switzerland (2)
Moldova 1-1 Greece (2)
Liechtenstein 1-1 Finland (4)
Bosnia and Herzegovina 1-1 Turkey (5)
Belarus 0-0 Ukraine (6)
Romania 1-1 Austria (7)
France 1-1 Serbia (7)
Montenegro 1-1 Cyprus (9)
QUALIFIED (in addition to Netherlands, which was already placed
England
Spain
WHO’S UP, WHO’S DOWN
Hungary 2nd to 4th; Sweden and Portugal up (Grp 1)
Slovenia 4th to 2nd and; Northern Ireland falls (2)
Poland 3rd to 5th; Czech Republic up (2)
Norway 3rd to 2nd; Scotland falls – final (9)
OH SHIT!
Les Bleus ache for the recognition their international stature warrants, and for the second day in a row they get it. After earning a tie against Romania via an own goal (perhaps against is the wrong word?), France topped it yet again with the exceedingly rare feat of having their starting goaltender, Hugo Lloris, sent off for bringing down Serbia’s Nenad Milijaš in the box. The latter converted the resulting penalty shot into Serbia’s lone goal. I think maybe France was jealous of Denmark’s “What the fuck?!” moment last week. This week France earns both.
Credit where it’s due, at least: French substitute Steve Mandanda coped admirably.
PULP FICTION MOMENT

And to think the Serbs will qualify outright
“And I will strike down upon thee with great vengeance and furious anger those who attempt to poison and destroy my brothers. And you will know my name is The Lord when I lay my vengeance upon you.” Ezekiel 25:17/Samuel L.
The British press apparently decided that this match was to be the answer to Croatia’s defeat of England in 2008 that saw them out of the European Cup qualifiers. England apparently saw it that way too, despite a 4-1 victory at their last meeting. England proceeded to thrash the Croatian side – no slouches they – 5 to 1. Even Croatia’s sole reply was promptly answered by Wayne Rooney. That hadda hurt.
WINNERS
Slovakia and Slovenia – My two group 3 picks played exactly as I’d expected, if not hoped. (I’m obligated, and not unhappily, towards the faltering Northern Irish side.) Slovakia took the Orangemen 2-0, and Slovenia put in an impressive 3-0 against Poland.
Slovenia is now the only team that can overtake Slovakia, who are guaranteed at least a playoff spot. This would require two Slovenian wins – including against the Slovaks – and for the Slovaks to lose against Poland. I don’t think it likely; but Slovenia should make it into the second round and if they stay on form I think they’ll be surprise contenders.
Serbia – France’s foibles aside, Serbia performed admirably today. That performance guarantees that they’ll not merely qualify but, barring a disaster, will finish at the top of the group. This has to be attributed to their own skill before anything else.
Faroe Islands – I have to give the plucky Faroese props for throwing down the Lithuanians. Their inability to win seems not to have dimmed their enthusiasm. They get a tip of the hat.
Honorable mention to Scotland. They played their best game of the tournament tonight. Alas that they had not done against Norway, which turned out to be the group’s decisive game. Ironically Norway is as likely as not to be cut from the top 8 to go forward, so their effort will be for naught.
LOSERS
France – Look. Thierry Henry is not a team. He can’t score all your goals and he can’t do all your running. Not even with little Franck Ribéry running around helping him.
Bottom line, France got lucky in having a weak group. That is the only reason their dreams won’t end in October.
Sweden – What was their performance against the Maltese? It should not have taken them 80 minutes for a single goal against this side. It doesn’t bode well if they hope to hold their weak second place, much less catch up to the Danes.
Greece – A tie against Moldova? Give me strength. Latvia’s draw against Switzerland was relatively more important and now they’re nipping at Pheidippides‘ heels. Indeed I think I was too quick to disregard them, or at least too ready to give Greece credit. They’re now even money for second place.
Ukraine – Croatia’s drubbing should have been solid gold for them, since it would vault Ukraine ahead in any tie-breaking situation. But they drew. To Belarus. The cultural and historical impact alone makes me wince.
Turkey – They didn’t need a tie against Bosnia-Herzegovina. They needed the win. They didn’t get it. Now only an improbable Bosnia loss to Estonia will see them in with a chance. When your survival is completely contingent upon another team’s performance, something’s gone badly awry. End of the line.
Dishonorable mention to Denmark, who tied Albania, which can only be rated a failure. They can afford it, and everybody else in the group appears to have done the same, but now is not the time to let up. Sweden, Hungary and Portugal are all still contenders.
It’s quiet until October. We’ll see what we see.
World Cupdate: UEFA Groups 8 & 9
17 August 2009
Previous: Group 1, Group 2, Group 3, Group 4, Group 5, Groups 6 & 7
Group 8: A Papist Potpourri
Participants: Italy, Bulgaria, Irish Republic, Cyprus, Georgia, Montenegro
A pretty weak group overall has Italy in the lead with the Irish visible in their rearview mirror. Second-seeded Bulgaria has clearly been sold above its market value despite holding Italy to a 0-0 draw. (10 of the 19 matches in this group so far have been draws. Bits of them are sprinkled fragrantly all over the group. They are sickly-sweet.)
Despite the frustrating number of draws and the obtuse grid of victories and losses, it’s pretty clear that the field is the Irish, the Italians and everybody else. Everybody else has no chance of breaking out – none of the teams are that bad, but none are good enough to make a mark. This creatres a mouth-watering opening for the Irish team, who have only been to the World Cup three times in 80 years of competition – all three since 1990. They seem, haltingly, to be seizing this advantage.
The closeness of the top two is belied by the fact that the Irish have played an additional game (a draw), and the Italians have only taken a draw each to the Irish and Bulgarians. The Irish have those plus additional draws to Montenegro and Bulgaria again. Italy can expect to walk away with (relatively) easy wins from Georgia and Cyprus while I can make no such assurances about the Irish team; even draws against Bulgaria and Ireland a second time would give the Italians 22 points, which would get them over the top with a little room to spare. The Irish would meanwhile require three straight wins to hit 22, and even then the Italians would come out ahead if they won their other games. I don’t think it particularly likely that anyone will win any number of games straight, and I would definitely predict that whoever clears this group will qualify with fewest points in UEFA.
But neither of the leaders are likely to lose either. This is bad for Ireland, as they need a major Italian stumble given the math they’re facing to hope to edge them out for the top spot. I don’t think they’re going to get it, and it’s actually much more likely that the Irish trip and fall. They’ll need their vaunted luck if they want to change the dynamics of the group this late in the qualifiers.
Prediction: Italy to qualify at the top. Ireland to come in a fairly weak second. The last thing the coach for Bulgaria will draw is probably a pistol.
Group 9: Can anyone untie the Gordian knot?
Participants: The Netherlands, Scotland, Norway, Macedonia, Iceland
This group was going to be fairly straightforward until today. For some reason when I first compiled all this I checked back, saw Scotland’s game against Norway, and said to myself, “Wait awhile.” Perhaps it was bad luck, but the wait rewarded me with the sight of the Tartan Army being violently thrown back at the gates of second place by an out-of-nowhere Norway. The gory details are here, and to them there’s little to add.
It’s all about second place now. It is not possible for the Netherlands to come in below first place, and even if it were they’ve stormed to victory in the entire group. That would have made Scotland’s 7 points look pretty good, even compared with Macedonia. In a group where each team plays only eight games, and is guaranteed to lose two of them to the leader, a relatively low score is necessary to break through. Anything above 12 points – four wins – runs away with it.
Before this afternoon Scotland was in second place, separated by Macedonia based on the goal differential. Going down to Norway 4-0 has blown the group open. The Scots now trail Macedonia, who move up into second place; Norway has moved up into fourth, one point behind both, relegating Iceland and their four points to the bottom. (Iceland has only one game left to play and is now out of contention, though they still have claws.) Despite the positions, of the three teams remaining in the battle for second Scotland is now in the most grave danger.
Scotland faces the firewall: they’ve only one game left to play. Their match against the Netherlands is really a foregone conclusion, especially if their play has even a shadow of what took place this evening in Oslo. (A win there would not only erase the stain of their loss to Norway but would probably be the most dramatic upset of the qualifiers.) The Scots have got lucky in that their match against the Dutch side comes the very last, so they aren’t certain to suffer the morale shock of two defeats in a row leading into it.
The match against Macedonia is now must-win for the Scots in any scenario. I don’t see any way out of they falter here. Not only do they need a win, they need a blow out, to make up for the four unanswered goals Norway took out of them today. A Norwegian win against them might help, since it doesn’t matter where the goals allowed come from; but if Norway wins against the Macedons then Scotland needs Norway to lose to no-hope Iceland. A draw will tie them at 10 points and the Norwegians would get the better of it.
Put another way, Scotland’s course is fucking hard. It’s also reliant on a confluence of events which taken together are not likely. (Though an Icelandic victory is not as unlikely as it might seem based on the last meeting with their Viking ancestors, a 2-2 draw, and the Icelanders aren’t as bad as their place would suggest.)
The Macedonians need merely take a page from the book of their famed ancestor: cut through the bullshit and win. (The gods would approve.) A win and a draw in their last two against Scotland and Norway will clinch it (in either order). A win and a loss puts them into a solid position, though if they have to choose they’re prefer to beat Norway: They’ll probably get the better of any tie in the final rankings with the Scots, while a Norwegian win again both Iceland and Macedonia would see them sail through. (A win and a tie would see them go through on goal differential.)
Therein lies the beauty of what Norway bought themselves today. It’s not just points: it’s outs. Before today they needed to beat Scotland and nothing else would do. Now they’ve got options, though a loss at any point will continue to doom them. (As opposed to the Macedonians who can maybe kinda afford one.)
Prediction: Obviously the Netherlands qualifies. Until today I’d have favored the Scots to beat Norway and go forward. But this is why I waited. The Scots are not out but they’re being handed their hats. My second place pick is a weak Macedonia by the slightest of edges. This one’s 52-48.
World Cupdate: UEFA Groups 6 & 7
15 August 2009
Previous: Group 1, Group 2, Group 3, Group 4, Group 5
Group 6: England prevails
Participants: Croatia, England, Ukraine, Belarus, Kazakhstan, Andorra
In retrospect it seems rather comical that Croatia was seeded above England, but this just goes to show you the crisis that the English team has suffered the past several years – and the extent to which they are putting it behind them. Their Italian coach, Capello, appears to be doing something right in a big way. (Though there’s perhaps some pain in admitting it.) In any event England has decided that winning might not feel so bad, and win they have. They’re wiping the floor with everybody and have shown no sign of slowing.
Second place is a real dogfight between Croatia and Ukraine. Everybody else is in the dust – indeed thus far the bottom three places have defeated only those teams beneath them. So any game by the top three against the bottom three can be safely judged a pass. This makes second place all the more difficult, as Croatia and Ukraine have already played each other twice – tying both times. This means that both teams have four games remaining, one of which is a near-certain loss and the other three certain wins.
If this remains the case, 2nd place will go to whichever team can run up the scores against weak sides like Andorra and minimize goals allowed. Obviously should either beat England it would be a shock of epic proportions which would guarantee 2nd place – but still leave them far behind the Queen’s merry men. Croatia has to be given the edge on the strength of their more accomplished and broadly-capable team: all but one of Ukraine’s 9 goals have come from just two players. That’s not a team and it’s vulnerable to injury or penalties. If it’s about running up the goal differentials, Croatia provided a convincing shutout to Kazakhstan. Ukraine has not.
Prediction: England is certain to qualify at the top of the group. Croatia will take the second spot but it will be a win based on goal differentials, as both they and Ukraine will take three of their last four games. A loss by either against a team besides England would make their position irretrievable.
Group 7: La France – Aucune
Participants: France, Romania, Serbia, Lithuania, Austria, Faroe Islands
Something strange and awful is happening in this group. I’m not quite sure what it is yet.
Group leaders Serbia has thus far beat everybody except France. You would think this would put France in a dominant position, save the fact that their first game was an embarassing 3-1 loss to Austria (who couldn’t even nail down the little Faroese). They’ve not done much better subsequently; they tied Romania and in their last game beat the Faroese by a paltry 1-0. The Serbians, besides their respectable loss to France, have been free of mistakes, which is why they have a fairly substantial lead. The remaining teams have had spotty records against everybody else – there’s no clear hierarchy.
Now perhaps it’s clear why I say there’s something wrong with this group.
Serbia is clearly now in a dominant position; but this is the weirdo group, where Austria draws the Faroe Islands but beats France but loses to Lithuania. Can I honestly say, as I did of England and Spain, that Serbia will win every game they have left, including or excluding France? Not here.
Make no mistake that France is clinging to second place; their victory over the Faroes was supposed to be a home run. Instead they turned in another weak, low-scoring victory. This should have been a blowout. Perhaps the Faroese are a surprisingly robust small team – I had to remove a fairly long diatribe against them because of their stubborn refusal to totally suck. But the French must also be found wanting.
Then again you’d have a harder case still to make that Austria, Lithuania or Romania are going to be any real threat down the line. France’s stumbles don’t spell doom for a team as seasoned and powerful as they, even if they have fallen far from their 2006 performance and the retirement of Zidane; and Serbia have played tight and forceful and smart. It is more a two-horse race than it first looks.
If the Serbians lose only to France in their last three games – because in a group like this why wouldn’t they? – the Frenchmen will need a clean sweep to snatch first place. A single draw will relegate them to second. A Serbian loss to somebody else can hardly be ruled out, and that would make France’s path correspondingly easier. The rest of the field is not in serious contention and will probably only suffice as meat puppets for the current top two.
But then this is a group utterly defiant of probability.
Prediction: France will effect a comeback to take the group. (If anything it’s the most random plausible outcome.) Four victories in a row is doable if they can find it in themselves with their backs to the wall, and they can and should take all of their remaining opponents. Serbia are luckier than they are good – their wins are rather stitched together with duct tape – and as a result should land in second. Most likely, they’ll both lose or draw some, but France will find enough to come out on top.
World Cupdate: UEFA Group 5
14 August 2009
Previous: Group 1, Group 2, Group 3, Group 4
Group 5: At the walls of Sarajevo
Participants: Spain, Turkey, Belgium, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Armenia, Estonia
This group is almost more straightforward than the last. Spain’s victories haven’t been shutouts but they have had them without fail. Their last four matches include contests against Belgium and B/H (which is my new trendy abbreviation whose use of the slash mark seems offhand and clerical but actually incisively critiques the ethnic cleavage with which the country remains riven – pass it on), which may prove to be of interest. But probably not. Spain’s been on a roll since the Euro 2008, despite having a relatively overrated side, and their fluke loss to the US last month probably won’t break their back. Indeed my only real complaint is that David Villa is doing too much of their work. It’s a sign of potential weakness down the road.
Second place is closer, but at this point there’s really nobody close enough to challenge B/H. Turkey isn’t displaying much of that unbelievable never-say-die attitude that made the Euro Cup so entertaining (a loss for the whole sport, that), Belgium are between coaches and Estonia is certainly out of range – though like their Latvian brethrean I suspect this will be the last time in some while they’re seeded so low.
Then again Turkey would have to sweep their remaining matches to slide into second place (assuming Spain does as well; a Spanish loss at any point would scramble the numbers). This is not out of the ballpark – they’ve already beat B/H and they have no further matches against Spain. Belgium is a threat but not an overpowering one. Then again Turkey walked away with a draw against Estonia so consistent play is clearly not a factor of their qualifying experience. This is the problem they face, and this is the deficit between raw, aw-shucks enthusiasm and cool professionalism.
Prediction: Spain is certain to automatically qualify. Now that I’ve gone through the whole thing, though, I’ve talked myself into Turkey for second place. They have an amazing capacity for surprise and Bosnia and Herzegovina have limped through on relatively easy games. They are also certain to lose at least one of their remaining four, which Turkey is not. Also I’m nostalgic for my time in Denmark in 2008 when I watched them once again strike terror through Europe at Vienna. This whole affair isn’t particularly based on reason anyway.
Also, I know the allusion I attempted to make in the title for this group is inaccurate. Alas.
World Cupdate: UEFA Group 4
13 August 2009
Previous: Group 1, Group 2, Group 3
Group 4: The pun I can’t quite make
Participants: Germany, Russia, Finland, Wales, Azerbaijan, Liechtenstein
I was thinking of calling it “Operation Barbarossa.” But I’m a culturally sensitive guy.
At least we finally have a group behaving as it’s supposed to. Russia is nipping at the heels of leader Germany, which is hampered only by a draw to Finland. Azerbaijan and Lichtenstein games constitute freebies for the other countries, having drawn only against each other. Wales is also not in practical contention, having won only their freebies and lost against all others.
What’s really at issue here is which of Germany or Russia gets the automatic slot and which to second-round draw. While I feel bad about disregarding the Finns so callously (and there’s no doubting that they’re a plucky people, lest I omit a World War II reference), there’s not much of a way for them to break through. This is a team that hasn’t qualified for a World Cup or Euro Cup in 50 years – a team that in the last Euro qualifiers was doomed by a loss to the same Azeri side that we’re comping for everyone in this group. (It was the sole victory the Azeris took, while Finland missed a trip to Austria by three points and the goal differential with struggling Portugal.)
That wouldn’t itself be so bad if not for the first, disastrous game they played against Russia, where they gave two – two! – own goals! The help gave the Russians a 3-0 victory, which they repeated in the second meeting. Anyway the numbers just aren’t there – even a shock victory over Germany would put Finland at 22 points. Even if the Germans also lost to the Russians they would almost certainly beat Finland on goal differential. Either Russia or Germany would have to suffer a cascade of major setbacks to give Finland the juice necessary. It’s just not happening.
Russia and Germany are simple. Both will win three of their four remaining games. (Indeed just today Germany took the first against Azerbaijan in a stadium whose name they utter with a grimace.) On 10 October they’ll play each other. The winner of that comes first. The loser goes to the playoff.
Prediction: There’s no reason to believe Germany won’t take the automatic spot and qualify. Their game against Russia is the only real question mark left on the board, and I don’t think Putin’s Punishers pull it off. (Though I will be watching it closer than the waiter at a dinner date with Alexander Litvinenko.) The good news for the Bear is that they are certain to qualify in the second round. Only victories by the deep underdog Welsh (or the other, deeper underdogs) could jeopardize this fundamental situation.
World Cupdate: UEFA Group 3
12 August 2009
East meets North
Participants: Czech Republic, Poland, Northern Ireland, Slovakia, Slovenia, San Marino
I wrote before about odd ducks. As with the last two groups the top four are pretty scrambled here. Most remarkably the strongest notional team, the Czechs, languishes below Slovenia (before today they were atop the Slovenes in fourth, but by the thinnest of margins). Incidentally Slovenia also handed the Slovakians their sole loss.
I’m at a bit of a loss myself at how to understand this group. (Besides with sympathy for poor, suffering San Marino.) It seems pretty clear that Slovakia’s doing just as well as it looks – besides their lost to Slovenia they’ve played and defeated the other quality teams, though they’ve also used up both their “freebies” against San Marino. The loss against Slovenia was probably a fluke and even then the Slovenes are much stronger than their 5th place suggest. I see no reason for Slovakia to start struggling now.
Northern Ireland, however, is not as strong as they appear. Both freebies are already logged and the only goal they managed against leader Slovakia was by a Slovakian player. One could make the argument that their three losses and draws were in the first three days of play, so their strength is in fact evidence of a rally: and this is possible. But they only have 3 games left as they concluded their meets with San Marino early. Even if they win all three remaining games they’ll have only 21 points (compared to a potential 27 for Slovakia). Winning all three games is precisely what they’ll need to do to lock this away, and despite their recent victories I’m not sure they have it in them.
The Poles were notionally the second-strongest team until this afternoon, but with two losses and a draw in six games they’ve not soared. They also have played all their freebies against San Marino and they’ve not yet beaten a team more serious than the fifth-place Czechs. (Who themselves have only beaten the Slovenians, and then drew them on their next meet.) Superficially they’re placed to challenge for second place. I think such a challenge is just that.
Now the Slovenians. They fascinate me. They beat the Slovakians and took a win and a loss against the Northern Irish, but also took a loss from the flagging Czechs. I have no idea what to do with them. But they had a real advantage in the schedule when I first examined them: they hadn’t yet played San Marino. Since they’ve trounced them and they’ve got another match against the poor shills coming. The win this week has catapulted them from 5th to 3rd. Their two other games are opposite Poland (whom they tied) and Slovakia (whom they beat). If they can win one of these two – and they can – they’ll have a real shot at contention. Automatic qualification is probably too far away, but second place is definitely within their reach.
Prediction: Slovakia shows no indication of slowing, and even if they split their last four games it will be enough to put them over the top. Second place is nearly impossible to predict, but I’m going to take a leap and say Slovenia. If nothing else the homophony is pleasant.
World Cupdate: UEFA Group 2
11 August 2009
Group 2: The Who? Who? Group
Participants: Greece, Israel, Switzerland, Moldova, Latvia, Luxembourg
This group is a bit of an odd duck, not least because of the combination of the terminally-disappointing Greeks and the desperately grasping Swiss. The Swiss are in fact doing better than they should thanks to a languishing Israel. They are enhanced by a major victory – and hindered by a terminal defeat.
Every game played against Moldova or Luxembourg should be a victory. And indeed every one has – except the Swiss, who were taken 2-1 by Europe’s Washington, D.C. This erases the advantage they should enjoy from their victory over the Greeks at the Piraeus, and hinders their ability to get the better of a tie by shrinking their goal differential. (Ties are broken first by how many more goals were scored than allowed, and then by total number allowed.) I don’t think it’s likely to be repeated by anybody; but this leaves Greece, Latvia and Israel with 12 free points and Switzerland with only 9, which means they’re that much more vulnerable. Greece has two gimmes left to collect, while the Swiss only have one. All else being equal this puts the Greeks at most one win away from the top spot. They can get this from the Swiss or the Latvians.
Should the Swiss lose to the Greeks they will be denied the top spot and be put at risk for second place, especially as they aren’t guaranteed to come out atop the Latvians or the Israelis (though notionally and practically the latter are a greater threat). The Latvians, like the Hungarians, are doing well thanks to a scheduling fluke – all but one gimme game was scheduled early – and shouldn’t survive to take first or second place.
Now Israel is a bit of a wild card. They have been checkered so far despite their nominal strength, but they have the potential to sneak into 2nd place. As long as they beat or draw Latvia they’ll surpass them by the end of the qualifiers; but barring a major shake-up they will have to overcome the Swiss in the final group game in order to move on. It’s not an insurmountable task considering how spotty the Swiss have been, but they’re a serious threat. (Unless an unlikely gift from the gods radically changes Israel’s position.) A lot will be riding on Israel and Switzerland on 14 October, especially if the Swiss again beat Greece; then it will be likely that only an Israeli victory can save both Greece and Israel, and the latter only if they’re perfect, which they have so far failed to be.
Prediction: This one’s very tough. Greece definitely has a much easier route to the top, but the Swiss are standing squarely in their path. If they lose to the Swiss than a win or draw against Israel, assuming both win the rest of their games, will put the Swiss into the Cup. At the risk of standing in front of the facts I think Switzerland will do it and qualify – Greece has not had a great few years but should have no problem coming in behind them. Israel’s route is just too treacherous at this point, though there is a non-negligable chance they can sneak into number two. At whose expense is unclear.
World Cupdate: UEFA Group 1
10 August 2009
We’re now less than a year from South Africa, and the final line-up of teams is beginning to take shape. For the crucial leagues (a grotesquely-expanded Europe and South America) qualifiers continue for the rest of the year. But most teams have finished just over half their games, so it’s simultaneously far enough away that some prediction is possible while being close enough for me to avoid embarassing myself (too badly).
So here goes for Europe. I’ll post a group or two a day as in the course of a long lazy Sunday I managed to pour 4000 words before getting to Group 9, which is too much even for me. Also the delay will allow the mini-round of qualifiers to take place this Wednesday 12 August, which will at least update the figures even if none of the games are very dramatic. (Scotland v Norway is the best of a dull bunch.)
The UEFA qualifiers are organized into eight groups of six teams each and a further group of five. They’re derived from taking one team each from six preset pots. These pots were organized based on FIFA rankings of all the national teams – so Pot A was the best, Pot B the next, etc. This was to ensure that there wasn’t a “Group of Death” which pitted strong national teams against each other while weaker teams qualified in less-competitive groups. You’d think that this functioned to distribute spots freely to the best teams while crippling the chances of weaker ones. You’d think wrong.
There are 13 spots to be distributed amongst the UEFA teams. The eight group winners will qualify automatically after ten games per group (eight for group nine – two per team). Of the nine group runners-up the top eight will go into a single pot and play four games to determine the final four qualifiers.
Teams are assigned points based on performance. 3 points for a win, 1 for a draw (to each) and nothing for a loss. So 13 points out of six games (which is what most teams have played) means 4 wins, 1 draw and 1 loss.
Group 1: Great Danes and Little Iberians
Participants: Portugal, Sweden, Denmark, Hungary, Albania, Malta
If I did have to nominate a “group of death” this year, so far it would be this one. Denmark and Hungary have soared at the expense of Portugal and Sweden, which have both suffered under the weight of draw after draw. (Portugal failed even to secure a win in their first meet against Albania.) Meanwhile Denmark, probably channeling their 2007 disgrace, came through a shock last-minute win against Portugal and a solid performance against Sweden to sit atop the pool.
The top four teams have four games left to play. My instinct is that Denmark’s numbers vis-a-vis Portugal are slightly inflated, as Denmark already played both their games against Malta while the Portuguese have one to go. Fourth-place Sweden are the only other team with another game against Malta. We can assume both will win: a draw or loss to Malta by either would surely spell doom. However even if Portugal beats Denmark at their next meeting and assuming a win against Malta, they’ll still fall one-point behind the Danes.
Hungary’s position in second-place is deceptively weak. They’ve only played Sweden once – their sole loss – while they’ll face Portugal in two of their final four. Hungary’s four wins have come solely from Albania and Malta, the weakest sides. Saving the hardest games for last may be a morale boost, but Sweden and Portugal’s victories over Malta will put them only one point behind. Even with a draw, either can squeeze ahead by beating another team, and Sweden still has a match against relatively-easy Albania. Even a draw there would tie Sweden up with Hungary. There are just too many outs left for the others. Hungary will slip.
I doubt the Danes will, however. Their injury-time win against Portugal (where they were behind from the half until the 82nd minute, and then again from the 84th until injury time) is evocative of Turkey last year, which was constantly outplayed but never outspirited. While the Danes will be at home next time, the Portuguese will have returned to them Cristiano Ronaldo, absent at their last meeting a year ago. This should help, but then he didn’t do much against Albania in June. I think it’s likely that the Danes’ last win was something unusual and Portugal goes into the next meeting with better than even odds. I also don’t think it will matter. The resurgent Danish side is more than capable of taking any two of Albania, Hungary or Sweden, and two are all they’ll need. Against both Swedes and Portuguese they’ve proven themselves more than capable of performing with élan.
Predicting number two is not easier. Portugal should have the edge but they drew Sweden in both of their meetings, and given the numbers at work a draw is tantamount to a Swedish victory and evidence of a shaky Portuguese side. Sweden’s loss against Denmark at home doesn’t speak better of them though. It needs to run up the numbers against Malta in order to get the better of any tie and take down Denmark at Parken if they can. In no case can they accept another draw against Albania.
Prediction: Denmark to clear to South Africa. Portugal will rally, possibly on the strength of a victory against the Danes, to make second. Sweden has more than an outside chance, but the decision whether they go forward isn’t theirs.