The draw for
the 2006 football World Cup was held
in Leipzig Germany on December 9th
2005. This is the greatest sporting
event on earth after the Olympic games
and has been eagerly looked forward
to. The 32 teams were allocated into
8 groups of four in a televised ceremony
that was watched live in over one
hundred and sixty countries. The top
two teams in each group will progress
to the straight knockout stages.
The first team drawn
from the balls was England, could
that be an omen, could they possibly
end the tournament finishing first?
Fifa had controversially seeded them
second, due in part to their recent
thrilling injury time win over the
old foe, Argentina.
Group
A consists of Germany, Costa Rica,
Poland & Ecuador
Group
B consists of England, Paraguay, Trinidad
& Tobago, & Sweden
Group
C consists of Argentina, Ivory Coast,
Serbia & Montenegro, & Holland
Group
D consists of Mexico, Iran, Angola,
& Portugal
Group
E consists of Italy, Ghana, the USA,
& the Czech Republic
Group
F consists of Brazil, Croatia, Australia
& Japan
Group
G consists of France, Switzerland,
South Korea, & Togo
Group
H consists of Spain, Ukraine, Tunisia,
& Saudi Arabia
The matches kick
off in Munich on June 9th and will
last a month, the final being played
on July 9th in Berlin.
While it is easy
to look at the groups and pick the
likely two qualifiers, we all know
that is not how it will turn out.
Memories are fresh of the failure
of the holders France to progress
from the group stage in 2002, dumped
out after barely scoring a goal by
the likes of Senegal.
The odds makers were
quick to cut England’s odds
slightly to 6/1 to win the tournament
on the back of what looks like an
easier group. There will be hundreds
of millions of pounds traded on this
event worldwide before the winners
are known. You can still obtain a
free £20 bet on betfair.com
by entering the promotional code 6CHE3VPWJ
when prompted.
The favourites remain
multi winners and current holders
Brazil, but the usual suspects Italy,
Holland, Spain, France, England, Argentina,
& Portugal all have their enthusiastic
followers. Don’t forget Germany
too, for on their own soil they will
be very hard to beat, even if on paper
they do not have a great side this
time. Trophies are never won on paper,
and they will be there or thereabouts,
they always are.
Groups C & E
look the toughest to qualify through.
The African challenge is greater and
possibly stronger than ever before
despite their two most successful
nations, Nigeria and Cameroon, failing
to make it this time. Can the Asian
countries, particularly Japan and
South Korea, maintain the huge progress
they made in 2002, although of course
that was on home soil, and it will
be interesting to see how Australia
perform. They have qualified for the
first time since 1974 and they did
recently beat England, albeit in a
friendly game where England played
two different teams through the match.
Most of the Australian players ply
their trade in the English premiership,
so they will know many of the other
players well enough, and vice versa.
I must mention first
time qualifiers Trinidad and Tobago,
the smallest nation to make it to
Germany, and how delighted they must
have been to draw England. Their talisman
and former European Cup winner Dwight
York will lead his nation with great
pride. Most of the T & T players
play their football in the English
lower leagues, but that will make
them only a more dangerous opponent,
and England will certainly not take
them lightly.
It promises to be
the greatest football tournament yet
seen, and certainly more overseas
supporters will travel to Germany
than ever before. Provisional figures
suggest that England will take over
100,000 supporters alone, and when
you consider that at some grounds
only 30,000 tickets will go on open
sale, it promises to produce a mighty
scramble for them. Holland, France
and Italy will also take huge followings,
as will the Czech Republic, Spain,
Sweden and Poland. German hotelkeepers
are in for a very busy summer.
England hope to do
well, though deep down everyone suspects
yet another Brazilian victory led
by their flamboyant star Ronaldhino,
but an England versus Brazil final
would be an attraction worth seeing.
That’s the hope in England for
sure.
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