Next Day's Games

Final

Germany 1-0 (ET) Argentina (Gotze 113')

Monday, June 30, 2014

Game 54 Recap: Germany 2-1 (ET) Algeria

GERMANY 2-1 (ET) ALGERIA

It took about 30 more minutes then expected but a pair of extra time goals sent Germany through to the quarterfinals over a very game Algerian opponent.

Germany struggled for much of this game, stifled by an Algerian defence determined to keep them from scoring in this match. Limited in their own offensive chances, Algeria continuously looked to beat the German defence on long lobs over the top.

One of those created some early excitement. Manuel Neuer came yards outside of his own penalty area to try and clear a ball and ended up playing as a centre back against Islam Slimani. Fortunately for Germany, he was able to deflect the ball out for a corner kick. It would hardly be the last time in the game that Neuer played sweeper in the German defensive line.

Germany's troubles with Algeria's offensive speed continued to cause issues early on. Sofiane Feghouli snuck behind the defenders but his sharp angle shot angled just over the crossbar. Faouzi Ghoulam hooked a shot from inside the area just wide of the far post, moments after Islam Slimani's headed goal was waved off due to an offside.

It wasn't until the 41st minute that Germany managed a quality chance at goal. Toni Kroos shot from the midfield was destined for goal until Rais M'Bolhi directed it back out front. The rebound fell to Mario Gotze but M'Bolhi challenged and made the second save as well to preserve the 0-0 scoreline at halftime.

In an effort to get the offence going, Germany brought Andre Schurrle in at halftime. Schurrle nearly got Germany going immediately as he snuck off the wing in to the Algerian penalty area. His shot was partially blocked but nearly skipped in to the Algerian goal anyway. On the ensuing corner kick, Shkodran Mustafi was able to make contact with the ball but sent it square at M'Bolhi.

Germany continued to apply pressure as Philipp Lahm fired a quality strike from outside the area but M'Bolhi was able to dive and get enough of a hand on the ball to parry just wide of goal. Germany continued to be the better of the teams in the second half but Thomas Muller and Bastian Schweinsteiger both saw quality chances turned away again by M'Bolhi.

With a 0-0 draw after 90 minutes, Algeria had hopes to pull out a shock victory in the extra period but it was Germany that ended the deadlock almost right after the restart. Muller streaked down the wing and delivered a low cross in to the Algerian area. The top offensive player since entering the game, Schurrle managed to get a tricky reverse heel flick on the ball, deflecting it in to the far corner for the opening goal of the game.

Algeria nearly responded in the 102nd minute but Mehdi Mostefa fired a shot just wide of goal off a frantic corner kick. Germany weren't satisfied sitting back in defence though and as the clock ticked down, they picked up the insurance marker they sought through Mesut Ozil. Algeria abandoned their own end leading to an Ozil and Schurrle 2-on-1. Schurrle's shot was blocked off the line but the rebound fell to Ozil who made sure no one could stop his shot.

Algeria refused to quit and pulled one back in injury time of the extra frame but it was too little, too late as Germany escaped with the 2-1 victory.

Goals

Germany: Andre Schurrle (92'), Mesut Ozil (120')
Algeria: Abdelmoumene Djabou (120+1')

Discipline

Germany: Philipp Lahm (Yellow 107')
Algeria: Rafik Halliche (Yellow 42')

Man of the Match

Fans voted Rais M'Bolhi Man of the Match in a losing effort. Germany had 22 shots on goal in this match and yet were scoreless after 90 minutes. M'Bolhi wasn't culpable on either German goal and was the lone reason the game got to extra time at all. I also liked Andre Schurrle off the bench for Germany. Added some pace and finishing touch to the game that Germany weren't getting from Mario Gotze.

Key Moment

Wasn't officially the winning goal thanks to a late marker by Algeria but Andre Schurrle's goal to start extra time was the nail in the coffin so to speak for Algeria. Algeria had to hope for a reprieve from the German pressure after the break but instead found themselves down with limited time on the clock. Could never get sustained offensive pressure going until the end when the game was over.

What we learned from Germany

Not sure if this was a tactical problem for Germany or all about execution. Felt they were completely unprepared to handle the high Algerian pressure and their quick counter-attacks although that's all they've done so far this tournament. Scrambling frequently on defence and Mertesacker/Howedes continually burned by a lack of speed. Said last game and will say again, they need a striker on the field. Schurrle was a quality source of chances when he entered but terrible finishing on the whole from the rest of the team.

What we learned from Algeria

Felt they did exactly what they needed to in order to have a shot at winning in this game. Prevented Germany from getting quality shots off and constantly looked for the long ball against the German defence. Had limited success finishing as Germany were able to find ways to clear the ball from their own zone. Nothing to be ashamed of in this game. Held one of the best teams in the world to a draw for over 90 minutes.

Going Forward

Algeria's exit means Asia and Africa are officially done in this tournament. Won't be happy with the manner in which they won but Germany are through to the quarterfinals for the 16th(!) straight World Cup. They've also set up a France-Germany quarterfinal match that may end up being the most hyped match of the tournament, short of Brazil reaching the final.

Game 54 Starting Lineups (Germany vs. Algeria)

Game Preview here.
Starting lineups below:

Germany

Not sure if he's injured but Hummels on the bench. Boateng should slide inside with Mustafi at right back.

Germany 4-3-2-1 football formation

Substitutes:

Goalkeepers: Roman Weidenfeller (#22), Ron-Robert Zieler (#12)

Defenders: Erik Durm (#15), Matthias Ginter (#3), Kevin Grosskreutz (#2), Mats Hummels (#5)

Midfielders: Julian Draxler (#14), Sami Khedira (#6), Christoph Kramer (#23), Andre Schurrle (#9)

Forwards: Miroslav Klose (#11), Lukas Podolski (#10)


Algeria

Don't ask, I've given up predicting or trying to explain what they'll do.

 Algeria 4-4-2 football formation

Substitutes:

Goalkeepers: Cedric Si Mohamed (#1), Mohamed Zemmamouche (#16)

Defenders: Madjid Bougherra (#2), Liassine Cadamuro-Bentaiba (#17), Carl Medjani (#12), Djamel Mesbah (#6)

Midfielders: Nabil Bentaleb (#14), Yacine Brahimi (#11), Abdelmoumene Djabou (#18), Riyad Mahrez (#21), Hassan Yebda (#7)

Forwards: Nabil Ghilas (#9)

Game 53 Recap: France 2-0 Nigeria

FRANCE 2-0 NIGERIA

It took a long time for them to get going but France did manage to pull out the victory in the end, defeating Nigeria 2-0 with a pair of late goals.

Not the sharpest performance from France and there's plenty for manager Didier Deschamps to ponder as they await their quarterfinal opponent.

France struggled to get the ball in to scoring position to open the game and surrendered a pair of great achances in the early going. Peter Odemwingie was able to get a free header at the back post but made a mess of the finish and popped the ball straight up for Hugo Lloris to collect. Emmanuel Emenike appeared to score minutes later when he tipped in a long cross but the goal was called back to an offside flag.

France did get the best chance of the period though in the 22nd minute. A great 2-man rush from Paul Pogba and Mathieu Valbuena led to a Valbuena cross to the top of the area. Pogba got everything on the volleyed shot but it was too close to Vincent Enyeama whose reactions allowed him to punch the ball off of his line.

France's problems getting through the Nigerian defence continued well in to the second half of play. Thankfully for them, Nigeria had their own offensive woes to deal with. Peter Odemwingie managed a quality shot from range in the 64th minute but that was as close as Nigeria would come to scoring in the match.

As the second half wore on, France settled in to the flow of the game. Karim Benzema nearly picked up his 4th goal of the tournament from in close but his rebounded shot was cleared off the line by Victor Moses. Blaise Matuidi just failed to get on the end of a cross and Yohan Cabaye rocketed a distant shot off the crossbar.

Benzema again had a glorious chance in the 79th but his close range header was turned away by Enyeama. France were not to be denied in this match though. On the ensuing corner kick, Enyeama challenged poorly and tipped the ball straight on to the head of Pogba who calmly headed home for the winning goal. Joseph Yobo deflected in an own goal under pressure from Antoine Griezmann to seal things in injury time.

Goals

France: Paul Pogba (79'), Joseph Yobo (OG 90+1')
Nigeria: N/A

Discipline

France: Blaise Matuidi (Yellow 54')
Nigeria: N/A

Man of the Match

Easy decision in this game even before he scored the winning goal. Paul Pogba was everywhere in the midfield this game, making play after play in both ends. Nearly scored in the first half if not for a great reflex save by Vincent Enyeama. Deservedly got his first World Cup goal late in the second half with a gifted header from Enyeama.

Key Moment

With about half an hour left to play, Didier Deschamps pulled Olivier Giroud in favour of Antoine Griezmann. The difference in play for France was instantaneous. Griezmann provided additional pace and width to the attack and also allowed Karim Benzema to slide up top as the central striker where he belongs. Was all France in the last 25-30 minutes and Griezmann's entrance was a contributing factor to that.

What we learned from France

That was greatly concerning until the 75th minute or so. Too many turnovers in the midfield, weren't taking the chances afforded to them offensively and left Nigeria far too much space to operate in their end. The last 15 minutes of this game were great. If they play the first 75 in the quarterfinals though, they'll be going home after that match.

What we learned from Nigeria

Have to be able to go full speed for 90+ minutes in the World Cup and they didn't today. For parts of the first hour they were the better team on the field. Possession was close to even and they were able to move the ball through the midfield and close down the French attackers. They faded late though and France didn't. Completely overwhelmed at the end of the game. Both goals came off of tired, sloppy mistakes and those will kill you at any level.

Going Forward

Nigeria's exit means Algeria are the last African hope this World Cup. They will play Germany later today. France advance to the quarterfinals and will face intriguing matches either way.  Germany are a historic rival and the two are possibly the top European teams in the tournament, although Netherlands would disagree. If the upset occurs then they'll face an Algerian team with its own ties to rance. Roughly two-thirds of the Algerian team were either born or raised in France, and there is a large expat Algerian population in France.

Game 53 Starting Lineups (France vs. Nigeria)

Game Preview here.
Starting lineups below:

France

Giroud starts with Benzema on the wing. Koscielny in for Sakho who has been dealing with injuries.

France 4-3-3 football formation

Substitutes:

Goalkeepers: Mickael Landreau (#23), Stephane Ruffier (#16)

Defenders: Lucas Digne (#17), Eliaquim Mangala (#13), Bacary Sagna (#15), Mamadou Sakho (#3)

Midfielders: Remy Cabella (#7), Antoine Griezmann (#11), Rio Mavuba (#12), Morgan Schneiderlin (#22), Moussa Sissoko (#18)

Forwards: Loic Remy (#20)


Nigeria

Only 1 change as Moses is back in for the injured Babatunde.

Nigeria 4-2-3-1 football formation

Substitutes:

Goalkeepers: Chigozie Agbim (#21), Austin Ejide (#16)

Defenders: Azubuike Egwuekwe(#6), Godfrey Oboabona (#14), Kunle Odunlami (#12)

Midfielders: Ramon Azeez (#15), Reuben Gabriel (#4), Ejike Uzoenyi (#3)

Forwards: Shola Ameobi (#23), Uche Nwofor (#19), Michael Uchebo (#20)
 

Game 54 Preview: Germany vs. Algeria

GERMANY vs. ALGERIA
Round of 16 - Game 6



 Date: June 30, 2014
Time: 4:00 p.m. EDT
Venue: Estadio Beira-Rio, Porto Alegre
Overall Head-to-Head Record (W-L-T): 2-0-0 Algeria
Last Match: 1982 World Cup (Group Stage). Algeria def. West Germany 2-1.
Line: Germany -400
Group G Preview here.
Group H Preview here.
Starting Lineups posted separately once they're announced.

Team Profiles 

World Ranking: Germany (2nd), Algeria (22nd)
Managers: Joachim Low (GER), Vahid Halilhodzic (ALG)
Captains: Philipp Lahm (GER), Madjid Bougherra (ALG)
World Cup Appearances: 18 (GER), 4 (ALG)
Best Finish: Germany (3x Champions, Last in 1990), Algeria (3x Group Stage, Last in 2010)
Qualifying Records: Germany (9-0-1, GF: 36, GA: 10), Algeria (6-2-0, GF: 16, GA: 7)

Previous Game Results

Germany

Algeria

June 17th - Belgium def. Algeria 2-1
June 26th - Algeria tied Russia 1-1

Rosters
































Injuries/Discipline

Germany: Benedikt Howedes (Yellow Card), Sami Khedira (Questionable - Knee)
Algeria: Nabil Bentaleb (Yellow Card), Madjid Bougherra (Yellow Card), Liassine Cadamuro-Bentaiba (Yellow Card), Nabil Ghilas (Yellow Card), Djamel Mesbah (Yellow Card)

Overview

The second game of the day is a bigger mismatch then the first according to oddsmakers. Some places have Germany as high as a 2-goal favourite in this Round of 16 match against Algeria. It's Algeria's first time in the knockout round of the World Cup, while Germany have finished 3rd or better in every World Cup since 2002.

It would be a mistake for Germany to overlook this Algerian side though. Capable defensively and lightning-quick on the counter-attack, Algeria have the potential to compete with any squad in the world and will surely make Germany work for everything in this game.

Fortunately for Algeria, they're up against a German squad that is still trying to figure out the formula for winning this World Cup. Constantly tinkering with their personnel, Germany have looked out of sorts in this tournament, despite scoring 7 goals and winning their group comfortably. It's a testament to their excellence over the years that a group showing like this is considered disappointing.

Algeria themselves have shuffled their personnel through the tournament although primarily to give a different look to teams. 17 different players started for Algeria in the group stage, so Vahid Halilhodzic should have plenty of decisions to make in choosing his squad. Regardless of personnel, expect this to be a side loaded with defenders but ready to spring out in attack if Germany are caught in the offensive end.

Another big question to watch in this game is the Miroslav Klose goal watch. Not likely to start again but should make an appearance off the bench at some point this game. The 36 year old German striker is tied with Brazil's Ronaldo on 15 career World Cup goals, the most of anyone in history. Klose you can imagine is desperately seeking one more tally to take hold of the all-time goal record.

Personnel

In the German Third: Some potential for concern for Germany when Algeria counter-attack. Algeria the long ball to their striker and wingers to create one on one chances. Germany full of elite talent in the back end but not the ideal pace to keep up with the Algerians at a full sprint. Germany the better team when their defence gets set but have to be careful on the fast break. Advantage: Cautiously Germany.

In the Midfield: There was a stat ESPN posted in the early minutes of Germany's last game. After about 6-7 minutes, Germany had completed 73 passes. The U.S. had completed 7. No one dominates midfield possession and tempo like Germany. Advantage: Germany.

In the Algerian Third: Germany may again try a new lineup of personnel and will surely shift positions during the game. Too much skill and players capable of scoring for Algeria to handle though, regardless of roles. Advantage: Germany.

Goalkeeping: M'Bolhi has been passable in the Algerian goal despite surrendering 5 goals this tournament. No match for Manuel Neuer in the German net though. Advantage: Germany.

Germany will win if:

Lather, rinse, repeat. There are few teams in the world that Germany need to adjust their tactics for and Algeria isn't one of them. Control the ball in the Algerian half and be wary of the quick ball over the top of their defenders and they will win this game.

Algeria will win if:

Try to frustrate Germany in your own half. Best way to do that is an aggressive zone type defence. Try to harry them on the ball but don't allow yourself to be pulled out of position. Offensively, look for long balls to players matched up against Howedes and Mertesacker and take advantage of their lack of speed. Get anything on goal when they have a chance, because there won't be many opportunities.

Prediction

I like Algeria and I think given the right matchup, they could make some waves in this round. Germany isn't the right matchup. Germany wins comfortably, scores in both halves.

Germany 3-0 Algeria.

Game 53 Preview: France vs. Nigeria

FRANCE vs. NIGERIA
Round of 16 - Game 5



 Date: June 30, 2014
Time: 12:00 p.m. EDT
Venue: Estadio Nacional, Brasilia
Overall Head-to-Head Record (W-L-T): 1-0-0 Nigeria
Last Match: 2009 Friendly. Nigeria def. France 1-0.
Line: France -250.
Group E Preview here.
Group F Preview here.
Starting Lineups posted separately once they're announced.

Team Profiles 

World Ranking: France (17th), Nigeria (44th)
Managers: Didier Deschamps (FRA), Stephen Keshi (NGA)
Captains: Hugo Lloris (FRA), Vincent Enyeama (NGA)
World Cup Appearances: 14 (FRA), 5 (NGA)
Best Finish: France (Champions, 1998), Nigeria (2x Round of 16, Last in 1998)
Qualifying Records: France (5-2-3, GF: 18, GA: 8), Nigeria (5-0-3, GF: 11, GA: 4)

Previous Game Results

France

Nigeria

June 16th - Nigeria tied Iran 0-0

Rosters




Injuries/Discipline

France: Patrice Evra (Yellow Card), Paul Pogba (Yellow Card)
Nigeria: Michael Babatunde (Out - Wrist), John Obi Mikel (Yellow Card), Victor Moses (Probable - Injury), Kenneth Omeruo (Yellow Card), Juwon Oshaniwa (Yellow Card)

Overview

One of the top teams in the group stages resumes their campaign today against a dangerous Nigerian squad. Four years ago at this time, France were embroiled in a huge scandal regarding player actions and performance in South Africa. Now they are being given 8/1 odds to win the 2014 World Cup.

Nigeria are the first obstacle for this French squad to get through if they want a shot at the trophy. And Nigeria bring a mix of speed and power to the field that France did not see in any of their group games.

France should stick with the 4-3-3 formation they have gone with this tournament. They are mostly healthy and have no suspensions so Didier Deschamps should have his full squad of players available for selection. France will likely revert to their lineup from their first two games after resting players against Ecuador. Potential selection issues exist in the midfield with whether Paul Pogba or Moussa Sissoko starts, and if Olivier Giroud finds his way in to the lineup as a forward.

Nigeria have gone with a 4-2-3-1 formation this tournament with only minor changes to their roster. They will definitely be without Michael Babatunde after he broke his wrist in the Argentina game but should have Victor Moses available again off injury.

France is expected to get their offence clicking again after being held scoreless against Ecuador. Nigeria will provide a stiff test for the young central defenders though, neither of which appear to be fully fit after last match.

Personnel

In the French Third: If you haven't seen Nigeria play, familiarize yourself with the name Emmanuel Emenike. The 27 year old Nigerian striker is the closest thing in the World Cup to a freight train as a forward. Has exceptional speed and power and is the focal point of this Nigeria offence. Nigeria have plenty of speed surrounding him but the key in this area will be effective play from Emenike. The French defence should be able to contain Emenike if they surround enough players around him. The key though will be to take him out of play without leaving their flanks open for his teammates. Advantage: Even.

In the Midfield: Speed and quick delivery if the ball are the name of the game offensively for Nigeria. France will counter that with their own speed and size and superb defensive organization through the midfield. On the ball, few teams this tournament have controlled play better then France and they will look to capitalize on Nigeria chasing the ball and pulling themselves out of position. Advantage: France.

In the Nigerian Third: Plenty of questions about Nigeria's organization and skill in their back four and that's a bad sign against this French team. France weren't clicking in their last game but part of that was personnel and they did still manage several shots on target. I expect Nigeria to have their hands as full here as they did last game when they surrendered 3 goals. Advantage: France.

Goalkeeping: Very little separating the goalkeepers in this game. Both experienced, both captains for their team. Lloris allowed fewer goals in group play but Enyeama looked the better prior to facing Argentina. Nitpicking to find anything separating these two. Advantage: Even

France will win if:

Shut Emenike down in your own half and get shots on Enyeama. This Nigerian offence flows entirely through Emenike as a lone striker. Dangerous running with the ball and laying off passes to his supporting players, Emenike having room to do what he wants will be very bad for France. Offensively, no need to try and be too fancy in the offensive third which they did against Ecuador. Get in to a scoring area and fire the ball on goal. Enyeama has given up some juicy rebounds this tournament and there will be second-chance opportunities if the first doesn't go in.

Nigeria will win if:

This is a tough one because there's obvious holes in the back line that France will exploit and France have very few weaknesses. Will have to stack their penalty area defensively and keep balls away from Enyeama as best as possible. On the counter-attack, need Emenike to hold balls up as long as possible so they can attack in numbers rather then merely turn the ball over with no numbers offensively.

Prediction

Nigeria get some runs upfield that terrorize the French defenders but France's offence far too good and efficient against this weak Nigerian line.

France 3-1 Nigeria

Sunday, June 29, 2014

Game 52 Recap: Costa Rica 1-1 (5-3 SO) Greece

COSTA RICA 1-1 (5-3 SO) GREECE

For the second straight game, Greece managed some injury time magic but it was not enough to carry them to a victory this time as Costa Rica pulled out the win in penalty kicks.

It took for a while for the game to get going in the first half with neither side managing some quality scoring chances before halftime. Costa Rica's best chance came in the 8th minute but Christian Bolanos fired a shot from 15 yards over the crossbar.

Greece nearly scored themselves in the 37th minute but Dimitris Salpingidis flick at the back post was denied by a big Keylor Navas save for Costa Rica.

Despite Greece having the better of chances in the first half it was Costa Rica that got on the scoreboard to start the second half on a bizarre play. Bolanos' slow cross found captain Bryan Ruiz at the top of the Greek penalty area. Ruiz one-time shot was slow and trickling along the ground, but it appeared to freeze Orestis Karnezis in the Greek goal. Karnezis appeared to have plenty of time to get to the ball but didn't move in net and Costa Rica took the 1-0 lead.

No complaints from Costa Rica who likely should have doubled the scoreline two minutes later. A long ball in to the Greek penalty area was only taken from Bolanos by an outstretched arm of Vasilis Torosidis. The handball infraction went missed by the referee though and play went on.

Costa Rica could have used the extra goal as the half went on. Did well to shut down all Greece attacks until the 66th minute. Having already picked up a yellow card in the first half, Oscar Duarte made a poor challenge on Jose Holebas of Greece. The foul earned him his second yellow card and a trip to the showers with 25 minutes to play in the game.

Down a man, it appeared as if Costa Rica might be able to escape in regulation time with the help of some desperate defending and clearances in their own end. But Greece kept the pressure up and just like their last group game against Ivory Coast, found the goal they needed at the last. Kostas Mitroglou fired a shot from close range in the first minute of injury time which Navas saved but spilled directly out front of goal. Up from defence to pressure, Sokratis Papastathopoulos rifled home the rebound to give Greece the tie game and force and extra period of play.

It was all Greece from that point forward. Mitroglou flicked a header towards goal that Navas was barely able to clear. Mitroglou found another chance at the end of extra time but Navas was able to get a piece from in close and direct it wide of goal, to force the game in to penalty kicks.

Bizarre moment prior to penalty kicks as Greece coach Fernando Santos was seen arguing with the referee and was sent off before the penalties could start. Hard to tell what impact that may have had on Greece not having their manager there for penalty taker selection.

A mostly academic display of shooting to start the penalties. Shooting first, Costa Rica hit their first four penalties while Greece responded hitting their first three shots. Greece's fourth shot was the decider though. Veteran substitute Theofanis Gekas' shot was turned away by an excellent dive from Navas who guessed direction correctly and was able to get an arm on the ball. Michael Umana's followup scored to give Costa Rica the 5-3 win in the shootout.

Tough loss for Greece who had the advantage in chances and possession after Duarte's sending off. Costa Rica meanwhile will make their first ever quarterfinal appearance next weekend when they take on Netherlands.

Goals

Costa Rica: Bryan Ruiz (52')
Greece: Sokratis Papastathopoulos (90+1')

Penalty Kicks:
  1. Celso Borges (CRC) SCORES.
  2. Kostas Mitroglou (GRE) SCORES.
  3. Bryan Ruiz (CRC) SCORES.
  4. Lazaros Christodoulopoulos (GRE) SCORES.
  5. Giancarlo Gonzalez (CRC) SCORES.
  6. Jose Holebas (GRE) SCORES.
  7. Joel Campbell (CRC) SCORES.
  8. Theofanis Gekas (GRE) SAVED.
  9. Michael Umana (CRC) SCORES.
Discipline

Costa Rica: Oscar Duarte (Yellow 42', Yellow 66', Red 66'), Yeltsin Tejeda (Yellow 48'), Esteban Granados (Yellow 54'), Bryan Ruiz (Yellow 70'), Keylor Navas (Yellow 90')
Greece: Andreas Samaris (Yellow 36'), Kostas Manolas (Yellow 72')

Man of the Match

Costa Rica goalkeeper Keylor Navas was again named Man of the Match. Navas made 7 saves as well as a key stop on Gekas in the shootout to earn the victory for Costa Rica. Navas was the rock at the back for Costa Rica, holding them in the game despite spending half the game down a man after Duarte's sending off.

Key Moment

Came right down to the wire in the shootout. After 7 straight goals to start the shootout, Theofanis Gekas stepped up for Greece. His shot was hard to the left of goal but Keylor Navas guessed right and was able to get an arm up to direct it away from goal. That was the only break required for Costa Rica, as Michael Umana converted the following shot to give Costa Rica the win.

What we learned from Costa Rica

Tough to analyze given they spent the last 55 minutes of the game down a man. Felt that before that they were the definite better team on the field. Kept Greece outside of their penalty area and maximized their own chances of scoring. Far too passive in the midfield though and allowed Greece plenty of room to advance the ball up the field. Will have to be more aggressive against Netherlands in the quarterfinals and will be without 2 starters in that game.

What we learned from Greece

Not much that wasn't already known. Had one lapse defensively that cost them in the early second half. Only got quality offensive chances after Costa Rica went down a man and still had no quality finishing. Have to find a way to better attack the opposing goal going forward as their current strategy has been figured out.

Going Forward

Greece are headed home after their first knockout round appearance ever. Costa Rica meanwhile advance to the quarterfinals for the first time in history. They'll be in tough against a Dutch team that has averaged 3 goals for a game so far in this World Cup.

Game 52 Starting Lineups (Costa Rica vs. Greece)

Game Preview here.
Starting Lineups below:

Costa Rica

Regular starting XI for Costa Rica.

 Costa Rica 5-4-1 football formation

Substitutes

Goalkeepers: Daniel Cambronero (#23), Patrick Pemberton (#18)

Defenders: Johnny Acosta (#2), Waylon Francis (#12), Roy Miller(#19), David Myrie (#8)

Midfielders: Michael Barrantes (#11), Diego Calvo (#20), Jose Miguel Cubero (#22), Esteban Granados (#13)

Forwards: Randall Brenes (#14), Marco Urena (#21)


Greece

1 change for Greece from last game. Samaris replaces Kone who left the Ivory Coast match with an injury.

Greece 4-3-3 football formation

Substitutes

Goalkeepers: Panagiotis Glykos (#12), Stefanos Kapino (#13)

Defenders: Vangelis Moras (#5), Giorgos Tzavellas (#3)

Midfielders: Giannis Fetfatzidis (#18), Kostas Katsouranis (#21), Panagiotis Kone (#8), Panagiotis Tachtsidis (#23), Alexandros Tziolis (#6), Loukas Vyntra (#11)

Forwards: Theofanis Gekas (#17), Kostas Mitroglou (#9)

Game 51 Recap: Netherlands 2-1 Mexico

NETHERLANDS 2-1 MEXICO

For the second straight day, the early Round of 16 game has failed to disappoint and sent one team home in just the worst possible fashion.

In a game played in near-unbearable heat, it was the Netherlands who managed a stunning late comeback against Mexico to advance to the quarterfinals for the second straight tournament.

CBC reported mid-broadcast that the temperature on the field in the shade was 39 degrees Celsius or 102 degrees Fahrenheit. That wasn't taking in to account humidity, sunlight or players running for miles during the game. It was also the first match in Brazil where pre-determined cooling breaks occurred around the 30th and 75th minutes of the match.

Mexico came out in their usual 5-3-2 look but it was a bizarre tactical change for the Dutch. Having played a 5-3-2 formation predominantly themselves, the Dutch opted for a 4-3-3 look in this game. That backfired in a big way when holding midfielder Nigel de Jong was forced to leave 9 minutes in with an injury.

This was a first half dominated by Mexico. Time and again they found ways to get through the Dutch defenders, using their speed to stretch the field in all directions. Hector Herrera had the first good chance in the 17th minute but could not settle the ball in the penalty area and tapped it just wide.

Carlos Salcido, playing in place of the suspended Jose Vazquez unleashed a wicked moving strike from 30+ yards away but Jasper Cillessen managed to awkwardly deflect it wide of the target. Giovani dos Santos got his own chance near halftime but Cillessen bravely challenged and was able to kick the ball away from goal.

All Mexico to start the second half as well and they were quickly rewarded. Giovani dos Santos got his foot on an errant Dutch clearance and his curling shot across his body from 30 yards eluded Cillessen and snuck inside the post. It was the nightmare scenario for the Netherlands as Daley Blind, filling in for de Jong in central midfield could not contain dos Santos. Cannot fathom that goal occurring with the veteran de Jong in that spot.

The Mexican goal woke up the Netherlands. They turned up the pressure offensively and were denied an equalizer on yet another fantastic Ochoa save. Arjen Robben's corner kick fell to Stefan de Vrij in the 6 yard box but his redirection went off a perfectly positioned Ochoa and out off the post. No reaction but just ideal placement in the goal led to another highlight for Ochoa in this tournament.

No let up for the Dutch though. Wesley Sneijder's shot from the top of the area was deflected just wide and Robben's shot from the side of goal was smartly turned away by Ochoa as well. Netherlands got past the Mexican defence in the 85th minute but again Ochoa was there to deny Klaas-Jan Huntelaar's flick although the offside flag was up.

Minutes away from the quarterfinals, disaster struck for Mexico. Another Robben delivery fell to Huntelaar who headed entirely away from goal, but fortunately for the Dutch, it fell straight to Sneijder. Maligned by Dutch supporters for his performance this tournament, Sneijder made no mistake launching the ball inside the post to give the Dutch the tie and crush the hopes of Mexican supporters in the stadium.

The late drama wasn't done there though. 4 minutes later in injury time, Robben streaked down the wing for the umpteenth time in this game. Almost past the end line, Robben cut back and was hauled down by Rafael Marquez in the penalty area. Mexico questioned the decision but it looked a legitimate foul and may have been a make-up call after a questionable foul on Robben went Mexico's way in the first half.

Given a penalty kick in the closing stages, Klaas-Jan Huntelaar was given the task of winning the game for Netherlands. Only in as a late substitute for Robin van Persie, Huntelaar finished things off perfectly, tucking the ball inside the post to give Netherlands the 2-1 lead and the victory.

Goals

Netherlands: Wesley Sneijder (88'), Klaas-Jan Huntelaar (90+4')
Mexico: Giovani dos Santos (48')
Discipline

Netherlands: N/A
Mexico: Paul Aguilar (Yellow 69'), Rafael Marquez (Yellow 90+2'), Andres Guardado (90+4')

Man of the Match

A losing effort but fans voted Mexico goalkeeper Guillermo Ochoa Man of the Match again. Part of that is he was deserving but part of that also may have been no time to change votes with the Dutch comeback. I'm fine with Ochoa getting it, I'm fine with Robben getting it, I'm fine with Huntelaar or Sneijder getting it. Ochoa's positioning in this game was superb again denying de Vrij and Robben from close range. Little he could do on either Dutch goals.

Key Moment

Mexico went defensive in the last third of the game looking to protect their lead. It almost worked until Wesley Sneijder volleyed home an errant header from Huntelaar. It was all Netherlands from that goal on and Mexico's substitutions gave them little in the way of an attacking presence to counter it. The winning Dutch goal came before extra time but no doubt they would win once Sneijder tied things up.

What we learned from Netherlands

Felt they overthought their strategy in this one. Tried to go 4-3-3 and paid the price when de Jong went out injured. Hamstrung in to playing Blind in midfield and Kuyt as a left back. Need to get back to what got them here. 5-3-2 is their bread and butter right now. Never quit on the game despite the oppressive heat and don't think many teams can match the Dutch heart. This team wasn't ready to leave Brazil yet and that is ultimately what won out for them today.

What we learned from Mexico

Did everything right for about 75 minutes. Pressured the Dutch in midfield, kept them away from goal and took advantage of attacking opportunities. Then it all fell apart. Absolutely hated that they fell back in to a passive shell defensively. Chile did the same and Netherlands completely dismantled it. Can't afford to give the Dutch time on the ball and Mexico did. As a result they're heading home early again.

Going Forward

I said in my knockout round predictions, this was the key game in this quarter of the bracket. Regardless of opponent, Netherlands will have an easier time in the quarterfinals then they did today. Gave me a huge scare after I picked them to win it all but won't back down from that now. Gamely challenged a good Mexican team and pulled it out in the end.

Crushing defeat for Mexico. Paul Carr of ESPN tweeted that Mexico have been eliminated from the World Cup knockout round now 4 times after having a lead in the elimination game. Don't know how to cope with that if you're a Mexican fan........Tequila.

Game 51 Starting Lineups (Netherlands vs. Mexico)

Game Preview here.
Starting lineups below:

Netherlands

Bit of a wrinkle in personnel as neither Martins Indi or Janmaat in the lineup. Best approximation of formation below.

Holland 4-4-2 football formation

Substitutes:

Goalkeepers: Tim Krul (#23), Michel Vorm (#22)

Defenders: Terence Kongolo (#14), Bruno Martins Indi (#4), Daryl Janmaat (#7), Joel Veltman (#13)

Midfielders: Jordy Clasie (#16), Memphis Depay (#21), Leroy Fer (#18), Jonathan de Guzman (#8)

Forwards: Klaas-Jan Huntelaar (#19), Jeremain Lens (#17)


Mexico

Salcido replaces the suspended Vazquez in only Mexican change.

 Mexico 5-3-2 football formation

Substitutes:


Goalkeepers: Jose de Jesus Corona (#1), Alfredo Talavera (#13)

Defenders: Miguel Angel Ponce (#16), Diego Reyes (#5)

Midfielders: Javier Aquino (#20), Isaac Brizuela (#17), Marco Fabian (#8), Carlos Pena (#21)

Forwards: Javier Hernandez (#14), Raul Jimenez (#9), Alan Pulido (#11)

Game 52 Preview: Costa Rica vs. Greece

COSTA RICA vs. GREECE
Round of 16 - Game 4

 

 Date: June 29, 2014
Time: 4:00 p.m. EDT
Venue: Arena Pernambuco, Recife
Overall Head-to-Head Record (W-L-T): N/A
Last Match: N/A
Line: Costa Rica +135

Group C Preview here.
Group D Preview here.
Starting Lineups posted separately once they're announced.

Team Profiles 

World Ranking: Costa Rica (28th), Greece (12th)
Managers: Jorge Luis Pinto (CRC), Fernando Santos (GRE)
Captains: Bryan Ruiz (CRC), Giorgos Karagounis (GRE)
World Cup Appearances: 4 (CRC), 3 (GRE)
Best Finish: Costa Rica (Round of 16, 1990), Greece (2x Group Stage, Last in 2010)
Qualifying Records: Costa Rica (8-4-4, GF: 27, GA: 12), Greece (9-1-2, GF: 16, GA: 6)

Previous Game Results

Costa Rica

Greece

June 14th - Colombia def. Greece 3-0
June 19th - Japan tied Greece 0-0
June 24th - Greece def. Ivory Coast 2-1



Rosters


















Injuries/Discipline

Costa Rica: Jose Miguel Cubero (Yellow Card), Giancarlo Gonzalez (Yellow Card), Yeltsin Tejeda (Yellow Card)
Greece: Orestis Karnezis (Questionable - Injury), Panagiotis Kone (Questionable - Hamstring), Sokratis Papastathopoulos (Yellow Card), Dimitris Salpingidis (Yellow Card), Giorgos Samaras (Yellow Card), Vasilis Torosidis (Yellow Card)

Overview

If you saw this game as being a Costa Rica-Greece matchup then you are amongst a probable handful in the world. The most unlikely of Round of 16 matches sees Greece make their debut in the knockout round and will ensure one of the two teams makes the quarterfinals for the first time in their history.

Costa Rica have been one of the big surprises in this tournament. Expected to be a place-filler in Group D, they surprised everyone by topping the group to set up today's date with Greece. Not a huge offensive threat, Costa Rica get by with strong defence and goalkeeping. It is also a very international mix of players. Their starting 11 in their last match with England featured players plying their club trade in 10 different countries.

Greece were an outside chance at making the knockout round in a weak Group C but managed to advance to this stage in the most improbable fashion. Needing a victory against Ivory Coast, they found it courtesy of an injury time penalty kick by Giorgos Samaras to secure their spot in this game. Also known for their defence, Greece have not been as sharp in this tournament as they typically are and may find themselves vulnerable to a quick Costa Rican counter-attack.

Costa Rica are healthy and have no selection issues. After resting some players against England, would expect them to return to their regular lineup today. It's a variant of a 5-4-1 but will change shape throughout the game as Costa Rica adjust their tactics. While very much a defence-first team, Costa Rica are dangerous when they get forward. Joel Campbell possesses speed and power as the lone striker and gets great supporting play from wide midfielders Bryan Ruiz and Christian Bolanos.

Greece have been the model of defensive organization since winning Euro 2004. They have shown some holes in this tournament though, particularly on the wings. Greece's 4-3-3/4-5-1 typically sees 9 players surrounding the penalty area at all times on defence. Greece may opt to push a bit higher up the field today though against a Costa Rica attack limited in numbers by its own defensive philosophy.

Personnel

In the Costa Rican Third: Costa Rica maintain a good defensive shape and close out attacking players incredibly fast. Greece aren't a team with overly dynamic forwards and have struggled manufacturing goals in this tournament. Greece can get an occasional darting run from their midfield that causes issues but on the whole Costa Rica will not be scared of this lineup. Advantage: Costa Rica.

In the Midfield: Greece passive defensively through the midfield while Costa Rica willing to put some pressure on the attackers. I also feel Costa Rica a bit more creative and effective in possession then Greece are. Advantage: Costa Rica.

In the Greek Third: I think there's holes in this Greek back line, particularly at left back but I don't feel this Costa Rica is the best to take advantage of that. They can get forward but their goals have been the result of shoddy effort or poor man-marking, neither of which Greece will allow. I think they have options on the wings to get deep down the field but will need to find Campbell effectively in the centre to have any hope of goals. Advantage: Greece.

Goalkeeping: First-choice Greek goalkeeper Orestis Karnezis is a game-time decision after leaving the Ivory Coast game with an injury. Panagiotis Glykos will likely start if he can't go. In either case, Keylor Navas has been one of the top goalkeepers in the tournament and has a better club record the past year then either Greek options. Advantage: Costa Rica.

Costa Rica will win if:

Attack the full backs for Greece with long balls and speed and see if that opens up the Greek defensive lines. Colombia find this incredibly effective in their game and are the most similar in style of play to Costa Rica. Create space out wide and they'll be able to flood the penalty area with players. Greece are good at picking players up but Costa Rica should be able to use their quickness to find open holes for shots.

Greece will win if:

Have to provide greater pressure on Costa Rica in the middle of the field. Greece love to sit back and defend before attacking in formation. Unfortunately, that's exactly what Costa Rica does as well, and they're a faster, more athletic team. Pressure higher and win possession without being in your own penalty area is the best way to draw Costa Rica out of position and get quality opportunities at goal.

Prediction

Hardly the must-see game of the tournament. Both teams are counter-punchers with limited options in attack. Goals will be at a premium in this game and first one to score might be the winner. Here's hoping for an entertaining game but don't really see it happening today.

Costa Rica 1-0 Greece

Game 51 Preview: Netherlands vs. Mexico

NETHERLANDS vs. MEXICO
Round of 16 - Game 3


 Date: June 29, 2014
Time: 12:00 p.m. EDT
Venue: Estadio Castelao, Fortaleza
Overall Head-to-Head Record (W-L-T): 3-2-1 Netherlands
Last Match: 2010 Friendly. Netherlands def. Mexico 2-1.
Line: Netherlands EVEN
Group A Preview here.
Group B Preview here.
Starting Lineups posted separately once they're announced.

Team Profiles 

World Ranking: Netherlands (15th), Mexico (20th)
Managers: Louis van Gaal (NED), Miguel Herrera (MEX)
Captains: Robin van Persie (NED), Rafael Marquez (MEX)
World Cup Appearances: 10 (NED), 15 (MEX)
Best Finish: Netherlands (3x Runners-Up, Last in 2010), Mexico (2x Quarterfinals, Last in 1986)
Qualifying Records: Netherlands (9-0-1, GF: 34, GA: 5), Mexico (10-3-5, GF: 31, GA: 14)

Previous Game Results

Netherlands

June 13th - Netherlands def. Spain 5-1
June 18th - Netherlands def. Australia 3-2

Mexico

June 13th - Mexico def. Cameroon 1-0
June 17th - Mexico tied Brazil 0-0
June 23rd - Mexico def. Croatia 3-1

Rosters


















Injuries/Discipline

Netherlands: Daley Blind (Yellow Card), Jonathan de Guzman (Yellow Card), Stefan de Vrij (Yellow Card), Bruno Martins Indi (Probable - Head)
Mexico: Paul Aguilar (Yellow Card), Rafael Marquez (Yellow Card), Hector Moreno (Yellow Card), Jose Juan Vazquez (Suspended - Card Accumulation)

Overview

A pair of surprising teams so far at the 2014 World Cup take to the field in Fortaleza with a spot in the quarterfinals and perhaps further on the line.

One of the last teams to qualify for this tournament, Mexico have made waves with their group stage performance. Their defence has been nothing short of exceptional and has been bolstered by excellent goalkeeping from Guillermo Ochoa behind them. They will need those performances to continue today though. No team in the World Cup scored more goals in the group stage (10) than Netherlands did.

With a completely revamped back line, and having failed to get a point in Euro 2012, Netherlands was seen as a bit of a mystery in this tournament. Some didn't see them even escaping their group with Spain and Chile in the midst. But the Netherlands defence has been a bright spot and their attacking combo of Arjen Robben and Robin van Persie has been the most dangerous strike duo in the tournament. They will have their hands full against the Mexican defence that conceded 1 goal in the group stage, but no team is better equipped to break down Mexico then this one.

Both teams play a variation of the 3-5-2/5-3-2 formation that everyone loves this tournament. Both teams also tend to play their wing backs as attacking wingers when they're going forward.

Mexico have one selection concern going in to this match. Holding midfielder Jose Juan Vazquez is suspended for this game due to an accumulation of yellow cards in the group stage. The 26 year old has been a revelation this tournament in that role and whoever Mexico replaces him with will be a downgrade defensively as they will likely have to check Wesley Sneijder.

Netherlands come in to this game with their typical starting XI available. Robin van Persie has returned from his suspension and Bruno Martins Indi is likely to play after suffering a concussion in Netherlands' second group match.

Personnel

In the Dutch Third:The 3 central Dutch defenders of Vlaar, de Vrij and Martins Indi were expected to be a weak point this tournament but have been stellar at the back. They get a lot of support from their wing backs and Nigel de Jong but that trio has been a rock at the back. Mexico finally got their scoring going late in the Croatia game but that was largely due to Croatia abandoning defensive zone coverage. Reality is, Mexico have not been able to get consistent runs on the ball towards goal and have lacked finishing touch from top scorer in qualifying Oribe Peralta. They'll get balls in to this part of the field, but finishing them off is a much different story. Advantage: Netherlands.

In the Midfield: A bit of a wash in the central midfield, neither team overly aggressive defensively and both with playmakers. Mexico maybe a bit more dynamic offensively with Herrera and Guardado, Netherlands the better defensive team with Nigel de Jong. Think the key battle here is with the wing backs. Layun vs. Janmaat and Blind vs. Aguilar will determine where this part of the pitch is won. I like the Dutch backs offensive ability but they are also more susceptible to defensive lapses and allowing players behind them. Advantage: Even

In the Mexican Third: Don't know if Mexico is as capable here as they appear in this game. 3 great central defenders but not the speed to necessarily keep pace with Robben and van Persie. I think the Brazil game is key here. Mexico surrendered plenty of chances on goal to Neymar in particular but bad finishing and great goalkeeping held them in. That was once in a lifetime performance by Ochoa and don't know if that can be repeated against all the attacking options the Dutch have. Advantage: Netherlands.

Goalkeeping: Ochoa has been the goalkeeper of the tournament so far. Nothing wrong with Cillessen either although the way he handles the ball must be terrifying to Dutch fans. Advantage: Mexico.

Netherlands will win if:

Close down the attacking midfielders in the space above the penalty area and get the ball to Robben/van Persie on the break. One area that does concern me for the Dutch is the area above their own penalty area. Have found they do allow a gap there with space to operate and Mexico are great at  firing long-range shots from there. Have to close that down unless Cillessen wants to be in a shooting gallery. Offensively, Robben in particular is best with the ball at a full sprint. Look to the wings for Robben in particular on a counter-attack and they'll have plenty of room to work on the Mexican defence.

Mexico will win if:

Have to win the battle of the wing backs on either side of the field and find a way to mark all of Robben/van Persie/Sneijder. Mexico isn't likely to get offence going up the centre of the field today against de Jong and the back 3. But they will likely be able to get Layun and Aguilar behind Blind and Janmaat wide and can really stretch the field that way and create scoring chances. Defensively, there are 3 Dutch players that can all burn you in attack and need very little space to operate. Easier said then done but they all need to be marked at all times in your half. Shut down those 3 and this Dutch attack becomes non-existent.

Prediction

Mexico with too little teeth in attack to seriously harm the Dutch. My guess is they sit back defensively and force the Dutch to probe and keep them out of the penalty area. That didn't work for Chile though and that was without van Persie. Netherlands take this one in the second half.

Netherlands 2-0 Mexico

Saturday, June 28, 2014

Game 49 Recap: Brazil 1-1 (3-2 SO) Chile

BRAZIL 1-1 (3-2 SO) CHILE

After 120+ minutes of soccer, a matter of inches is all that separated these two teams. And in the end, it's Chile who head home in an absolutely crushing loss, while an entire nation rejoices that their host country has another game to play in this World Cup.

It was also a highlight performance from a Brazilian player who many felt was done when he moved to MLS to play for Toronto FC after losing his job in Europe.

It was a raucous atmosphere at kickoff and the Brazilian fans nearly had the chance to blow the roof off in the early minutes. The ball fell to Marcelo on the edge of the area off a Brazilian set piece but his strike could not curl inside the far post.

All Brazil in the first half, Hulk and Neymar played together on the left wing and time and again were able to get past Gary Medel who was an injury doubt in this game. 

Brazil deservedly found the scoresheet in the 18th minute. Neymar's corner kick was flicked by Thiago Silva to the back post and redirected in by David Luiz. Appeared to be an own goal by Gonzalo Jara but review showed it did go off Luiz last for his first ever international goal.

Neymar again was able to get past the Chile defence in the 26th but his left foot let him down (not for the first time this game) as his shot on a partial break tumbled well wide of goal.

Not the strongest of halves for Chile but they capitalized when given the chance. A poor touch by Hulk on a throw in deep in the Brazil end led to a turnover. Eduardo Vargas played Alexis Sanchez towards goal and Sanchez neatly struck the ball past Julio Cesar and inside the far post to silence the crowd and make it a 1-1 game.

Both sides had chances on goal in the remainder of the half but no one got closer then Neymar who saw a header deflect just outside the post from in close.

After a frantic opening 45 minutes, the game slowed down considerably in the Belo Horizonte heat. Brazil appeared to take the lead through Hulk in the 55th minute but he was ruled as having used an arm to bring the ball in to possession and his goal was disallowed and a yellow card issued. Chile responded in the 64th minute but Charles Aranguiz's strike from close range was punched off the line by Cesar. Nothing else was doing for the second half and the first knockout round game became the first in this World Cup to play over 90 minutes.

With both teams clearly exhausted, the game slowed even more in the extra time period. Hulk and Jo were both able to pick up chances for Brazil in the period but were turned away by Claudio Bravo.

With the game appearing destined for penalty kicks, Mauricio Pinilla nearly broke the heart of the entire Brazilian nation. Played through by Sanchez in the 120th minute, Pinilla eluded his man but fired a shot in to the crossbar of the Brazilian goal. It would be the last chance on goal of the extra period.

In to penalty kicks, it was Brazilian goalkeeper Julio Cesar that was the star. Cesar saved the first two Chilean shots and after Marcelo scored on the 3rd Brazil shot, it appeared Brazil would carry that 2-0 lead to victory. 2 Chilean goals and a Hulk miss later though, it was back to 2-2 with 1 shooter each remaining. Neymar calmly put his ball away leaving the game in the hands of Chile's Gonzalo Jara. Jara's strike caromed off the post (Cesar might have saved it anyway) and ricocheted across goal and out the other side of the field, giving Brazil the penalty kick victory.

Gut-wrenching defeat for Chile who you could argue were the better team in this game for long stretches of play.

Goals

Brazil: David Luiz (18')
Chile: Alexis Sanchez (32')

Penalty Kicks:
  1. David Luiz (BRA) scored.
  2. Mauricio Pinilla (CHI) saved by Julio Cesar.
  3. Willian (BRA) missed.
  4. Alexis Sanchez (CHI) saved by Julio Cesar.
  5. Marcelo (BRA) scored.
  6. Charles Aranguiz (CHI) scored.
  7. Hulk (BRA) saved by Claudio Bravo.
  8. Marcelo Diaz (CHI) scored.
  9. Neymar (BRA) scored.
  10. Gonzalo Jara (CHI) missed.
Discipline

Brazil: Hulk (Yellow 55'), Luiz Gustavo (Yellow 60' - Misses next game), Jo (Yellow 93'), Dani Alves (Yellow 105+1')
Chile: Eugenio Mena (Yellow 17'), Francisco Silva (Yellow 40'), Mauricio Pinilla (Yellow 102')

Man of the Match

Julio Cesar was Man of the Match after a brilliant goalkeeping display in the penalty shootout. Saved the first 2 Chilean shots and likely would have gotten a hand to Jara's ball if it hadn't been off the post.People questioned Cesar's form before this tournament. There should be no doubters now. Cesar the hero in Brazil and keeps their hopes of a 6th championship alive.

Key Moment

Never allow a game to go to penalty kicks. In the last minute of extra time, Mauricio Pinilla was able to break away from Thiago Silva for a free shot in front of goal. Pinilla's rocket completely beat Julio Cesar but rose too quickly and rang back out in to play off the crossbar. It would have been a certain victory for Chile at that point. Instead they head home in heartbreak.

What we learned from Brazil

Have better goalkeeping then anyone expected but may have picked up their last victory of the tournament. Shoddy handling of the ball in their defensive third led to the Chile goal and nearly cost Brazil again on multiple opportunities. Had the nice goal off the set piece but Chile took Neymar out of the game and their offence had nothing going as a result. Neither Fred or Jo are of the calibre of their teammates and that lack of striker play is what will ultimately end Brazil's run at some point.

What we learned from Chile

Don't know if they ran out of gas or not (it sure looked like it) but they let off in extra time which hurt them. Had Brazil on the ropes in the second half but couldn't finish them off and let Brazil back in to the game. Thought they were too reliant on the long ball to Sanchez to set up offensive chances. Brazil weren't pressuring overly heavily so not sure why they weren't trying to work midfield unless they wanted to make sure they had players back to defend.

Going Forward

Chile head home, eliminated by Brazil in the Round of 16 for the second straight World Cup. Brazil will play next on July 4th against either Colombia or Uruguay.

Game 50 Starting Lineups (Colombia vs. Uruguay)

Game Preview here.
Starting Lineups Below:

Colombia

Just 1 change from their usual starting XI as Martinez is in for Ibarbo.

 Colombia 4-2-3-1 football formation

 Substitutes:

Goalkeepers: Faryd Mondragon (#22), Camilo Vargas (#12)

Defenders: Santiago Arias (#4), Eder Alvarez Balanta (#16), Carlos Valdes (#23)

Midfielders: Carlos Carbonero (#5), Fredy Guarin (#13), Alexander Mejia (#15), Juan Fernando Quintero (#20)

Forwards: Carlos Bacca (#17), Victor Ibarbo (#14), Adrian Ramos (#19)


Uruguay

Uruguay going 2-3-5. Forlan for Suarez and Lodeiro the casualty of the formation change as Maxi Pereira comes in.

Uruguay 5-3-2 football formation 

Substitutes:


Goalkeepers: Rodrigo Munoz (#12), Martin Silva (#23)

Defenders: Sebastian Coates (#19), Jorge Fucile (#4), Diego Lugano (#2)

Midfielders: Walter Gargano (#5), Nicolas Lodeiro (#14), Diego Perez (#15), Gaston Ramirez (#18)

Forwards: Abel Hernandez (#8), Christian Stuani (#11)

Game 49 Starting Lineups (Brazil vs. Chile)

Game Preview here.
Starting Lineups below:

Brazil

1 change for Brazil. As expected, Fernandinho replaces Paulinho in the midfield.

Brazil 4-3-3 football formation 

Substitutes:

Goalkeepers: Jefferson (#1), Victor (#22)

Defenders: Dante (#13), Henrique (#15), Maicon (#23), Maxwell (#14)

Midfielders: Hernanes (#18), Paulinho (#8), Ramires (#16), Willian (#19)

Forwards: Bernard (#20), Jo (#21)


Chile

1 change as well for Chile, as Arturo Vidal re-enters the lineup for Gutierrez. Gary Medel was an injury concern but is starting.

Chile 3-4-3 football formation 

Substitutes:

Goalkeepers: Johnny Herrera (#23), Cristopher Toselli (#12)

Defenders: Miiko Albornoz (#3), Jose Rojas (#13)

Midfielders: Jean Beausejour (#15), Carlos Carmona (#6), Jose Pedro Fuenzalida (#19), Felipe Gutierrez (#16), Fabian Orellana (#14), Jorge Valdivia (#10)

Forwards: Esteban Paredes (#22), Mauricio Pinilla (#9)
 

Game 50 Preview: Colombia vs. Uruguay

COLOMBIA vs. URUGUAY
Round of 16 - Game 2
 

 Date: June 28, 2014
Time: 4:00 p.m. EDT
Venue: Estadio do Maracana, Rio de Janeiro
Overall Head-to-Head Record (W-L-T): 18-11-9 Uruguay
Last Match: 2014 World Cup Qualifying (September 2013). Uruguay def. Colombia 2-0.
Line: Colombia -110
Group C Preview here.
Group D Preview here.
Starting Lineups posted separately once they're announced.

Team Profiles 

World Ranking: Colombia (8th), Uruguay (7th)
Managers: Jose Pekerman (COL), Oscar Tabarez (URU)
Captains: Mario Yepes (COL), Diego Lugano (URU)
World Cup Appearances: 5 (COL), 12 (URU)
Best Finish: Colombia (Round of 16, 1990), Uruguay (2x Champions, Last in 1950)
Qualifying Records: Colombia (9-4-3, GF: 27, GA: 13), Uruguay (8-5-5, GF: 30, GA: 25)

Previous Game Results

Colombia

Uruguay

June 14th - Costa Rica def. Uruguay 3-1
June 20th - Uruguay def. England 2-1
June 24th - Uruguay def. Italy 1-0

Rosters


















Injuries/Discipline

Colombia: Fredy Guarin (Yellow Card), Carlos Sanchez (Yellow Card)
Uruguay: Martin Caceres (Yellow Card), Walter Gargano (Yellow Card), Diego Godin (Yellow Card), Diego Lugano (Yellow Card, Questionable - Knee), Fernando Muslera (Yellow Card), Egidio Arevalo Rios (Yellow Card), Luis Suarez (Out - Suspended by FIFA)

Overview

The second game of the day also features a pair of continental foes as Colombia take on Uruguay. Uruguay are still reeling from the suspension of Luis Suarez and will have to find some way to counter the Colombian attack without their best and most valuable player.

The star for both teams in Suarez' absence has been Colombia's James Rodriguez. The 22 year old attacking midfielder has been a revelation in the tournament, scoring in all 3 games and making the entire Colombia offence click. Rested in the first half against Japan, Rodriguez's introduction in the second half was the turning point in that game as Rodriguez simply took the game over with his skill and speed. Uruguay's gameplan today has to start with finding a way to control the young star.

Uruguay is expected to stick with their 4-2-2-2 formation, with Diego Forlan likely stepping in for Suarez up front. Forlan was the best player at the 2010 World Cup but has seen his form decline in the subsequent years and at 35 is a sizeable downgrade from the world-class Suarez. A similar lineup was fielded in Uruguay's first group match against Costa Rica and that outing was an absolute disaster for this squad. Have to find a way to create offensive chances through Forlan and will need Edinson Cavani to step up as the primary striker.

Colombia will go with their 4-2-3-1 formation that has been excellent so far. Rested several players in their last match against Japan but should be in full strength today. Biggest selection question for Colombia is at striker. Jackson Martinez filled in for Teofilo Gutierrez last match and responded with 2 goals. Colombia may opt to stick with the in form Martinez as long as that keeps working.

Personnel

In the Colombian Third: Would have been an intriguing battle until Suarez unleashed his inner idiot against Italy. Uruguay was without Suarez for their pre-tournament games and opener and their offence was absolutely dreadful without him. I said before the tournament, no team requires one player for their success more so then Uruguay do, and that player isn't allowed in the stadium today. Cavani and Forlan did not click in their opener and I expect the same today against a quality Colombian defence. Advantage: Colombia.

In the Midfield: Uruguay likely to be in a defensive stance today and have a pair of quality holding midfielders at their disposal. I like Colombia to dominate this stretch of the field though. Too quick in all parts of the game and can stretch the field in all ways with their midfielders. Better on the ball then Uruguay who have been using long balls to their forwards frequently as opposed to working through the midfield. Colombia better defensively than Uruguay and generally move the ball better. Advantage: Colombia.

In the Uruguayan Third: After a debacle against Costa Rica, Uruguay have actually looked competent in the past 2 games and could be at full strength again if captain Diego Lugano is good to go. Except Italy and England don't have the same offensive flare as Colombia and were forced to hang back and deal with the Suarez threat in those games. I expect Uruguay to be on their heels defensively trying to handle all the speed and movement from Colombia and that's not a fight they can win for 90 minutes. Advantage: Colombia.

Goalkeeping: Ospina has been rock-solid. Muslera has looked very tentative in goal. If my research is correct, Muslera also hasn't saved a penalty kick since the 2010 World Cup. Advantage: Colombia.

Colombia will win if:

Maintain their defensive shape to neutralize Cavani/Forlan and get their quick counter-attacks going early. Suarez is the most dynamic but Cavani and Forlan both bring danger to Colombia. Not as quick or versatile as Suarez but both can bury the ball if given time and space. Colombia's defence has been great at preventing teams from having that all tournament, need to ensure that happens again today. Offensively, look for the long stretch passes early and often and get Uruguay out of position. Uruguay's defenders struggle when pressured with speed and one-on-one situations. Colombia excel at creating those issues.

Uruguay will win if:

Need to be all-defence in this game. Won't have nearly the same offensive chances that they've had so far this tournament in this game. Best bet for Uruguay in winning this game; hang back protect your own area, drag the game on as long as possible. If Colombia get momentum going then they don't stop. Uruguay have to weather the early storm, keep balls away from Muslera's goal and get Colombia frustrated in attack. Take advantage of offensive chances if afforded to you but can't be the same attacking Uruguay today that they usually are.

Prediction

Uruguay struggles to get quality scoring chances without Suarez and their defence crumbles again against the best offence they've faced so far. Colombia runs away with this in the second half.

Colombia 3-0 Uruguay