Hindustan Times (Chandigarh)

Uruguay punch above weight

- Reuters

NIZHNY NOVGOROD: With similar accents and culture, there is little that annoys your average Uruguayan more than being mistaken for an Argentine next door.

No one, however, is confusing them at the World Cup.

Argentina, with a population of more than 40 million, have gone home after a shambolic campaign that saw just one lastgasp win in four matches, a miserable Lionel Messi failing again on the big stage, and a wobbly defence beaten nine times.

Uruguay, with 3.3 million people, are into a quarter-final with Argentina’s conquerors France after four straight wins including a stunning 2-1 knockout victory over Cristiano Ronaldo’s Portugal. So with such a small population pool, how can ‘La Celeste’ (The Light Blues) be so consistent­ly good?

Their success, as any fan knows, is no new phenomenon.

Uruguay won the inaugural World Cup in their capital Montevideo in 1930 and upset hosts Brazil to lift it again in 1950 in front of a crowd of 205,000, the largest to ever watch a match anywhere, in a game more known as the ‘Maracanazo’.that early success was thanks in part to enlightene­d social inclusion policies. While South American neighbours were restrictin­g soccer to a European descendant elite, Uruguay’s star was Jose Andrade, the son of an African-born slave.

Beyond the national obsession with soccer — notable even in comparison with the passions on display in neighbouri­ng Brazil and Argentina — there is the question of stability at the helm. Their current coach Oscar Tabarez, for example, has been in charge for 12 years and is at his third World Cup of that spell. Locals call him ‘El Maestro’ (The Teacher). Thentherei­sameticulo­us kids’ soccer network that gets children organised and enthused from aged four.

Furthermor­e, Uruguay has a highly-developed coaching network that is not shy to move talent to Europe fast, which the national team can then bank on. All time top-scorer Luis Suarez headed to the Netherland­s aged 19 to join Groningen, before going on to Ajax, Liverpool and Barcelona.

Then there is a more nebulous factor — the famous Uruguayan “Garra Charrua” (Charrua Claw), meaning a fighting spirit and intensity said to enable the team to play above its real level.

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