Arab Times

WC qualifying tourney reaching climax

Italy hope to regain form against Sweden

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LONDON, Nov 7, (Agencies): The lineup of teams at the World Cup in Russia will be confirmed over the next week.

Here’s a look at the two-leg European and interconti­nental playoffs matches, as well as how African qualifying is shaping up:

Northern Ireland are within reach of their first World Cup in 32 years after hitting their target of second place in a group won by defending champion Germany.

Switzerlan­d, ranked No. 4 in August, find themselves in a tense playoff despite nine straight wins to start qualifying.

On Monday, Switzerlan­d coach Vladimir Petkovic was still looking back to the 2-0 loss at Portugal last month, saying he had imagined playing a “nice friendly” game this week. He acknowledg­ed his team was too passive against Portugal, and challenged players he did not identify to take more responsibi­lity now.

The Swiss need to forget about that match before the first leg Thursday at Windsor Park, where only Germany have beaten Northern Ireland in a competitiv­e match in the past four years.

Switzerlan­d have a nine-game winning streak at home in tournament qualifiers, and hosts the return on Sunday in Basel.

Petkovic

Greece are bidding to reach a major tournament again after an embarrassi­ng qualificat­ion campaign for the 2016 European Championsh­ip.

Without defender Kostas Manolas, who is banned from the first leg,

Italy’s Daniele De Rossi (right), and Eder train ahead of Friday’s World Cup play-off soccer match against Sweden,

at the Coverciano training center, near Florence, Italy on Nov 7. (AP)

pressed in qualifying with a win over France and finished ahead of the Netherland­s.

“We are winners just by being here,” Sweden coach Janne Andersson said.

The first leg will be in Sweden on Friday, with the return match on Monday in Italy.

Sweden went unbeaten at home in qualifying at Friends Arena and striker Marcus Berg scored eight times in nine matches.

Being in the playoffs for a major tournament is nothing new for Ireland.

This will be the team’s ninth time, and they have lost five of them — including against France ahead of the 2010 World Cup when Thierry Henry clearly handled the ball in the build-up to the crucial goal.

The first leg will be in Denmark on Saturday. Ireland will host the second leg on Tuesday.

Ireland have effectivel­y already won one playoff — by beating Wales 1-0 in their final qualifier — and will likely rely on the counteratt­acking tactics that worked so well in Cardiff.

While there are no real stars in the Ireland team, Denmark have a standout in Christian Eriksen — one of European soccer’s best playmakers over the past few years at Tottenham. He scored eight times from midfield in qualifying.

The Danes’ 4-0 win over Poland in group play highlights their potential and they are also higher in the FIFA rankings, at No. 19 compared to Ireland’s No. 26.

The managers — Martin O’Neill and Age Hareide — are former teammates at English club Norwich.

This is the scenario Australia aimed to avoid when they switched from Oceania to the Asian Football Confederat­ion after the 2006 World Cup: A last-ditch interconti­nental playoff in the Americas for a spot at soccer’s marquee event.

Australian players traveled from three continents to assemble in Honduras this week to prepare for Friday’s first leg. The return match will be in Australia on Wednesday.

It was a similar scenario when the Australian­s played Uruguay for a

Cahill

place at the 2006 tournament. Uruguay won 1-0 in Montevideo, and Australia leveled it up with a 1-0 win in Sydney before advancing 4-2 on penalties. It ended a long drought for the Socceroos, who had failed to advance from the last playoff stage in 1986 (against Scotland), in 1994 (against Argentina), in 1998 (against Iran), and in 2002 (against Uruguay).

Tim Cahill, the only player still active from that playoff series in 2005 and now Australia’s all-time leading scorer, is in doubt because of an ankle injury.

New Zealand will return to the scene of one of their greatest triumphs when it hosts Peru on Saturday.

In 2009, New Zealand beat Bahrain 1-0 in front of a crowd of 35,000 at the Wellington Regional Stadium to qualify for the World Cup for the second time. It had previously qualified in 1982, the same year in which Peru made their last World Cup appearance.

The return leg will be in Peru on Wednesday.

Rory Fallon, who scored New Zealand’s winning goal in that match eight years ago, has been recalled to the All Whites after a one-year ab- He is currently playing for Dorchester in the seventh tier of English soccer. That win over Bahrain briefly put soccer center-stage in a rugby-mad country and Saturday’s match will likely do so again. The match is a sellout.

Peru, ranked No. 10, starts as the overwhelmi­ng favorite against 122nd-ranked New Zealand but have a significan­t setback, with striker Paolo Guerrero ruled out after failing a doping test. Guerrero scored six goals in qualifying.

Africa

Africa’s last three World Cup places will be decided on the final group games in qualifying, when Ivory Coast could miss out and Congo could qualify for the first time since 1974.

Two of the five groups are settled, with Nigeria and Egypt already through.

Tunisia and Congo will tussle for a place from Group A. Tunisia have a three-point advantage, so Congo needs to beat Guinea and hope Tunisia loses at home to Libya. If that happens, the World Cup place will go to the team with the best goal difference.

Morocco and Ivory Coast face a straight shootout in Group C when Morocco travel to Abidjan. Ivory Coast must win to sneak through to the World Cup and deny former coach Herve Renard, now with Morocco.

Senegal can seal their place on Friday in a contentiou­s qualifier against South Africa, a game ordered by FIFA to be played again because of match-fixing by the referee. Senegal lost the initial game but if it wins on its second chance, it’ll be through to the World Cup.

That will lead to serious discontent from the other teams. Burkina Faso, hoping to go to the World Cup for the first time, have already appealed against FIFA’s decision.

the last-but one surviving member of the West German team which won the 1954 World Cup, died on Tuesday, his exclub Cologne said.

The 90-year-old played on the left wing in the final as the Germans fell two goals behind after just eight minutes but fought back to beat Hungary, 3-2, in "the Miracle of Berne". Schaefer's death means midfielder

85, is the last surviving member of that team. Germany's current coach

who is preparing for Friday's friendly against England in Wembley, mourned the loss.

"The news that Hans Schaefer has died makes us all very sad here in the national team. As one of the heroes of Berne, he will never be forgotten," Loew said.

In the 1954 final, and one of football's greatest players, netted goals for Hungary after six and eight minutes.

Midfielder pulled a goal back for the Germans in the tenth minute. Right winger

then wrote himself into German football folklore, equalising before half time and scoring the winner six minutes from time.

"I am very sad and will always remember Hans Schaefer as a great Cologne player and person. #RIP," former Cologne, Arsenal and Germany striker

wrote on Twitter.

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