The Star Malaysia

Belgium won’t waffle it

The Red Devils plan to get the job done as they brace for Brazil challenge

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KAZAN: At a World Cup rocked repeatedly by the fall of giants, Brazil and Belgium have managed to hold firm in the maelstrom and will meet in a blockbuste­r quarter-final in Kazan.

Most pre-tournament modelling has been put through the shredder by the eliminatio­ns of traditiona­l heavyweigh­ts like Germany and Spain.

However, the clash of the fancied South Americans and Belgium’s “Golden Generation” today has given the most casual of analysts reason to feel smug that, at least, they got one thing right in their scenario plotting.

The teams have progressed through different means but each arrive with confidence after rousing wins in their last starts.

Inspired by Neymar brilliance and the wiles of Willian, Brazil sent a tough Mexico side packing with a 2-0 defeat that cemented Tite’s side as favourites to claim a record-extending sixth World Cup trophy.

It was hardly such smooth sailing for the Belgians, who suffered a huge scare in their last-gasp 3-2 win over Japan.

But their marauding finish, banging in three consecutiv­e goals late in the tie to erase a 2-0 deficit, was a sobering reminder of the firepower at Roberto Martinez’s disposal.

Against Brazil, however, Belgium’s formidable attack featuring captain Eden Hazard and Romelu Lukaku may be hard pressed to break down a stingy defence which has conceded one goal in their four matches at the tournament, and a total of six from their past 25.

Their win over Mexico showed textbook defending from the central pairing of Thiago Silva and Miranda, assisted by fullbacks Fagner and Filipe Luis.

If there is one glimmer of hope for Belgium, it might be the suspension of holding midfielder Casemiro, who picked up his second yellow card during the Mexico game.

The Real Madrid man has been key to Brazil’s structure, so his likely replacemen­t, the 33-year-old Fernandinh­o of Manchester City, will have big shoes to fill.

Although Luis put in a solid display against Mexico, Tite may be tempted to recall his preferred leftback Marcelo, who missed the match with a back injury but returned to training.

At the other end, Brazil’s attack has clicked after a disappoint­ing start to the tournament, and even Neymar’s much-criticised histrionic­s could not completely overshadow a dominant performanc­e against Mexico.

They will look to exploit a Belgium defence that has let through four goals and has a trio of big centreback­s that may be exposed for pace by the nippy Neymar, Willian and Philippe Coutinho.

Belgium, bidding to reach their first semi-finals since 1986 in Mexico, face a huge challenge to knock off Tite’s men but after surviving Japan, they already feel they are playing with house money.

“We can enjoy it from the first minute,” Martinez said.

“I don’t think anyone expects us to go through to the semi-finals.” — Reuters

 ??  ?? Looking forward: Belgium striker Dries Mertens (second from right) leading his teammates during a training session in Dedovsk yesterday. Inset: Brazil defender Marcelo gesturing towards fans outside their hotel in Kazan yesterday. — Reuters / AFP
Looking forward: Belgium striker Dries Mertens (second from right) leading his teammates during a training session in Dedovsk yesterday. Inset: Brazil defender Marcelo gesturing towards fans outside their hotel in Kazan yesterday. — Reuters / AFP

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