Otago Daily Times

A to Z of the WORLD CUP

The 2018 Fifa World Cup reaches its climax on Monday morning (3am NZ time) with the final between France and Croatia in Moscow. Mitch Phillips ,of Reuters, compiled this AZ of the tournament.

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A

Africa. For the first time since 1982 no African teams made it to the knockout stage. Egypt and Tunisia never got close, Morocco was a bit unlucky, while Nigeria and Senegal were a matter of minutes away — but when the dust settled it was a huge disappoint­ment for the continent to spend the second half of the tournament watching from home.

B

Boot (Golden). With the final and thirdplace playoff to come, England’s Harry Kane is in pole position on six goals, ahead of

Belgium’s Romelu Lukaku, Portugal’s Cristiano Ronaldo and Russia’s Denis Cheryshev, all on four. Kane’s tally matches Gary Lineker’s in 1986 as England’s tournament best and is the first to include three penalties. Brazil’s Ronaldo, who got eight in 2002, is the only player in the last 10 tournament­s to score more than six. E Europe. For the third tournament in four, there is an allEuropea­n final. This and the previous Europebase­d tournament also featured allEuropea­n semifinal lineups. Once again the continent’s top sides, and some of its lesser ones, have left the rest of the world trailing — and that was with Italy and the Netherland­s watching from home.

F

Forgotten. It could have been one of the greatestev­er World Cup goals and instead turned into one of the greatestev­er World Cup saves, but Jordan Pickford’s unbelievab­le stop from Mateus Uribe’s 30metre topcorner piledriver was not even repeated on the big screen in the Spartak Stadium as from the resulting corner Colombia snatched a mayhemindu­cing equaliser.

G

Golden Generation. Belgium’s players were sick and tired of hearing about and being asked about the tag and how it was ‘‘time to deliver.’’ In most ways they did, performing superbly, scoring memorable goals and dispatchin­g Brazil in the quarterfin­als, but they could not muster enough ideas to unpick the French defence in the last four. The bulk of the team, certainly its creative

end, is still far from retirement age, so stand by for more GG headlines in two years.

H

Hazard. Finally he wore the mantle of superstar like it was not a hair shirt. After disappeari­ng as Belgium slipped out of the last World Cup and 2016 Euros, Eden Hazard really stepped up to the mark in Russia. Demanding the ball, dominating the key games, he could not quite get his side over the line in the semifinal but nobody can this time accuse him of not trying.

I

‘‘It’s (not) coming home.’’ England’s unexpected run to the semifinals launched a nationwide reprise of the 1996 anthem Football’s coming home, which also boomed out of the loudspeake­rs at every stadium before it played and after every goal. Back at Euro

’96 it sang about ‘‘30 years of hurt’’ in relation to the barren spell after the 1966 World Cup. It’s now up to 52 . . . and counting.

J

Japan. Flew the Asia flag with pride on and off the pitch. After its heartbreak­ing late defeat by Belgium, Japan’s players might have been forgiven for throwing a few cups and punching the odd wall. Instead they picked up every piece of debris and left their dressing room looking as if it had never been used. All they left behind was a note, in Russian, thanking their hosts. Pure class.

K Kante. Can any player ever have had so much influence on the success of his teams while attracting so little attention? N’Golo Kante patrols the area in front of his

defence with such understand­ing and appreciati­on that he rarely seems to need to sprint, let alone stretch. He is a dream screen for the men behind him and, as so many teams in Russia have discovered, an absolute nightmare to have to get past.

L

Late goals. Barely a day seemed to pass without some team snatching a goal in the dying moments — helped by what seemed to be the new minimum of five minutes’ stoppage time. Iran, Colombia, England, Portugal, Argentina, Brazil, Germany, Tunisia and others all enjoyed that explosion of joy and relief that comes with a lastgasp winner or equaliser and that have contribute­d to so much of this tournament’s excitement. M Modric (not Messi). Luka Modric has matured through the tournament, and matured through the game in Croatia’s semifinal victory over England. His ease of movement, eye for the right pass and overall class eventually shone through as those around him fell away. Not so Lionel Messi, who left with his World Cup dream unfulfille­d. One of the greatest players of all time alongside Pele and Diego Maradona went out with barely a whimper to join the subset of GOATs who have never won the World Cup — including Ferenc Puskas, Johan Cruyff and George Best, who never even got to play in one.

N Neymar. Option 1. Bravely recovering from a long injury absence, Neymar, the mostfouled player

in the tournament, had more attempts on goal than any other player and did all he could to drag a disappoint­ing Brazil team towards a first final for 16 years. Option 2. Neymar personifie­d everything bad about the world’s most popular game — his amazing talent overshadow­ed by diving, cheating and truly ridiculous rolling around that made him the planet’s biggest laughing stock.

O

Oldest. Egypt goalkeeper Essam ElHadary became the oldest player to appear in a World Cup finals game when he played in his country’s final group game against Saudi Arabia at the age of 45 years, 161 days.

P

Penalties. The 28 awarded up to and including the semifinals was a tournament record by a distance with the previous highest being the 18 given in 2002. Several were the result of VAR interventi­on.

Q

Qatar. Host country for the next World Cup, to be held in NovemberDe­cember 2022, where determined fans will be sometimes able to watch three games in a day — instead of taking three days to get to a game in Russia.

R

Ronaldo. With his shorts hitched to the max, Ronaldo’s lastgasp, freekick equaliser in the 33 draw with Spain was one of the highlights of the early matches. He continued to perform heroics but was unable to drag a very limited Portugal team into the quarterfin­als. Of the ‘‘Big Three’’ in Russia, however, he can probably be most pleased with his contributi­on.

S

Sneaky. Colombia’s players appeared to have been overtaken by mass hysteria when a penalty was awarded against them for hauling down England’s Harry Kane but in the midst of the fourminute protest one of them was ‘‘in the moment’’ enough to repeatedly dig his heel into the grass around the penalty spot in a feeble attempt to make things difficult for the penaltytak­er. It did not work, as Kane converted and England went on to win on a penalty shootout.

T

TikiTaka. Spain made an astonishin­g 1137 passes in 120 minutes against Russia but barely created a scoring opportunit­y and went out on penalties. Pointless passing suddenly looked so last decade. Back to the tactical drawing board.

V

VAR. With very few exceptions, the first use of the Video Assistant Referee system has been a huge success. Several penalties were awarded, and a handful overturned, on the basis of replays and fears of repeated and lengthy delays proved largely unfounded.

U

Upsets. In World Cup terms they do not come any bigger than

Germany losing to South Korea to finish bottom of their group. Spain being knocked out by 70thranked Russia, Argentina held by Iceland and torn apart by Croatia and Spain and Portugal clinging on by its fingertips to draw against Morocco and Iran also had the neutrals cheering.

W

Wrestling. For some unknown reason, dozens of players decided that the best way to defend a corner was to ignore the ball and instead wrap their arms around their opponent and wrestle them to the ground. After initially turning a blind eye, Fifa and its referees decided to clamp down and started awarding penalties — much to the shocked outrage of those who had grappled with impunity in their opening games. X

Xenophobia. Despite all the dire warnings, there has been none, and Russians have shown themselves to be friendly hosts in every city. Y

Yellow. The famed and adored kit of Brazil, which it chose to sometimes replace with a new shiny blue one, as did Colombia. Nigeria introduced a kit that was a worldwide bestseller, then wore a change strip for its first game. Commercial imperative blew tradition out of the window and left fans scratching their heads.

Z

Zagallo. Mario Zagallo won the World Cup twice with Brazil in 1958 and 1962 then managed it the title in 1970. Franz Beckenbaue­r followed him (1974 and 1990) and now Didier Deschamps, captain of France’s 1998 winner, has the chance to join a very exclusive club.

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 ?? PHOTO: REUTERS ?? French flair . . . France midfielder Paul Pogba (left) and forward Antoine Griezmann fool around during a training session in Moscow yesterday.
PHOTO: REUTERS French flair . . . France midfielder Paul Pogba (left) and forward Antoine Griezmann fool around during a training session in Moscow yesterday.
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