Business Day

Colombia seek to revive their magic after tepid qualifiers

• The dancing darlings of Rio pin hopes on progressin­g from group round on star strikers Falcao and Rodriguez

- Agency Staff

With a scintillat­ing counteratt­acking style and salsadanci­ng celebratio­ns, Colombia became the darlings of the 2014 World Cup when they shimmied their way to the quarter-finals.

But the “cafeteros”, as they are known in honour of the Andean country’s rich Arabica coffee, lost some of their swagger in the qualifying campaign for this World Cup.

They scored just 21 goals during the gruelling two-year, 18-match South American qualifiers and limped over the line with three points from their last four games to claim fourth spot.

Argentine coach Jose Pekerman will be striving to bring back the magic to a team that boasts Monaco striker Radamel Falcao and 2014 Golden Boot winner James Rodriguez.

There were glimpses of the old lustre during Colombia’s friendly against France in March, when the South Americans roared back from 2-0 down to beat Les Bleus 3-2.

“Colombia showed World Cup attitude,” a satisfied Pekerman said after the game at the Stade de France.

Colombians are also pinning their hopes on Falcao, known as “El Tigre” (The Tiger), who sat out the 2014 World Cup due to a ligament injury but is hoping to make up for lost time in Russia. “I’ve imagined myself scoring a goal in the World Cup many times. I haven’t counted how many times, but yes, many times,” Falcao, 32, laughingly said in a recent interview.

Luckily for this canaryyell­ow-shirted squad, Colombia will face manageable rivals in Japan, Senegal and Poland — with Group H the only one to lack a World Cup winner.

The liveliest showdown is likely to be between Colombia, who are ranked 16th, and Poland, ranked 10th and back in the tournament for the first time since 2006, thanks to record scorer Robert Lewandowsk­i.

Senegal, ranked 28th, will be competing in the World Cup for the second time after reaching the quarterfin­als in Japan and South Korea in 2002.

Japan sealed their sixth straight qualificat­ion for the World Cup but are ranked a lowly 60th. Comforting­ly for Colombia, they thrashed Japan 4-1 at the 2014 World Cup.

“It’s a level group, we have to compete very well to get through the first round,” Rodriguez said. “Difficult, but nothing is impossible.”

Colombia are in their fifth World Cup, with their quarterfin­al appearance in 2014 in Brazil — where they lost to the hosts — their best performanc­e.

 ?? /Reuters ?? World Cup attitude: Colombia coach Jose Pekerman, centre, talks tactics with, left, James (pronounced “Hamez”) Rodriguez, and Radamel Falcao.
/Reuters World Cup attitude: Colombia coach Jose Pekerman, centre, talks tactics with, left, James (pronounced “Hamez”) Rodriguez, and Radamel Falcao.

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