Cape Argus

So who do we support now?

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assistant and later head coach at Stuttgart, winning the 1997 German Cup.

He later won the Austrian championsh­ip with Tirol Innsbruck, but never settled long at stations which have including Fenerbahce and Austria Vienna.

Low inherited influentia­l players like captain Michael Ballack, midfielder Bastian Schweinste­iger and striker Miroslav Klose but integrated a new generation of players who had come through Germany’s academies and shone in winning the Under-21 European Championsh­ip in 2009.

Those Under-21 players, including Mesut Ozil, Manuel Neuer, Mats Hummels, Sami Khedira, Jerome Boateng, plus another newcomer in Bayern Munich’s Thomas Muller, impressed at the 2010 World Cup in South Africa.

After the triumph in Brazil, it was time for a change, with captain Philipp Lahm and Schweinste­iger among the stalwarts who retired.

Now another watershed has been reached, but Low lives to fight another day. KAZAN, Russia: Argentina may have been knocked out of the World Cup but plenty of their frustrated fans remain, holding tickets to finals they expected their team to feature in, while hoping desperatel­y that bitter rivals Brazil get eliminated.

With Argentina runnersup in Brazil four years ago and quarter-finalists at the previous two World Cups, a number of their supporters had understand­ably planned for a long stay.

But their 4-3 defeat to France in Kazan condemned them to their earliest exit since 2002, leaving more than a few itinerarie­s up in the air.

Days after masses of blue and white-clad fans marched to Kazan Arena singing “champions of Russia”, Enrique Mayol of Buenos Aires cut a more subdued figure as he walked the town centre on a sweltering day.

“This is very tough. In Argentina we are fanatical about soccer. The issue of losing is very tough, especially being here, it alters your life plans,” said Mayol, who is left with a ticket to the FranceUrug­uay quarter-final in Nizhny Novgorod on Friday.

“We had foreseen going to play the quarter-finals in Nizhny and we had to change the tickets because of what we had been assigned.

“But we carry on, and it’s an event which takes place every four years, and it’s fantastic, and we want to carry on watching soccer.”

Tables of Argentine fans did just that at the local Twin Peaks bar, watching gloomily as Brazil beat Mexico 2-0 to set up a quarter-final with Belgium in Kazan on Friday.

When Brazil’s Neymar scored his goal, a couple of middle-aged Argentines rose from their seats and shuffled toward the exit in disgust.

They are more likely to cheer for Belgium on Friday, but Leandro Garay from Escobar in Buenos Aires province said it was tough to support any team left in Russia.

“We Argentines are a bit different in that regard,” he said near the Kazan Kremlin, the city’s main tourist site.

“We only support Argentina. Other fans support their own team and Argentina or their own team and Brazil, but we only support Argentina.

“Honestly, we are only moved by Argentina and that’s it. Argentine football is what runs in our veins.”

For Mariano Nayar from Buenos Aires, the pain of seeing Lionel Messi’s World Cup exit still lingered as he trudged around town with two sweaty compatriot­s.

“It hurts, it hurts, it hurts, because our expectatio­ns were to get to the final,” he said.

“We have the best player of the world so we always bet on him, but sadly this time we did not have a very wellstruct­ured team.

“Sadly, we have to watch it on TV now, but we will enjoy it anyway.

“We like football. In Argentina we are fans by nature so we will enjoy it anyway.” – Reuters

 ?? PICTURE: EPA ?? LONE RANGER: Germany coach Joachim Loew reacts during his team’s World Cup Group F match against South Korea in Kazan last week.
PICTURE: EPA LONE RANGER: Germany coach Joachim Loew reacts during his team’s World Cup Group F match against South Korea in Kazan last week.

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