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Peruvians look to reassert their dominance at 2018 World Cup

- By Kevin Baxter Los Angeles Times

No country has gone longer between World Cup appearance­s than Peru, which returns to soccer’s biggest stage this month after a 36-year absence. And the country hasn’t stopped celebratin­g since it qualified in November.

“It’s the best,” said midfielder Yoshimar Yotun, who plays in MLS for Orlando City. “For a football player on a national team, the best thing you can do is play in a World Cup and represent your country in front of the world.

“It’s an important point in my career and. … I have really accepted the idea that I’ll be in the World Cup.”

But some of that joy, which was celebrated with a national holiday the day after Peru qualified, was nearly wiped away by an inadverten­t toast.

Paolo Guerrero, Peru’s 34-year-old captain, was suspended last month by the Swiss-based Court of Arbitratio­n for Sport for a failed drug test he blamed on te de coca, a popular centuries-old aromatic tea made from coca leaves he said was given to him last fall by a waiter at a hotel in Lima, the nation’s capital.

A Swiss supreme court judge ordered Guerrero’s 14-month ban frozen, clearing the forward to participat­e in the tournament. In her ruling the judge, Christina Kiss, took into account Guerrero’s age, Peru’s long absence from the World Cup and a letter signed by the captains of Peru’s three first-round opponents — France, Denmark and Australia — urging the suspension be set aside.

That’s not the first time a court has issued a key ruling regarding Peru’s World Cup aspiration­s. During South American qualifying, the Court of Arbitratio­n for Sport determined that Bolivia used an ineligible player against Peru in September 2016.

As a result, Peru’s loss in La Paz, Bolivia’s capital, became a victory, giving it the three points it needed to beat out Chile on goal differenti­al and finish fifth in the South American tournament. That allowed the team to advance to an interconfe­deration playoff it won, earning the final ticket to Russia and the World Cup.

That also capped something of a soccer renaissanc­e for Peru, which played in three World Cups between 1970 and 1982, reaching the quarterfin­als in the first one and advancing to the second round eight years later.

That renaissanc­e shouldn’t have come as a surprise to anyone who was paying attention, though, since Peru played in the semifinals of two of the last three South American championsh­ips, with Guerrero leading the tournament in scoring both times.

Part of the turnaround can be credited to Argentine coach Ricardo Gareca, who took over in February 2015 and hasn’t seen his team lose in more than a year and half, registerin­g victories over World Cup teams Iceland, Croatia, Saudi Arabia and Uruguay along the way.

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