The Day

Vidal says beating Germany would make Chile world's best

- By JAMES ELLINGWORT­H AP Sports Writer

St. Petersburg, Russia — Arturo Vidal and Chile want to be the unofficial world champions.

It may be only the Confederat­ions Cup on the line when Chile faces Germany in today's final, but the combative midfielder wants to claim the bragging rights over his German teammates at Bayern Munich.

It could be the third title in as many years for Chile's golden generation of players. They racked up Copa America wins in 2015 and 2016, beating Lionel Messi's Argentina in both finals, and defeated Cristiano Ronaldo's Portugal on penalties in Wednesday's Confederat­ions Cup semifinal.

"We have proven our value on the pitch. We beat Argentina, which is one of the best teams and a few days ago we beat Portugal, the European champion," Vidal said. "So tomorrow, if we win we will be the best team in the world."

Germany coach Joachim Loew said Chile was far outperform­ing expectatio­ns.

"We wonder about how so many good players come from Chile," he said. "If such a small country can take such a prominent role in football ... that's a great, great achievemen­t"

Fatigue could be an issue for a Chile team that has played eight games in a month and went to penalties against Portugal, but Vidal hopes the will to win can make up for any tired legs.

"Our fuel reserves never run empty," he said. "Today we are ahead of the final and the pleasure is a unique situation in football."

Sunday's final will pitch youth against experience, with an experiment­al Germany side taking on a Chile team that has kept the same key players for several years.

The Confederat­ions Cup is FIFA's dress rehearsal for the World Cup, but for Germany it's an audition.

Loew's young players know they're fighting each other for a chance in next year's World Cup squad, when key players from the victorious 2014 side like Toni Kroos, Mesut Ozil and Thomas Mueller are set to return. The German under-21 team's European Championsh­ip win on Friday means younger players are staking a claim to a World Cup place too.

Chile and Germany drew 1-1 in the group stage, with Lars Stindl canceling out Alexis Sanchez's sixth-minute opener for Chile.

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