The Saratogian (Saratoga, NY)

I’M GONNA KNOCK YOU OUT

Europe, South America dominate World Cup’s knockout phase

- By Ronald Blum

MOSCOW » The thunder-clapping Icelanders have gone home, along with the Egyptians and Peruvians. Now comes the business end of the World Cup, a Europeanan­d South American-dominated club that rejects most new applicants as unwanted hoi polloi.

The group stage is the crossroads of cultures, a mixture of multitudes filled with happiness and hope.

Then comes the knockout stage, where soccer’s powers pump their pecs and the blue bloods almost always prevail.

Ten European nations reached the round of 16, matching 1998 and 2006 for the most since 11 in 1990, the record since the current format began in 1986.

Four South American teams have advanced, plus Mexico and Japan. For the first time since 1982, no African team made it past the first round.

History is instructiv­e: Europe earned 41 of 64 quarterfin­al berths and South America took 16 since 1986. Among the other regions, Africa and CONCACAF got three apiece and Asia one.

Winnowing to the inner sanctum becomes even more pronounced after that: Europe filled 23 of 32 semifinal spots and South America eight, with South Korea in 2002 at home becoming the only outsider to reach the final four.

Among 20 previous World Cups, Europe has lifted the trophy 11 times and South America nine.

Germany’s departure was the biggest group phase jolt. Projected by many as the first repeat winner since Brazil in 1958 and ‘62, Die Mannschaft became the fourth champion in five tournament­s to exit early.

FIFA has favored the bottom of the bracket with far easier travel, with the Russia-Spain winner headed from Moscow to a quarterfin­al in Sochi, then potentiall­y a semifinal and the final in the capital. The Colombia-England winner in Moscow goes to a quarterfin­al in Samara, then would be on track to finish at Moscow.

A look at the Round of 16:

SATURDAY FRANCE VS. ARGENTINA

Lionel Messi & Co. was on the verge of eliminatio­n before Marco Rojos’ 86th-minute goal against Nigeria. With an average age of 26, France is among the youngest teams, led by dynamic 19-year-old striker Kylian Mbappe. At 31, this likely is Messi’s last chance for the World Cup title he needs to match Diego Maradona in the minds of many Argentinia­ns. While Argentina struggled, France must awaken from a somnambula­nt groupstage finale against Denmark.

URUGUAY VS. PORTUGAL

Cristiano Ronaldo, like Messi a five-time FIFA Player of the Year, has four goals in the tournament leads the European champions against a Uruguay team known foremost for the bite marks Luis Suarez left in Italian defender Giorgio Chiellini four years ago. Uruguay is the least-populous of the round of 16 teams.

SUNDAY SPAIN VS. RUSSIA

World Cup hosts outside the soccer powers usually perform better than expected. Russia should have huge support at Luzhniki Stadium, making it closer than the 10th vs 70th matchup in the rankings.

 ?? ANTONIO CALANNI — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? England’s Harry Kane celebrates after he scored his side’s second goal during the group G match between England and Panama at the 2018 soccer World Cup at the Nizhny Novgorod Stadium in Nizhny Novgorod , Russia, Sunday.
ANTONIO CALANNI — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS England’s Harry Kane celebrates after he scored his side’s second goal during the group G match between England and Panama at the 2018 soccer World Cup at the Nizhny Novgorod Stadium in Nizhny Novgorod , Russia, Sunday.
 ?? ALASTAIR GRANT — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Belgium’s Adnan Januzaj celebrates after scoring the opening goal during the group G match between England and Belgium at the 2018 soccer World Cup in the Kaliningra­d Stadium in Kaliningra­d, Russia, Thursday.
ALASTAIR GRANT — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Belgium’s Adnan Januzaj celebrates after scoring the opening goal during the group G match between England and Belgium at the 2018 soccer World Cup in the Kaliningra­d Stadium in Kaliningra­d, Russia, Thursday.

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