New Straits Times

COPA AMERICA LIMPS TO KICK-OFF

Brazil are favourites in a tournament surrounded by contentiou­s pandemic issue

- RIO DE JANEIRO

BRAZIL kicks off the Copa America that almost never was tomorrow, on home soil for the second time in three years with minnows Venezuela as their opponents in a tournament already dominated by issues off the pitch.

After an often absurd odyssey, the 2020 edition kicks off a year late, in a different country and with fewer teams — and, most perplexing­ly, in the midst of a Covid-19 pandemic raging even more fiercely than it was 12 months ago when the health situation was deemed too dangerous to play.

Co-hosts Argentina and Colombia were stripped of their rights at the 11th hour, due mostly to the deteriorat­ing pandemic situations in those countries but also deadly social unrest in the latter.

In stepped Brazil, supported by the country’s far-right President Jair Bolsonaro, who has made a name for himself downplayin­g the seriousnes­s of the novel coronaviru­s.

Two years after the Selecao won a ninth title, also on home soil, Brazil are hosting the tournament even though the country has the world’s second highest Covid-19 death toll after the United States, with 480,000 fatalities.

Even the reigning champions’ players don’t want to play.

“We are against organising the Copa America, but we will never say no to the Brazilian national team,” the players said in a joint statement on social media earlier this week.

Other players such as Argentina’s Sergio Aguero and Luis Suarez of Uruguay have criticized the decision to go ahead with the tournament in Brazil.

The problems faced by internatio­nal football’s oldest competitio­n have been innumerous.

Originally slated to be a 12-team tournament including Asian federation guests Australia and Qatar, the schedule had to be reorganize­d after both pulled out in February as the new dates clashed with other regional commitment­s.

A second schedule reorganisa­tion took place this month so Brazil could kick-off the tournament instead of Argentina.

The tournament had to survive a last-ditched attempt by the national metalworke­rs’ union, the Socialist Party (PSB) and the Workers’ Party (PT) of former president Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva

to block it in the Supreme Court.

The Supreme Court ruled in favour of the tournament, but told state governors and city mayors to do more to ensure “appropriat­e health protocols” are respected.

Organisers insist it will be safe, with no fans in the stadiums and the teams undergoing mandatory testing every 48 hours. Team movements will be restricted and they will travel to host cities aboard chartered flights.

Led by star forward Neymar, who missed the 2019 tournament due to injury, Brazil will be favourites to defend their title.

The team are in fine form having begun qualifying for the 2022 World Cup in Qatar with six wins from six.

Lionel Messi will lead Argentina as the six-time Ballon d’Or winner aims to finally break his trophy drought in top-level internatio­nal competitio­n after three times before losing in the final.

He’s also lost a World Cup final with Argentina.

Uruguay will be hoping veteran forwards Luis Suarez and Edinson Cavani fire them to a record-extending 16th triumph.

No one else has shown the kind of form that would suggest they could upset the odds.

Before the business end arrives, the Copa will begin with an almost pointless group stage.

The withdrawal of Australia and Qatar leaves two five-team groups in which the top four from each will qualify for the quarter-finals.

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 ??  ?? Brazil’s Neymar (left) and Argentina’s Lionel Messi.
Brazil’s Neymar (left) and Argentina’s Lionel Messi.

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