Los Angeles Times

SOCCER FINAL ISN’T ABOUT REVENGE

Germany embarrasse­d Brazil in the World Cup in 2014, but teams say this is no rematch.

- By Kevin Baxter kevin.baxter@latimes.com

RIO DE JANEIRO — In the climactic scene of the iconic boxing moving “Rocky,” a bloodied and battered Apollo Creed pulls Rocky Balboa close and says, “Ain’t gonna be no rematch.” But they do meet again. It’s tough to pass up a rematch. Win once? Maybe you got lucky. Do it again and no one can question who’s better. That’s why Muhammad Ali fought Joe Frazier three times. It’s why the Yankees play the Red Sox 19 times each season.

It’s also why Saturday’s Olympic soccer final between host Brazil and World Cup champion Germany has become, for Brazilians, the biggest event of the Rio Games.

Two years ago Germany humiliated Brazil, 7-1, on its home soil in the most lopsided World Cup semifinal in history. It was a national embarrassm­ent that will not soon be forgotten.

Saturday’s rematch, which is expected to draw a sold-out crowd of nearly 80,000 to the iconic Maracana, offers a chance at both revenge and redemption though it can’t completely atone for the World Cup debacle because it won’t be a true internatio­nal match.

FIFA, the world governing body for soccer, is so worried the Olympic tournament might one day overshadow its World Cup, it has watered down the men’s half of the Summer Games competitio­n by making it an agegroup competitio­n limited to players no older than 23.

Each team is allowed three exceptions, so Brazil’s roster includes 24-year-old striker Neymar, the only Brazilian Olympian who also played in the World Cup, though he sat out the Germany game because of an injury. Defender Matthias Ginter is the only German who was also on the World Cup roster, although he never played.

“That was the World Cup. This is the Olympic team,” Brazil Coach Rogerio Micale said. “Neymar never played in that match so there is nothing that could generate any type of feeling that we have to take revenge.

“It is a different time with different players and ages.”

Try telling that to the Brazilian fans, who are so starved for good news they’re willing to overlook the difference­s.

Twice in the last two years Brazil has invited the world over for a party, only to wind up standing in the corner watching everyone else dance. In the World Cup, the Brazilian team was so crushed under the unrelentin­g pressure of its soccermad populace that three players were in tears during its round-of-16 shootout with Chile.

The collapse against Germany was understand­able if not inevitable.

This summer, Brazil’s Olympic team had won 15 medals — only five of them gold — entering the final weekend.

A victory Saturday, the penultimat­e day of competitio­n, would provide a huge measure of pride for a country that has won a record five World Cups but never an Olympic title.

Brazil is guaranteed no less than a silver, its sixth Olympic medal in soccer, most of any country. But second place won’t do this time.

“This is what we wanted,” Brazilian forward Gabriel Jesus said. “We are fighting to conquer this.”

Germany is also playing for its first Olympic title as a unified team, though East Germany won the tournament in 1976.

“What could be a greater experience for a young player than to be here at the Maracana for the final of an Olympic Games, playing in front of nearly 80,000 people?” said Germany Coach Horst Hrubesch, who has also dismissed comparison­s to 2014.

“What counts is this game, the Olympic final,” he said. “It is a different team.”

Saturday’s final will be a study in contrasts. Brazil hasn’t allowed a goal, while Germany has scored a tournament-high 21 times. Two players — Serge Gnabry and Nils Petersen — have combined for 12 goals, equaling what Brazil’s entire roster has scored.

Brazil’s roster features players signed to contracts in four of Europe’s top five leagues. Gnabry, a midfielder with England’s Arsenal, is the only German to play outside the domestic Bundesliga.

Micale continues to insist this ain’t gonna be no rematch.

“I am sure the final with Germany will be a great match, but it has nothing to do with the past,” Micale said. “Emotionall­y we will be strong as we have gone through so much already. During the tournament there have been questions and doubts.

“Now we just have to [play] our final match.”

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