So, if not Brazil, who? Fierce rival and continental neighbour Argentina is staking its own claim. Their status as second favourite in the eyes of most experts, if not the bookmakers, is because of the coach, the astute Jose Pekerman, and two of the best playmakers in the game. Eighteen-year-old Lionel Messi has been singled out by none other than the legendary Diego Maradona, who had this to say: "I have seen the player who will inherit my place in Argentinian lore and his name is Messi. He is offering classes in beautiful football...my kind of player in our blue and white jersey."
The other great Argentinian hope is a comparative veteran at 27. Juan Roman Riquelme dragged his mediocre club team Villareal to the Champions League semis, showcasing his unique abilities to hold possession in midfield and snake through passes that no one else sees. A Barcelona reject after one poor season, Riquelme will feel he has something to prove on the biggest stage. Just as Villareal has done with so much success, Pekerman has designed the national team to play to the unassuming midfielder's strengths. With a squad including Crespo, Heinze, Tevez and Cambiasso supporting the two superstars, Argentina is quietly confident of its prospects.
Italy announced they're contenders when they demolished hosts Germany 4-1 in a friendly recently. Remarkably for the Azzurri, they are coming to the Cup with a vibrant attack. Marcelo Lippi, amongst the most respected coaches of all time, has eschewed the catenaccio-style of prioritising defence that Italy has brought to almost every edition of the World Cup. With agile, predatory strikers like Inzaghi and Del Piero and the hulking presence of Luca Toni feeding off the magic passes that the ludicrously gifted Francesco Totti provides, Lippi looks to have found the right balance. If Totti is back to his best (a fracture of the left fibula kept him out almost the entire season), Italy will boast a formidable attack.
As always, it will also have the confidence of an experienced back line. In captain Cannavaro, Nesta, Zambrotta and Massimo Oddo, it has a defence with enough tactical awareness and quality. Gattuso will be a terror in midfield while Pirlo can pass the ball with the precision of an American quarterback. The only cloud on the Italian horizon: a match-fixing scandal that's engulfed the domestic league with top clubs like Juventus and AC Milan implicated. The national team claims to be unaffected but it must be playing on the players' minds, especially goalkeeper Gianluigi Buffon's, who was questioned by prosecutors last week.
England coach Sven Goran Eriksson has much to ponder. He's yet to decide what formation suits his team best in the absence of talismanic forward Wayne Rooney, throwing a previously settled team into disarray. The latest scan results indicate that Rooney's foot will not heal in time and Jermaine Defoe will probably have to be drafted in. Eriksson will know on June 7, only two days before the Cup begins, if the volatile Man U striker will be fit. British bookmakers have England at 7/1 (joint second favourites), but the squad's confidence will have been dented by the absence of such a vital player.
Of course, there are others with a genuine chance of parading the trophy around the Olympia Stadium in Berlin on July 9. Spain has some of the most exciting footballers on the planet but is a perennial under-achiever on the big stage. Holland is another, never having won the trophy even though 'total football' of the Cryuff era helped revolutionise the game. Portugal also has great potential and a very shrewd coach. The Czech Republic proved to be an outstanding team in World Cup qualifying and could be more than a handful for the big guns. Of the African teams, Ivory Coast looks most likely to mount a decent challenge. Guus Hiddink-inspired Australia could be a surprise entry in the semis.
It has to be said, however, that the way the teams are shaping up it looks like the tournament is Brazil's to lose. Thirty-one other teams will spend an arduous month, struggling to alter that outcome as they pursue a dream.
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