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Eric Farnsworth

Eric Farnsworth

Posted: June 22, 2010 01:54 PM

World Cup: The Year of Latin America?

What's Your Reaction:

Each World Cup brings a new storyline, and this year is no different. The rise of African football, the year that Spain finally met expectations, the return of England to World Cup prominence-- all of these and others have been mooted as possibilities for 2010. But to this point, all have proven a bust. In fact, having just watched Chile defeat Switzerland, the real story of this year's competition is the dominance of the Western Hemisphere.

Latin American nations, as well as the United States, have not lost one game yet in the preliminary rounds, except for Honduras' 1-0 defeat by another Latin American nation, Chile, and 2-0 to Spain. With the final game left to play in the opening round, it's likely that no fewer than six or even seven of the eight Western Hemisphere representatives will go through, almost half of the final 16 in the quarter finals. This contrasts with the under-performing Europeans, only one of which (Holland) is at the top of its group.

England, Germany, and Italy have all underperformed, whereas the French have just been inept- poetic justice for the handball that brought them through qualifying against the Irish. Portugal looked languid until a wipe-out of North Korea. Spain needed to play the weakest team in the tournament from the Western Hemisphere to notch its first points.

Head to head, Western Hemisphere against Europe, the results have so far been amazing. Chile has knocked off Switzerland, which earlier beat Spain. Paraguay defeated Slovakia and tied Italy; Mexico defeated France; the United States tied both England and Slovenia.

Two of the three teams with two victories after two games (Argentina, Brazil, and Holland) are from Latin America. Every Latin American team except Honduras has at least three points, and the United States has two. No other region begins to approach this early record; only one team from Africa, for example, has more than one point, including host South Africa which will be the first host team in history not to make it out of the preliminary round. The exception is Ghana, which leads a group devoid of a representative from the Western Hemisphere. Asia fares little better.

The World Cup can turn on a dime, especially once the knock-out rounds begin. But the initial storyline has to be the overall success of the Western Hemisphere, positioning the region very well to advance deeply into the tournament.

As I've earlier predicted, I still like Brazil as the tournament champion. Argentina also looks strong, although one wonders whether the drama that always accompanies their coach will catch up to them over the course of a month-long tournament. My heart, though, is first with the United States, of course, and then Mexico and other Latin American nations that have yet to win the trophy.

Stay tuned, more to come.

 
 
 
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Aripottah
Dining on micro-bios may be hazardous to health
08:56 PM on 06/24/2010
A good tournament so far, a few errant referee calls notwithstanding. FIFA I hope you are listening and watching, and ready to make certain decisive changes.

I expect many great matches to come. A big thank-you to our great S. African hosts.
09:08 PM on 06/23/2010
cant wait for this stupid sport to be over. then the post can get back to sports that really matter!!!!
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apessano
Darwin Loves You
12:19 AM on 06/24/2010
Fail.
Go back to your Nascar.
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malinvr
05:39 PM on 06/23/2010
So true.
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gbfjonly
12:35 PM on 06/23/2010
Yes, the knockout stage is a whole new tournament. But what Mr. Farnsworth said is 100% true.

The 5 teams from South America have performed pretty well, to my own surprise. Of course, you'd expect Argentina and Brazil to go through without major problems. But Chile, Uruguay and Paraguay are among the few teams that played consistently well.

I just hope all American teams [North and South] don't suffer from some kind of "Spanish chickening" disease and keep up the good work on the knockout stage.
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Doctor Nick
Hi, everybody!
09:40 PM on 06/22/2010
Go Western Hemishpere!

There is the famous World cup championship pattern and geography - no Euro team winning outside of Europe, only one non-euro team ever winning in Europe. I wonder if it holds for the group stages as well. Someone should do an analysis.

It's obviously a bit premature but regardless of what happens in the knockout stages, getting 7 out of 16 berths in the knockout stages would be amazing (and probably unprecedented). Since after all there are only 8 berths for our beloved hemisphere.

Fueraza Paraguay!
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05:09 PM on 06/22/2010
Maybe you should wait a couple of weeks before declaring the winners and losers of this World Cup. The knockout stage is a whole new tournament and nobody will remember what happened at group stage. We have seen a lot of teams peak at group stage before only to have a rude awakening, and vice versa.