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- <text id=94TT0786>
- <title>
- Jun. 20, 1994: Sport:190 Countries Can't Be Wrong
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
- Jun. 20, 1994 The War on Welfare Mothers
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- SPORT, Page 56
- 190 Countries Can't Be Wrong
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p> The World Cup begins this week and will be followed
- intently around the globe--except by the host nation
- </p>
- <p>By Barry Hillenbrand/London--With reporting by Jordan
- Bonfante/Los Angeles, Michael Brunton/London, Greg Burke/Rome
- and Ian McCluskey/Rio de Janiero
- </p>
- <p> Everything is just about ready. in Orlando, Florida,
- painters have finished the massive black and white panels that
- have transformed the copper dome of the new city hall into a
- giant soccer ball. Near Detroit, agronomists from Michigan State
- University have covered the synthetic turf in the Pontiac
- Silverdome with 1,850 hexagonal chunks of specially grown,
- soccer-friendly grass. In Palo Alto, California, workers are
- nearly finished giving Stanford University's venerable stadium
- a $5 million face-lift.
- </p>
- <p> All this activity is in preparation for World Cup USA '94,
- which begins in Chicago on Friday. Forget the Super Bowl, World
- Series and Olympic Games. The World Cup is the most eagerly
- anticipated event on the sporting calendar for most people on
- earth. Held every four years, the tournament decides the world
- championship of football--the kind of football actually played
- with the feet. Like America's Dream Team in Olympic basketball,
- the teams are made up of a country's best players. Some may play
- professionally in a league on a foreign continent, but they play
- for their national teams in World Cup games. In December 1991,
- 143 nations signed up to compete in the qualifying rounds; even
- Vanuatu and San Marino, plus a few curious geopolitical
- subdivisions like the Faroe Islands, entered. It took two years
- and 491 matches to whittle the field down to two dozen, and
- these finalists will play 52 games in nine cities in the U.S.
- By the time the championship is won in the Rose Bowl on July 17,
- more than 30 billion viewers in 190 countries will have tuned
- in.
- </p>
- <p> The federation that runs the World Cup chose the U.S. for
- the 1994 tournament with the hope of attracting more American
- fans to soccer. It's a difficult task. A recent Harris poll
- found that only 25% of the 1,252 U.S. adults questioned knew
- what sport the World Cup involved, and only 20% were aware that
- the tournament would be held in the U.S. this summer. As for
- professional soccer in America, does anyone out there remember
- the Cosmos? Americans are not completely indifferent to the
- game, however. Fourteen million children and young people play
- the sport, and their parents are often avid spectators.
- </p>
- <p> Americans who do follow the World Cup will be rewarded,
- for international soccer right now is better than ever. In
- recent years gifted players from small countries have
- increasingly gone abroad to compete in the prosperous, rigorous
- football leagues of Europe. If fans in their home countries are
- deprived of the joy of watching top talent play during the
- regular season, the stars are battle hardened when they return
- to their national teams. The result has been a closer parity
- among national teams that undoubtedly will lead to upsets. The
- most exciting squads competing in the finals fall into four
- broad categories.
- </p>
- <p> CROWN PRINCES. The teams that have dominated the world
- championship for 60 years are Argentina, Brazil, Italy and
- Germany. Will one of them win again this year? Probably, but it
- won't be as easy as it has been. In the qualifying rounds,
- Argentina was nearly eliminated after Colombia humiliated it at
- home 5-0. Brazilians thirst for a magical "tetra," a fourth
- championship, but the team has a bad habit of falling apart when
- it is least expected. Who will keep Brazil from losing? Romario
- and Bebeto. In Brazil no one ever bothers with last names for
- football stars; Romario is Romario de Souza Faria, leading
- scorer for Barcelona, the current Spanish league champion;
- Bebeto is Jose Roberto Gama de Oliveira, who is fragile looking
- but has a magical touch with the ball.
- </p>
- <p> Italy's coach, Arrigo Sacchi, speaks of teamwork with
- religious fervor. "For the kind of football I believe in," he
- says, "generosity is fundamental." If Sacchi sounds like the St.
- Francis of Assisi of football, he has yet to win many converts.
- Nearly 8 out of 10 readers polled recently by the weekly Guerin
- Sportivo said they had lost faith in him. Still, he has Roberto
- Baggio, probably the world's best player, to call upon for
- miracles.
- </p>
- <p> Finally there is Germany, the 1990 Cup champion. Germans
- are wondering whether new coach Berti Vogts comes near to Franz
- Beckenbauer, the football legend who guided the team four years
- ago. "Vogts was a bone crusher of a player," says one nervous
- fan. "Beckenbauer was a thinker."
- </p>
- <p> THE CHALLENGERS. In the 1970s the Dutch played in two Cup
- championship games, losing both times. Since then they have
- lingered on the fringes of greatness. But this year the
- Netherlands hopes to put an end to its also-ran reputation by
- playing a slightly modified version of "total football," an
- aggressive style that has players move as a single unit on both
- offense and defense. The Dutch will be playing in the same group
- as the ascendant Belgians, their geographic neighbors but
- stylistic opposites. Belgium plays a tough, tight defensive game
- that exploits opponents' errors. The biggest threat to the
- traditional powers comes from Colombia. Under coach Francisco
- Maturana the team has built an attacking machine led by Faustino
- Asprilla, a striker, or goal-scoring forward. The Colombian game
- is hide-and-seek ball control, emphasizing short passes that
- slice up a defense.
- </p>
- <p> THE HIGHWAYMEN. On the road to the final in Pasadena, the
- favored teams will run into flashy underdogs who could, on a
- good day, dispatch the powerhouses. The Irish have a shrewd
- coach in affable Jack Charlton, who played on England's 1966
- Cup-winning team and led Ireland to victory over Holland and
- Germany in two warm-up games. Rashidi Yekini and Daniel Amokachi
- provide Nigeria, playing in its first Cup, with plenty of
- scoring power.
- </p>
- <p> THE CINDERELLAS. Some teams that have languished in soccer
- obscurity for years have suddenly flourished. Under the
- direction of Spanish coach Xavier Azkargorta, Bolivia, long the
- doormat of South American football, was undefeated in the
- qualifying rounds and even beat Brazil 2-0. The U.S. also has
- extravagant hopes--the team won a stunning 2-0 upset victory
- over England last year. Unfortunately, the U.S lacks world-class
- stars, although goalie Tony Meola shows promise and midfielder
- John Harkes and striker Roy Wegerle have gained experience in
- England. The Americans have come a long way, but the team, which
- faces Switzerland in Detroit on Saturday, is unlikely to advance
- beyond the first round.
- </p>
- <p> Just how important is the World Cup? For the citizens of
- most of the countries whose teams are playing in America,
- nothing else short of Armageddon really matters. Already, the
- debates over player selection and team preparation have been
- all-consuming. Brazilians spent weeks arguing about whether
- players would be allowed to have sex during the tournament.
- After Pele and Garrincha, heroes of previous Cups, announced
- that this activity had not harmed their performance, coach
- Parreira, who at first said spouses could not accompany the team
- to the U.S., recanted. All the players' needs, he said,
- including "sexual ones," would be tended to.
- </p>
- <p> Perhaps after a few weeks of exposure to soccer mania at
- its most virulent, Americans will begin to appreciate the game.
- But even if soccer fails to take hold in its last frontier, this
- year's World Cup will not suffer. We may not know a corner kick
- from a throw-in, but no one puts on a sports spectacle better
- than America.
- </p>
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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