South America 2014 World Cup qualifiers

Ha ye, but we shall see how Uruguay plays for the remainder of the qualifiers.
 

I didn't see the match but from what I've read and then seen now, Suarez had a great performance (albeit from a youtube video, and a short one at that). Such a monster.
 
Last edited by a moderator:
Neymar took one of the worst penalties I've seen in a while, scored a very good equaliser though before that.

A draw away in Brazil is a good result for Colombia.
 
Argentina's qualifying focus turns to preparation - ESPN FC

Coach Sabella makes some good points about his full-backs being exposed & the times i have watched Argentina in qualifiers it could be a problem for them when they play in world cup vs stronger sides.

But I reckon coach Sabella has trust his attacking riches no be honest. A 4-2-4 formation would be perfect for Argentina. With the two in the middle being strong defensive mid-fielders.

------------------------------Romero-----------------------------------

Zabaletta-----------Garay---------Colocinni/Campagnara------Assadi/Rojo

--------------------Mascherano-----Banega-------------------------

Di Maria------------------Messi-----------------------Aguero-------

-----------------------------Higuain--------------------------------------

However i'm a bit surprised as to why he doesn't pick Tevez & Jonas Gutierrez in his squad
 
Last edited:
Gutierrez doesn't add much in terms of the attack, despite his high work rate.

Ansaldi is a good left-back, so I guess he doesn't need that extra cover that Gutierrez could offer.
 
It's still a very mediocre back five whichever way you look at it. I wonder how they'd do packing the middle and playing a diamond with Messi at the tip of it.
 
Gutierrez doesn't add much in terms of the attack, despite his high work rate.

Ansaldi is a good left-back, so I guess he doesn't need that extra cover that Gutierrez could offer.

Ye maybe. However looking at the current squad picked, he has Maxi Rodriguez, augusto fernandez from celta vigo & Jose Sosa as the other winger option.

Find it hard to believe that all of them are better than Jonas.

----------

It's still a very mediocre back five whichever way you look at it. I wonder how they'd do packing the middle and playing a diamond with Messi at the tip of it.

Ye ha that's the case with the back-line. However although its early to make predictions, i reckon if the back-line can be solid enough, given the strike force Argentina has with Messi not necessarily the focal point - it could be a Messi inspired Argentina world cup triumph.
 
Ye maybe. However looking at the current squad picked, he has Maxi Rodriguez, augusto fernandez from celta vigo & Jose Sosa as the other winger option.

Find it hard to believe that all of them are better than Jonas.

Sosa is more of a playmaker type of player, and I feel he's a bit better than Jonas, but never knew that the other two were selected ahead of him, despite not hearing about how good Fernandez is, it's truly puzzling to see him ahead of Jonas, Celta aren't in good form too of late, so that's weird.
 
Uruguay continue to look shaky, struggling draw @ home to Paraguay.

Peru win in their derby vs Chile throws the battle for the 5th place wide open

Can't wait to see Argentina & Columbia clash in June, that is going to be a cracker. Clearly the best two teams in S Africa now, given Uruguay's current slump & Brazil not being at their best for a while.
 
Wonder whether Zeman could do a good job at Argentina. :p
 
3637 meters above sea level - the stadium at La Paz, Bolivia. Di Maria not surprisingly needed an oxygen mask..

261258_590546754318878_1457022077_n.jpg


--------


Suarez not really doing himself any favors, is he? But what the hell was Jara doing with Luis' dick though? Was asking to be punched.. He's no saint either.
 
Last edited by a moderator:
Ha ye that Bolivia altitude like the one in Mexico is crazy. Uruguay in more problems that Suarez's antics - they now are officially out of automatic qualifying spot & a play-off spot.

This is a stunning fall from grace.
 
Still 5 matchdays to go. Anything could happen between now and the end of qualifying.
 
Five things we learned from CONMEBOL World Cup qualifying - ESPN FC

quote said:
1. Coach Alejandro Sabella has steered Argentina capably through storm

Sabella was thrown in at the deep end when he was appointed less than two years ago. In theory, the 2011 Copa America was a training ground for the current set of World Cup qualifiers. Argentina threw away that opportunity and decided to start from scratch when they sacked Sergio Batista after the Copa and replaced him with Sabella.

The new man had very little preparation time, and perhaps inevitably there were early problems. In the second round of the campaign his team lost away to Venezuela. In the third they were held at home by Bolivia.

It looked then as if Argentina were in for a bumpy ride to Brazil. Instead, by the time the return fixtures came round, a qualification place was already safely within view -- and it is closer still now, after two rounds when no one else managed to equal the Argentine haul of four points.

In the past year the team has clicked. Lionel Messi has started to reproduce his club form, backed up by the solid midfield construction work of Fernando Gago behind him and inspired by the talent of Sergio Aguero, Gonzalo Higuain and Angel Di Maria in front and around him. On song there is no more attractive side in the international game. The defence may still need some tinkering, but Argentina can build for Brazil with confidence.

And Sabella is well entitled to relax with an expensive glass of wine after a comfortable 3-0 win over Venezuela and a well-planned 1-1 draw away to Bolivia, at the extreme altitude of La Paz, where four years ago Diego Maradona's side were routed 6-1. Next year Sabella's team promises to have all of the romance of Maradona's 2010 World Cup campaign, but a lot less of the hubris.

2. Uruguay's crisis is deeper than we thought

Last June, a third of the campaign played, Uruguay stood second in the table with a game in hand. They were the reigning Copa America champions, 2010 World Cup semifinalists, and if the side was starting to age together, high hopes surrounded the younger generation who were on their way to the London Olympics.

- Video: Luis Suarez caught on camera jabbing opponent

One by one, the wheels have come off. The Olympic campaign was a disaster, and in six subsequent World Cup qualifiers the senior side has added just two points, going down to four comfortable away defeats.

Back in October, after the previous pair of matches, it was clear that changes would have to be made. Coach Oscar Washington Tabarez made them, tweaking the structure of his team, leaving out one of his pair of defensive midfield guard dogs and attempting to play a more elaborate game in possession.

The evidence in friendlies was extremely promising. Uruguay played an impressive game winning 3-1 away to Poland last November, and though they went down to Spain by the same scoreline in February, they played a full part in an entertaining match.

Come the qualifiers, though, they were unable to produce that level of performance. True, only a late defensive blunder stopped them from winning at home to Paraguay last Friday. But their play once again looked laboured and pedestrian in Tuesday's 2-0 loss to Chile. Old stars and new hopes such as Nicolas Lodeiro and Gaston Ramirez are not stepping up to the plate.

Uruguay sit out the first of June's two rounds. In the other, they face a crunch game away to Venezuela -- which like Chile are direct rivals for a World Cup place. And they will be without the suspended Luis Suarez. If Uruguay are going to make it to Brazil, they will have to do it the hard way.

3. Ecuador's Jefferson Montero is one of soccer's undiscovered gems

Ecuador faced a test of nerve when they went a goal down to Paraguay on Tuesday. Their bid to qualify has been based on a 100% home record. Of their remaining six games, four are away. Paraguay's resilience is legendary and they were fighting for their lives. Might the Paraguayans be capable of grinding out an away win?

The capacity crowd in Quito need not have worried. Jefferson Montero chose the day to announce himself as a thoroughbred international player. He scored two and had a hand in the other two as Ecuador won 4-1. After a glance at the highlights, many fans around the world might have been wondering the same thing - Jefferson who?

Thankfully I am not among them. I had a grandstand view of his promise when I saw the teenage Montero help Ecuador win the gold medal in the 2007 Pan-American Games, staged in Rio de Janeiro. His silky running with the ball and ability to glide past his marker on either side were joys to behold. I expected great things, and am still expecting.

Now in Mexico with Morelia after a spell in Spain, on Tuesday's evidence Montero is solving the problem which was holding him back -- a lack of end product, caused by poor decision-making and panicky finishing. This time, under pressure, he did all the right things, undressing the defence, shooting and crossing with precision. With Montero on one flank and Luis Antonio Valencia on the other, Ecuador are an opposing full-back's nightmare.

4. Venezuela are serious contenders

The test of a team is always in how it responds to a setback. Venezuela travelled to Buenos Aires with high hopes of causing an historic upset. The well drilled defence of coach Cesar Farias was going to hold Argentina at bay, while at the other end the pace, power and skill of Salomon Rondon was sure to trouble the home defence.

Indeed, Rondon had his moments -- but they came when Argentina were already 3-0 up and the destiny of the points had been decided. Farias had no option but to admit that his men had been beaten by the better team. But how would they fare four days later at home to the Colombians, who had given another display of their exuberant firepower in a 5-0 win over Bolivia.

It was the time for truth, and Venezuela were not found wanting. Rondon gave them an early lead, and defensive discipline had clearly suffered no ill effects from failing to get to grips with Lionel Messi and company. Radamel Falcao Garcia and his supporting cast were kept out, and Venezuela are back on course.

5. The time is fast approaching for a couple of teams to get off the bus

No one has yet been mathematically eliminated. But realistically, both Bolivia and Paraguay needed more than one point from two games to keep their dreams alive. Bolivia are six points off the pace, while Paraguay are seven -- a big margin to make up with just five games to go.

Altitude specialists Bolivia have already dropped too many home points to be viable contenders. Tuesday's 1-1 draw with Argentina was almost the last nail in the coffin. Paraguay still have four home games left -- win them all and they might give themselves an outside chance of snatching the playoff position. But it is not looking likely, especially as they have managed just eight goals in their 11 games.

This, then, is a painful moment for a Paraguayan generation who have grown accustomed to watching their side in the World Cup: Their team has been to the last four, reaching the quarterfinals in 2010. But there is a price to be paid for rebuilding and it is almost certain to mean that when the World Cup returns to South American soil next year, Paraguay will not be participating.

Tim Vickery is an English football journalist who has lived in Brazil since 1994 and specializes in South American football.


----------

And apparently there are '4.5' qualifying berths, what's that supposed to mean?

Just means the top 4 teams from S America automatically qualify for the W-Cup. But who finishes 5th will play off vs the 5th place team in the Asia group
 

Users who are viewing this thread

Top