- Group 1: the Czech Republic needs to win at Finland; otherwise Romania get the spot
- Group 2: Turkey, Denmark, and Greece all still have a chance, but the Turks currently have the edge
- Group 3: Slovakia and Russia face each other in Bratislava; Russia needs to win, Slovakia only needs a tie
- Group 5: Norway has already clinched second place
Saturday, October 08, 2005
World Cup 2006 finalists becoming clear
Note: countries in blue have already qualified for Germany 2006; countries in purple are on the verge; countries in red are still in the hunt.
Africa (5 spots clinched)
Qualifying play wrapped up this weekend in dramatic fashion as several countries will be making their first-ever visit to the World Cup finals. As expected, Ghana secured its spot with a 4-0 win over Cape Verde, and Togo likewise sealed its bid with a come-from-behind 3-2 win, thus eliminating 2002 quarter-finalist Senegal. Also forced to look ahead early to 2010, after four straight visits to the WC finals, is Cameroon, which could only manage an agonizing 1-1 tie against Egypt--agonizing because of a missed stoppage-time penalty that would have sent them through to Germany. That left the door open for yet another first-time qualifier, Cote d'Ivoire. Another continental giant, Nigeria, will also be staying home next summer as Angola managed an 80th-minute goal to beat Rwanda and thus win the group. Finally, Tunisia twice came from behind to earn Africa's fifth place in Germany with a 2-2 home tie against second-place Morocco, who would have advanced with the win.
Europe (8 spots clinched / 6 remaining)
With victories on Saturday, Italy, Portugal, and the Netherlands joined Germany and Ukraine as qualifiers for the 2006 finals. Even though their group winner won't be known until Wednesday, England and Poland have also qualified, as the loser of their showdown for top spot is still assured of being one of the best two second-place teams. By defeating Sweden, Croatia likewise secured its place in Germany, although Sweden still might steal the group win with a home win against Iceland. Several other pivotal matches will be played on the 12th to determine not only the remaining group winners but also the important second-place spots, which earn a place in last-chance head-to-head playoffs. Serbia-Montenegro can win Group 7 with a win or tie against visiting Bosnia-Herzegovina; meanwhile, an expected win at San Marino would secure second-place for Spain, who must hope for a Bosnian win to leapfrog Serbia into first place. Even more unsettled is Group 4, which has four teams still in the hunt for the first two places. A 1-1 tie between Switzerland and France leaves Israel atop Group 4, but that's not likely to last as France should still win the group with an expected home win over Cyprus--unless Switzerland also manages a victory on the road at Ireland. An Ireland win wouldn't likely be good enough to beat out France, but it would put the Irish into the second-place playoffs. A tie in that pivotal match wouldn't help the Irish, but it would put the Swiss in the second-place playoffs. With no games left to play, Israel's only hope (despite having not lost a single of its ten matches) is that Cyprus somehow defeats France. The other battles for second-place include:
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2 comments:
Here's how the key matches played out on Wednesday:
In Europe, France, Sweden, and Serbia/Montenegro all won spots in Germany, leaving Spain and Switzerland to do battle in Europe's last-chance playoffs next month. They will be joined by four more teams in that contest for Europe's last three spots: Turkey (whose eliminated Denmark and Greece from the competition), Slovakia (who eliminated Russia), the Czechs (who eliminated Romania), and Norway. With France and Switzerland claiming Group 4's top two spots, Ireland and Israel can now dream only of South Africa 2010.
In Asia, a goalless draw was good enough to see Bahrain take out Uzbekistan, setting up a play-off against Trinidad and Tobago, who were 2-1 winners over Mexico. (That victory leaves Guatemala at home once again.) A similar playoff will determine the World Cup's final spot, between Australia and Uruguay, who finally sewed up fifth place in South American play.
With the exception of Africa, and to a more modest degree South America, qualifying for Germany 2006 has gone more or less as expected. Unless Spain falters in its European playoff, all of the big names--save for the recent African mainstays such as Nigeria--will be there. Thus, while some of the drama has been taken out of the qualifying process with the expansion several years ago to a 32-team field (from 24 in 1994), we'll get a finals tournament that is fully stocked with a great mix of traditional world-soccer sharks and minnows. It should be fun.
Ghana and Togo are a big surprise. I cant believe that Cameroon and Nigeria are out. The major European teams have struggled this year and will make for a more interesting cup. Mexicos performance in the confederations cup will make them a formidable adversaries and the united states will be a threat to any team. Hopefully the world cup could stay in the Americas.
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