Why the Brazil World
Cup is the best so far (plus some incredible trivia)
by rick olivares pic by getty images/FIFA website
The 2014 World Cup is halfway done and everyone is
already saying that this is the best one played. And I believe -- and arguably --
it is the best one.
How does one characterize a tournament as being the
best? Goals scored? Results decided at death’s door? The inevitable
controversy? The intense drama?
Check them all I say, and add those ingredients to
all the swirl of controversy surrounding the awarding and preparation of the
games in Brazil. Consider that before kickoff, all the news filtering out from host
country was negative – late construction, deaths during construction, natives
rallying against the World Cup, locals clashing with cops with one constable
getting hit by an arrow – an arrow!
Furthermore, it got off to an inauspicious start when
Yuichi Nishimura helped the home team to a win in the opener. But when the
Netherlands came back to crush Spain – boom – it has been one exciting and
riveting match after another.
But how does this World Cup stack up so far against
previous editions?
Let’s back track and take at look at FIFA’s
centerpiece event since the format expanded the finals to 32 countries in 1998 in
France. Since we aren’t past the quarterfinals, let’s take a look at the
numbers from the group stages and the Round of 16.
Number of goals
scored
Stage
|
1998
|
2002
|
2006
|
2010
|
2014
|
Group Stages
|
126
|
130
|
117
|
101
|
136
|
Round of 16
|
27
|
17
|
15
|
22
|
18
|
Games
decided in the last 15 minutes of regular time with no extension
Stage
|
1998
|
2002
|
2006
|
2010
|
2014
|
Group Stages
|
15
|
12
|
21
|
16
|
16
|
Round of 16
|
2
|
2
|
2
|
2
|
2
|
Games
decided in extra time
Stage
|
1998
|
2002
|
2006
|
2010
|
2014
|
Round of 16
|
1
|
1
|
1
|
1
|
3
|
Games
decided by penalty kicks
Stage
|
1998
|
2002
|
2006
|
2010
|
2014
|
Round of 16
|
1
|
1
|
1
|
1
|
2
|
In the five years that FIFA went into its current
expanded format, the group stages in Brazil have seen the most number of goals
with 136 and that is in spite of the humidity and the long league season that
concluded a month before the World Cup kicked off.
So why the drop off in the Round of 16?
The simple answers are: one, teams are more conscious
of their defensive efforts knowing the attacking prowess of other teams, and
two, we have seen exemplary performances by goal keepers in the Round of 16.
Prior to the Belgium-USA match, Mexico’s Guillermo
Ochoa was lauded for his excellent effort at goal until the Dutch broke El
Tri’s stubborn resistance.
Now everyone has heard of Tim Howard’s performance of
the ages against the Belgian onslaught.
As we look at the quarterfinals, the battles will be
more intense and the defensive efforts even more valiant because of the
following points that further bolster the argument that the Brazil games are
the best ever.
For the FIRST time in FIFA World Cup history, all
eight countries that TOPPED THEIR RESPECTIVE GROUP STAGES are facing each other
in the QUARTERFINALS. That has never been done before.
Of the eight teams – four are undefeated so far –
Argentina, Belgium, Colombia, and the Netherlands.
Four of the remaining teams are ranked in FIFA’s Top
Ten: Germany at #2, Brazil at #3, Argentina at #5, and Colombia at #8.
Belgium is ranked #11, the Netherlands #15, and
France is #17.
Costa Rica is the lowest-ranked seed by FIFA,
checking in at #28.
But all are the leaders of their group stage, all
advanced past the Round of 16, and all will now face each other in what
promises to be a battle royale.
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